The Sentinel-Record

Study: 15 million people live under threat of glacial floods

- SETH BORENSTEIN

As glaciers melt and pour massive amounts of water into nearby lakes, 15 million people across the globe live under the threat of a sudden and deadly outburst flood, a new study finds.

More than half of those living in the shadow of the disaster called glacial lake outburst floods are in just four countries: India, Pakistan, Peru and China, according to a study in Tuesday’s Nature Communicat­ions. A second study, awaiting publicatio­n in a peer-reviewed journal, catalogs more than 150 glacial flood outbursts in history and recent times.

It’s a threat Americans and Europeans rarely think about, but 1 million people live within just 6 miles (10 kilometers) of potentiall­y unstable glacial-fed lakes, the study calculated.

One of the more devastatin­g floods was in Peru in 1941 and it killed between 1,800 and 6,000 people. A 2020 glacial lake outburst flood in British Columbia, Canada, caused a tsunami of water about 330 feet (100 meters) high, but no one was hurt. A 2017 glacial outburst flood in Nepal, triggered by a landslide, was captured on video by German climbers. Alaska’s Mendenhall glacier has had annual small glacial outburst floods in what the National Weather Service calls “suicide basin,” since 2011, according to study lead author Caroline Taylor, a researcher at Newcastle University in the United Kingdom.

Heavy rains and a glacial lake outburst flood combined in 2013 in India to kill thousands of people. A 2021 deadly flood in India that was initially attributed to a glacial lake outburst wasn’t caused by one, studies later found.

Scientists say so far it doesn’t seem like climate change has made those floods more frequent, but as glaciers shrink with warming, the amount of water in the lakes grows, making them more dangerous in those rare situations when dams burst.

“We had glacier lake outburst floods in the past that have killed many many thousands of people in a single catastroph­ic flooding event,” said study co-author Tom Robinson, a disaster risk scientist at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand. “And with climate change glaciers are melting so these lakes are getting bigger, potentiall­y getting more unstable.”

Dan Shugar, a geoscienti­st at the University of Calgary who wasn’t part of the two studies, said much of the threat depends simply on how many people live in a glacial flood zone.

 ?? The Sentinel-Record/Lance Porter ?? Heather Slay, right, Cutter Morning Star High School’s EAST facilitato­r, and senior EAST student David Cox hold up gardening supplies for the school’s new vegetable garden. The students plan to have the garden ready by this spring.
The Sentinel-Record/Lance Porter Heather Slay, right, Cutter Morning Star High School’s EAST facilitato­r, and senior EAST student David Cox hold up gardening supplies for the school’s new vegetable garden. The students plan to have the garden ready by this spring.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States