Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Melting away

Study: Himalayan glaciers could lose 80% of their volume if global warming isn’t controlled

- SIBI ARASU

BENGALURU, India — Glaciers are melting at unpreceden­ted rates across the Hindu Kush Himalayan mountain ranges and could lose up to 80% of their volume this century if greenhouse gas emissions aren’t sharply reduced, according to a report.

The report Tuesday from Kathmandu-based Internatio­nal Centre for Integrated Mountain Developmen­t warned that flash floods and avalanches would grow more likely in coming years, and that the availabili­ty of fresh water could be curtailed for nearly 2 billion people who live downstream of 12 rivers that originate in the mountains.

Ice and snow in the Hindu Kush Himalayan ranges are an important source of water for those rivers, which flow through 16 countries in Asia and provide fresh water to 240 million people in the mountains and another 1.65 billion downstream.

“The people living in these mountains who have contribute­d next to nothing to global warming are at high risk due to climate change,” said Amina Maharjan, a migration specialist and one of the report’s authors. “Current adaptation efforts are wholly insufficie­nt, and we are extremely concerned that without greater support, these communitie­s will be unable to cope.”

Various earlier reports have found that the cryosphere — regions on Earth covered by snow and ice — are among the worst affected by climate change. Recent research found that Mount Everest’s glaciers, for example, have lost 2,000 years of ice in just the past 30 years.

“We map out for the first time the linkages between cryosphere change with water, ecosystems and society in this mountain region,” Maharjan said.

Among the key findings from Tuesday’s report are that the Himalayan glaciers disappeare­d 65% faster since 2010 than in the previous decade, and that reducing snow cover due to global warming will result in reduced fresh water for people living downstream. The study found that 200 glacier lakes across these mountains are deemed dangerous, and the region could see a significan­t spike in glacial lake outburst floods by the end of the century.

The study found that communitie­s in the mountain regions are being affected by climate change far more than many other parts of the world. It says changes to the glaciers, snow and permafrost of the Hindu Kush Himalayan region driven by global warming are “unpreceden­ted and largely irreversib­le.”

Effects of climate change are already felt by Himalayan communitie­s, sometimes acutely. Earlier this year the Indian mountain town of Joshimath began sinking and residents had to be relocated within days.

“Once ice melts in these regions, it’s very difficult to put it back to its frozen form,” said Pam Pearson, director of the Internatio­nal Cryosphere Climate Initiative, who was not involved with the report.

She added, “It’s like a big ship in the ocean. Once the ice starts going, it’s very hard to stop. So, with glaciers, especially the big glaciers in the Himalayas, once they start losing mass, that’s going to continue for a really long time before it can stabilize.”

Pearson said it is extremely important for Earth’s snow, permafrost and ice to limit warming to the 1.5 degrees Celsius agreed to at the 2015 Paris climate conference.

“I get the sense that most policymake­rs don’t take the goal seriously, but in the cryosphere, irreversib­le changes are already happening,” she said.

“The people living in these mountains who have contribute­d next to nothing to global warming are at high risk due to climate change.” — Amina Maharjan, migration specialist

 ?? (File Photo/AP/Ashwini Bhatia) ?? The Sutlej River flows March 13 in the valley below the tall snowy peaks in the Kinnaur district of the Himalayan state of Himachal
Pradesh, India.
(File Photo/AP/Ashwini Bhatia) The Sutlej River flows March 13 in the valley below the tall snowy peaks in the Kinnaur district of the Himalayan state of Himachal Pradesh, India.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Ashwini Bhatia) ?? Indian army personnel collect water from a melting glacier March 14 in the Kinnaur district.
(File Photo/AP/Ashwini Bhatia) Indian army personnel collect water from a melting glacier March 14 in the Kinnaur district.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Mukhtar Khan) ?? Relatives of Basharat Ahmad Zargar cry Feb. 14, 2021, during his funeral in Srinagar, Indian-controlled Kashmir. Zargar, who was working at a power project, was among the dozens killed after a part of a Himalayan glacier broke off on Feb. 7, 2021, sending a devastatin­g flood downriver slamming into two hydropower projects in northern India.
(File Photo/AP/Mukhtar Khan) Relatives of Basharat Ahmad Zargar cry Feb. 14, 2021, during his funeral in Srinagar, Indian-controlled Kashmir. Zargar, who was working at a power project, was among the dozens killed after a part of a Himalayan glacier broke off on Feb. 7, 2021, sending a devastatin­g flood downriver slamming into two hydropower projects in northern India.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Mukhtar Khan) ?? A glacier is seen Sept. 17 on a mountainto­p along the way to a remote village in the cold desert region of Ladakh, India.
(File Photo/AP/Mukhtar Khan) A glacier is seen Sept. 17 on a mountainto­p along the way to a remote village in the cold desert region of Ladakh, India.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Rajesh Kumar Singh) ?? A Hindu devotee bathes and performs morning rituals June 8 in the Ganges River on the outskirts of Prayagraj, India.
(File Photo/AP/Rajesh Kumar Singh) A Hindu devotee bathes and performs morning rituals June 8 in the Ganges River on the outskirts of Prayagraj, India.

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