The Hindu
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Tuesday, Apr 10, 2007

Opinion

The great Himalayan meltdown
http://www.hindu.com/2007/04/10/stories/2007041001520900.htm

N. Gopal Raj

Glaciers that feed the seven great rivers of Asia - Ganga, Indus,
Brahmaputra, Salween, Mekong, Yangtze, and Huang Ho - are under threat.

AS THE world warms inexorably, glaciers in the Himalayas are melting away,
putting at risk freshwater supplies for millions of people in Asia.

The 33,000 sq km of glaciers amidst some of the world's highest mountains
form the largest concentration of glaciers outside the polar ice caps. These
glaciers, which release an estimated 8.6 million cubic metres of water
annually, have nourished seven great rivers of Asia - Ganga, Indus,
Brahmaputra, Salween, Mekong, Yangtze, and Huang Ho. Ancient civilisations
sprang up and thrived along the shores of these rivers.

But now the pace of global warming is threatening the very existence of the
Himalayan glaciers. Since the mid-1970s, the average air temperature
measured at 49 stations of the Himalayan region rose by one degree Celsius,
with high elevation sites warming the most, noted a report compiled in 2005
by WWF, the global conservancy organisation. "This is twice as fast as the
0.6 degrees Celsius average warming for the mid-latitudinal northern
hemisphere over the same period and illustrates the high sensitivity of
mountain regions to climate change," added the report.

The Himalayan glaciers could disappear in the coming decades and the once
perennial rivers turn into seasonal ones, noted the Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC) in the final draft of its report on the impact,
adaptation and vulnerability produced by global warming.

"In the course of the century, water supplies stored in glaciers and snow
cover are projected to decline, reducing water availability in regions
supplied by meltwater from major mountain ranges, where more than one-sixth
of the world population currently lives," according to a summary of the
report that the IPCC released on April 6. Waters from the melting glaciers
would also contribute to rising sea levels, which the IPCC warns would
devastate many coastal areas and affect millions of people around the world
by 2080.

Longer ablation periods

Himalayan glaciers are very vulnerable to climate change, says Syed Iqbal
Hasnain, a leading glaciologist who is currently with the Centre for Policy
Research in New Delhi. It is not just that higher temperatures lead to more
ice turning to water. The "ablation period" when the glaciers melt in summer
has lengthened. Earlier, by October-November it would start snowing. In
recent years, it is still often quite warm during those months and the snows
set in only later in winter, he remarked.

The late snows produce another problem. The snowflakes need several months
to turn into hard ice crystals. Without the time needed for such
transformation, more of the glacier is liable to melt when summer comes, Dr.
Hasnain told this correspondent.

The south-west monsoon that brings torrents of rain to the plains of India
deposits snow on the upper reaches of mountains in central and eastern
Himalayas. But climatic changes have led to rain, rather snow, falling even
at higher elevations during the monsoon and this could accelerate the
melting of glaciers, he added.

In the face of these threats, the Himalayan glaciers are receding
alarmingly. Several studies have indicated that the rate at which these
glaciers are retreating has accelerated in recent decades. The Gangotri
glacier, whose melted waters feed the river Ganga, has, for instance, been
receding since 1780 but its rate of retreat has tripled in the last three
decades.

Anil Kulkarni of the Indian Space Research Organisation's Space Applications
Centre in Ahmedabad and fellow researchers used satellite pictures to study
466 glaciers in the Chenab, Parbati, and Baspa basins. These glaciers had
covered 2,077 sq. km in 1962. But by 2001-2004, the area occupied by these
glaciers had shrunk by 21 per cent, reported the scientists in a paper
published earlier this year. As the glaciers retreated, they also became
more fragmented and therefore more vulnerable to the affects of global
warming.

French and Indian scientists have been studying glaciers in the Spiti-Lahaul
region of Himachal Pradesh. In a paper published recently, the scientists
found that the glaciers, which occupied some 900-odd sq. km., had
experienced "significant thinning at low elevations" between the fall of
1999 and November 2004. Worse still, the rate of ice loss in the glaciers
during that time was about double the average for the Himalayas between 1977
and 1999. This indicated "an increase in the pace of glacier wastage,"
observed the scientists in their paper. However, in an email, Etienne
Berthier, the first author of the paper, noted that the survey period had
been short and further monitoring was required to assess a long-term trend.
A modelling exercise carried out by the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology in
Britain found that as the Himalayan glaciers melted in the face of global
warming, there would initially be an increase in river discharges, which
could produce widespread flooding, and then the river flows would decline.
The model studies indicated that flows in rivers originating in the western
Himalayas could peak in 2050 and in 2070 for rivers originating in eastern
Himalayas, according to Rajesh Kumar of the Birla Institute of Technology
extension centre in Jaipur, who was involved in the study.

"Glacier melt in the Himalayas is projected to increase flooding, rock
avalanches from destabilised slopes and affect water resources within the
next two to three decades," according to the latest IPCC summary report.
This would be followed by decreased river flows as the glaciers receded, it
added.

Scientists have estimated that melting snow and glaciers provides up to 80
per cent of the dry season flows of the Indus, Ganga, and Brahmaputra rivers
in the lowlands. As these river flows fall, agriculture, water supplies on
which millions of people depend, and power generation will be badly
affected.

Glacial retreat in the Himalayas, along with possible changes in monsoon
rainfall as a result of climate change, would have far-reaching consequences
for water availability in the South Asian region, points out Prakash Rao,
senior coordinator for the climate change and energy programme at WWF India.
Water-sharing disputes within and between countries in the region, that were
already proving troublesome, could worsen as a result, he told The Hindu.

Copyright © 2007, The Hindu.

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