RSS Feed

Snow Cover Turning to Lakes in the Himalayas

May 21st, 2009 · No Comments

As climate change takes hold, even the mighty Himalayas and Hindu Kush mountain ranges are now losing their snow and ice.

These are the world’s greatest repositories of snow and ice outside of the polar regions, and yet they may melt away in just 20 to 30 years, leaving more than a billion people desperately short of water, experts concluded in San Diego this week.

“There’s been a super-rapid decline in the glaciers of the region,” said Charles Kennel, senior strategist at the University of California San Diego Sustainability Solutions Institute and former director of Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

Kennel told IPS that nearly all of the 20,000 glaciers in the Himalaya-Hindu Kush mountain ranges are in retreat and the meltwater from some has created enormous lakes held back by rockslides that will inevitably burst, endangering anyone living in the valleys below. The World Wildlife Fund calculates there are 2,000 glacial lakes forming in Nepal and around 20 are in danger of bursting. Several have already flooded valleys in the past two decades in Nepal and Tibet.

“We are trying to make it known that the Himalayas are to the issue of the world’s water supply problem what the Amazon rain forest is to the issue of deforestation,” he said in reference to the “Ice, Snow, and Water” workshop convened at UC San Diego this week that included scientists from India, Nepal, Singapore and China.

The Himalayas-Hindu Kush and nearby mountains, along with the high-elevation Tibetan Plateau that spans 1.6 million square kilometers, are the water towers of Asia and feed its great rivers – the Yellow, Yangtze, Mekong, Salween, Indus, Ganges and Brahmaputra. Sometimes referred to as Earth’s “third pole”, the snow and ice in the region provide the largest river run-off from any single location in the world.

Data from the International Commission on Snow and Ice in Kathmandu, Nepal reveal that the Himalayan glaciers are shrinking faster than anywhere else and could totally disappear by 2035. Snowfall is also in sharp decline in much of the region, Kennel said. This region has been frozen for hundreds of thousands of years and the incredibly rapid meltdown is the result of three converging factors, he explained.

Like the Arctic, temperatures in this cold part of the world are climbing far more rapidly than elsewhere. Over the past three decades, the average temperature has increased by almost 1 degree Celsius, and Chinese climate scientists predict a further temperature rise of between 2.0 to 2.6 degrees Celsius by 2050. Some of this temperature rise is due to soot, otherwise known as black carbon, from burning fossil fuels – especially diesel and coal – as well as burning wood and other biomass.

Black carbon heats the region in two ways. The dark particles absorb heat from the sun and collect at mountain latitudes. Secondly, this soot coats the snow, turning it grey and reducing the snow’s albedo – ability to reflect sunlight – accelerating the melt, said Kennel.

A new study confirms that black carbon is responsible for much of the springtime snow and ice melt in Asia. “By inducing early retreat of snow cover, black carbon causes (Hindu-Kush-Himalaya-Tibetan Plateau) land areas to absorb more sunlight and warm disproportionately,” said Marc Flanner of the National Centre for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado said in a statement.

Scientists note that black carbon is also responsible for much of the rapid meltdown underway in the Arctic. Preventing emissions of black carbon through the use of cleaner burning fuels, higher temperatures or filters would provide immediate cooling benefits because soot only remains in the atmosphere for a few weeks.

Eliminating black carbon emissions from fossil and biofuel sources could mean the springtime snow cover in Asia would increase substantially, recovering perhaps 25 percent of what has been lost in the past 100 years, Flanner said.

The final, and perhaps most worrying factor for all of Asia is a documented shift in the annual monsoon season. “Experts here said the monsoon is declining in intensity and has become more variable,” said Kennel. The wettest part of India received no rain last year but a desert that had not seen rain in 50 years suddenly became wet. Overall, however there has been a decline in precipitation in the last 20 years, he said. And that also means less snow in the mountains.

All of this means there will be less and less water for the 1.3 billion people who rely on Asia’s water tower. “We know that this is coming, now the challenge is how to adapt,” he said.

The San Diego workshop focused precisely on that issue because California is facing an identical challenge – its own water towers, the Sierra Nevada mountains, are likely to be virtually free of snow and ice before the end of the century. This spring, only 60 percent of the normal snowpack remains in the mountains, forcing the state to ration water this summer with a significant impact on the region’s agricultural sector.

California is developing new water management plans to adapt, such as building new reservoirs. The 17 countries affected by the decline of Asia’s water towers need to do the same, said Kennel. While U.S. researchers share their techniques for studying the water supply from the Sierra Nevada, they acknowledged that their science cannot yet make forecasts or projections at local scales.

Decision makers and water authorities need to know what may happen in their region or watershed but science cannot provide that level of detail yet, Kennel said.

And then there is the large issue of water for natural ecosystems. Humans cannot use all the water or ecosystems that provide many vital services will collapse.

At the conclusion of the workshop, participants agreed to forge an international alliance on adaptation. That will require major investments in research and water management planning, but many Asian countries do not have the funds.

Last year, Bolivian President Evo Morales has called on developed countries to earmark one percent of their GDP to create an adaptation fund to mitigate climate change in poor and vulnerable nations.

“That would be a step forward,” agreed Kennel.

[IPS]

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Tags: · , , , , , , ,


If you liked this article, you maybe interested in the following

0 comments for this entry ↓

  • There are no comments yet for this entry.

Leave a Comment

  • Climate Crunch

    Climate Crunch Network
    Climate Crunch, the new environmental news network site will provide news and views from around the internet. Gathering it’s content from news agencies,sites, blogs & videos it provides a unique view of current affairs and opinions from across the world regarding the environment and climate change.

    Click here to try Climate Crunch

    Twitter



    Latest From Climate Crunch | Whats popular


    Happy 35th birthday, global warming!

    [Science] Global warming is turning 35! Not only has the current spate of global warming been going on for about 35 years now, but also the term “global warming” will have its 35th anniversary next week. On 8 August 1975, Wally Broecker published his paper “Are we on the brink of a pronounced global warming?” in [...] [Real Climate]


    Green Moves Lie At Heart of Panasonic's Buy Out of Sanyo

    [Technology] Panasonic Corp. plans to spend up to about $9.5 billion buying out two of its subsidiaries in an effort to go greener, faster. The company announced today that it aims to take total control of Sanyo and Panasonic Electric Works. [Earth2Tech]


    'The Cove' Director Louie Psihoyos Working on 3D Movie About Mass Extinction

    [Celebrity] Photo via laffy4k The Cove has shaken up globe when it comes to dolphin hunting. The Oscar-winning documentary brought Japan's slaughter of cetaceans into the tunnel vision of mainstream audiences -- no small feat for small scale documentary makers. Now, the film's director, Louie Psihoyos, is latching on to the craze of 3D and starting a new project, The Singing Planet: The whole world is singing, we just haven't... Read the full story on TreeHugger [TreeHugger Celebrity]


    80 MPG Ford Concept Car Heading To Auction

    [Transport] Ever hear of the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles? Neither have I. In fact, when the program came into existence under President Clinton in 1993, I was just 7 years old. I knew nothing of cars or fuel efficiency. This program involved the three major U.S. automakers and eight Federal Agencies. The initiative was to produce several high-mileage concept cars to be put into production by 2003, and each of the automakers deliver. GM came up with the Precept, Chrysler the ESX II, and Ford developed the Prodigy. Each was a hybrid vehicle capable of delivering about 80 mpg. The Ford Prodigy is heading to auction next month in Monterey, California. So why haven’t I ever heard of it before? Read more of this story » [Gas 2.0]


    Giant Aerogenerator X Wind Turbine

    [News] The giant revolutionary Aerogenerator X wind turbine design mimics the spiralling motion of a sycamore seed and is a collaborative project between engineering firm Wind Power, architects Grimshaw, Cranfield University academics and Rolls Royce, Arup, BP and Shell. [GreenMuze News]


    Grass Sofas are Big and Green

    [Lifestyle] Image from trendhunter.com: Osterley Park What could be nicer: a big green grass sofa, out in the sun, in front of a gorgeous country house. Leave it to the National Trust to arrange it. They have grown and installed ten couches in different countryside locales and towns to get people lazing around outside instead of in. It's a good thing too because according to a study that they carried out, Brit's spend an average of 43 hours a week sitting around on their sofa, even in summer. It gets worse: in some places it's 50 t... Read the full story on TreeHugger [TreeHugger Food]


    DiCaprio Posts Pics Of Inception's Solar Arrays

    [Celebrity] The ‘razz received a nice little shout-out from Leonardo DiCaprio this afternoon on Facebook — with the actor promoting the article we wrote up on his involvement in bringing solar power to the set of his latest thriller Inception. In addition, Leo also added some photos of the solar array used to power all of basecamp [...] [Ecorazzi]



    Climate Crunch | the complete climate change news service Get the latest buzz from Climate Crunch


  • Communities

  • -->