Greenwich Time

Study: As glaciers melt, sudden flood risks threaten millions

- By Kasha Patel

The Shishpar glacier in northern Pakistan started rapidly thawing during a record heat wave last spring. The melted snow and ice flowed into a nearby ice-dammed lake until water levels grew too high, triggering a large flash flood that wiped out a key bridge and battered a downstream village.

This is not a unique event. Across the world’s iciest regions, communitie­s live with the looming threat of inland tsunamis - massive walls of water moving quickly and forcefully from melting glaciers, known as glacial lake outburst floods.

A study published Tuesday in Nature Communicat­ions found that around 15 million people live in danger of such glacial flooding. More than half of those at risk are in only four countries: India, Pakistan, Peru and China.

“It sounds quite dire, but it doesn’t need to be,” said Tom Robinson, a coauthor of the study and risk researcher at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand. “With thoughtful investment and careful planning, we can avoid these [flooding disasters].”

Glacial lake outburst floods have existed for as long as glaciers, but the risk has greatly increased in recent decades due to climate change, Robinson said in an interview. A warming planet is melting glaciers more quickly, draining additional water into nearby lakes and causing a bigger flooding event when a breach may occur. The number and total area of glacial lakes worldwide have increased by about 50 percent since 1990, previous research shows.

Glacial lake outburst floods “pose a globally significan­t hazard, and that hazard appears to be getting significan­tly worse with climate change,” Robinson said.

While not all glacial floods are caused by heat waves like the one that triggered the Shishpar flood, climate change is also making extreme heat more common. A study showed that climate change made last year’s record heat in India and Pakistan 30 times more likely to occur and elevated temperatur­es of the heat wave by about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit (one degree Celsius) compared to preindustr­ial times.

Global population­s have also skyrockete­d, particular­ly downstream of many glacial lakes. In 1942, a glacial lake outburst near Huaraz, Peru, killed more than 1,000 people. A breach on that glacial lake today, which many fear, could affect more than 100,000 people living downstream.

Taking into account lake conditions and the number of people within 30-miles downstream, the study released Tuesday assessed the areas with the highest danger from glacial lake outburst flooding. They also looked at the level of human developmen­t, determined by the United Nations, and a corruption index from nonprofit Transparen­cy Internatio­nal for each location, which could influence how resources are allocated in flood prevention and response.

They found that high mountain Asia, home to the Himalayas, ranked the most dangerous, with 9 million people exposed to 2,211 lakes. Pakistan and China had the highest risk globally, with nearly 2 million and 1 million people exposed, respective­ly.

The High Arctic, such as Greenland, had the lowest danger. Even though Greenland had the highest number of glacial lakes worldwide, very few people live there and are in harm’s way. The Pacific Northwest, particular­ly in Canada, also had a large number of glacial lakes, although the population is not as vulnerable.

The most surprising part of the study came in the Andes, Robinson said. Peru ranked third globally in danger risk. Danger overall in the Andes comes in a close second behind high mountain Asia, but the study found the area receives much less attention from the scientific world.

The number of glacial lakes across the Andes increased by 93 percent over the past two decades, compared to 37 percent in high mountain Asia. Yet the researcher­s found the Himalayas accounted for 142 studies in English language journals between 1990 and 2015. Fewer than 100 studies on glacial lake outburst flooding in the Andes have been published in similar journals since 1979, the study said.

“The focus over the last few years on high mountain Asia is good,” said Robinson. “But that shouldn’t come at the expense of other places with really high danger as well, such as the Andes.”

Juan Torres, a risk researcher at National Institute for Research on Glaciers and Mountain Ecosystems in Peru, said he and his colleagues have published many Spanishonl­y studies in four subbasins in the region and plan to publish more .

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