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Himalaya may lose up to 75pc of its ice by 2100

Wednesday, 21 June 2023


Glaciers in Asia's Hindu Kush Himalaya could lose up to 75pc of their volume by century's end due to global warming, causing both dangerous flooding and water shortages for the 240 million people who live in the mountainous region, according to a new report, reports Reuters.
A team of international scientists has found that ice loss in the region, home to the famous peaks of Everest and K2, is speeding up. During the 2010s, the glaciers shed ice as much as 65% faster than they had in the preceding decade, according to the assessment by the Kathmandu-based International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), an intergovernmental scientific authority on the region.
"We're losing the glaciers, and we're losing them in 100 years' time," said Philippus Wester, an environmental scientist and ICIMOD fellow who was the lead author of the report.
The Hindu Kush Himalaya stretches 3,500 km (2,175 miles) across Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Myanmar, Nepal and Pakistan.
At 1.5 degrees Celsius or 2C of warming above preindustrial temperatures, glaciers across the entire region will lose 30% to 50% of their volume by 2100, the report said.
But where glaciers will melt most depends on location. At 3C of warming - what the world is roughly on track for under current climate policies - glaciers in the Eastern Himalaya, which includes Nepal and Bhutan, will lose up to 75% of their ice. At 4C of warming, that ticks up to 80%.
Scientists have struggled to assess how climate change is affecting the Hindu Kush Himalaya. Unlike the European Alps and North America's Rocky Mountains, the region lacks a long historical record of field measurements that reveal whether glaciers are growing or shrinking.
"There was always some uncertainty in the Himalaya - are they really melting?", said Wester.
In 2019, the United States declassified spy satellite images of the region's glaciers dating back to 1970, providing a new scientific baseline.
Further advances in satellite technology in the past five years, alongside bolstered field efforts, have buoyed scientists' understanding of the changes underway. The report draws on data running through December 2022.
"While the knowledge of the Himalayan glaciers is still not as good as the Alps, it's now comparable to other regions like the Andes," said Tobias Bolch, a glaciologist with Graz University of Technology in Austria unaffiliated with the report.
Compared with a 2019 ICIMOD assessment of the region, "there's a much higher level of confidence now in these findings," said Wester. "We have a better sense of what the loss will be through to 2100 at different levels of global warming."
With this newfound understanding comes grave concern for the people living in the Hindu Kush Himalaya.
The report found water flows in the region's 12 river basins, including the Ganges, Indus, and Mekong, are likely to peak around mid-century, with consequences for the more than 1.6 billion people who depend on this supply.