Community | June 29, 2010 | 8 comments

70 Percent of Himalayan Glaciers Gone by Next Century, Studies Say

Image
JanforGore
While the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicted wrongly that the Himalayan glaciers would be gone by 2035, photographic and scientific evidence shows that the melting third pole is still devastating the region.

In January, when the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change acknowledged that it was wrong in predicting that the glaciers of the Himalayas could be gone by 2035, skeptics of global warming used the error to assert that much of climate science was a fraud.

Next month, though, the Asia Society Museum opens a month long exhibition in New York of alpine photographs by David Breashears that are the strongest visual proof ever compiled that climate scientists may have been aggressive in predicting the rate of glacial melting at the top of the world, but not by much.

Breashears’ work, collected by the museum in “Rivers of Ice: Vanishing Glaciers of the Greater Himalayas,” documents the rapid retreat of one of the world’s thickest and most important sheets of ice. A mountaineer, Breashears has scaled the world’s tallest mountains to take photographs of dozens of glaciers from the same perches that great photographers of the early and mid-20th century used to shoot the highest, and some of the longest glaciers in the world.

In “Rivers of Ice,” the Asia Society Museum presents Breashears’ 21st century pictures alongside those archival photographs. The message, say the museum’s curators, is unmistakable: “The comparison starkly reveals the catastrophic glacier loss sustained during the intervening years.”

“[M]ore than one-sixth of the world’s population live in glacier-or snowmelt-fed river basins and will be affected by the seasonal shifts in stream flow.”The Breashears exhibition coincides with a new scientific reckoning of the pace of Himalayan melting, and the consequences to watersheds, rivers, communities and nearly 3 billion people that rely on what some scientists have come to call “the water towers of Asia.” Two years ago, Circle of Blue documented the risks to Asia’s ten major rivers--the Yellow, Yangtze, Mekong, Salween, Irrawaddy, Brahmaputra, Ganges, Indus, Amu Darya and Tarim–as well as to hundreds of lesser streams that rely for water on snow, and glacial melt from the Tibetan Plateau and its young, heaven-scraping Himalayan range.

snip

More recent studies conclude that without sharp changes in global policy to curtail carbon emissions the Himalayan glaciers–and there are more than 40,000 of them spread across the peaks and valleys of the Tibetan Plateau–could be mostly gone by 2070. The underlying and inescapable fact reached by scientists who study ice and the Himalayas is that atmospheric conditions are changing fast and dramatically.

A year ago Ravinder Kumar Chaujar, a scientist with India’s Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, published an important paper in Current Science on the increasing temperatures, diminishing accumulation of snow, and rapid retreat of the Chorabari glacier in northern India’s Himalayan territory. Surface temperatures around the glacier since 1980, said Chaujar, have increased 0.8 degrees Centigrade (1.5 degrees Fahrenheit). Average snow accumulation, Chaujar reported, has dropped from more than 2,000 kilograms per square meter in the decades of the 20th century to just over 1,500 kilograms per meter in 2006, the lowest snowfall in the 50 years of record-keeping.

snip

The blue glacial ice of such famed fields as Tibet’s Main Rongbuk Glacier below Mount Everest today are thin, black with soot, and shrinking. Climate scientists and geologists from China and India warn that the range of ice on the Tibet plateau and in the mountains could shrink by 43 percent by 2070. Between 1950 and 1980, about half of the glaciers on the Tibetan Plateau were in recession, according to a number of studies. By the first decade of the 21st century, 95 percent were retreating.

Ya Tandong, a Chinese glaciologist, recently described in a UN report the condition of Himalayan glaciers this way: “Studies indicate that by 2030 another 30 percent will disappear. By 2050, 40 percent. By the end of the century 70 percent. The full-scale glacier shrinkage in the plateau regions will eventually lead to an ecological catastrophe.”
  1. groups:
    Community,   News and Politics,   Green,   Current Tonight,   11 more
  2. tags:
    Culture Environment Agriculture Glacier Melt 5 more
  3.     
    |

8 comments // 70 Percent of Himalayan Glaciers Gone by Next Century, Studies Say

  • tommic
    • +1
      tommic  
    • Unfortunatly between the Chinese and India with their economic growth which they will not slow, alter or plan for the future, spells doom for the glaciers. The west has created a monster that cannot be contained, addiction to fossil fuels.
      If India and China only produce half of the emissions the west does Co2 will rise to over 500 ppm and runnaway climate change is inevitable. The more I read the more I understand there is going to be no stopping millions of Chinese from buying cars, trucks, putting one coal fired power plant online every week for the next two years. We are fucked, there is undoing what both these countries will do in the next ten years and then it will be too late. People refuse to believe that all this will end in disaster.

    • 1 year ago
  • futuregen
  • futuregen
  • good_stuff
    • 0
      good_stuff  
    • A century seems like a long time. Surely we will be able to tap into the sun's energy and therefore have enough cheap power to air condition the world's atmosphere by then, right?

      Maybe I'm just overly hopefull/pessimistic at the same time, as we probably will need a major societal collapse to change from fossil fuels as our primary means of power. We did just start burning fossil fuels about a century ago though, right?

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Image
    • http://www.asiasociety.org/arts-culture/asia-society-museum/future-exhibitions/r...

      Asia Society Museum showing David Breashears photos.

      Excerpt:

      'The Himalayas are home to some of the world's most magnificent peaks and largest glaciers, which supply crucial seasonal flows to rivers across Asia. Yet they are disappearing at an alarming rate.

      This exhibition presents new photographs of these "water towers of Asia" by mountaineer and photographer David Breashears alongside archival photographs taken over the past century by some of the world's greatest mountain photographers. The comparison starkly reveals the catastrophic loss of ice during the intervening years.'

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • The people who live in this region need solar cookers stat. Black carbon is also doing great damage to the glaciers that provide their water as well as CO2 emissions in our atmosphere from our burning fossil fuels and from deforestation. Putting more cars on the road in India is also not helping this. And while the IPCC may have been embarrassed, I do not believe they were as far off as they think they are even though there is still time to preserve at least half of these glaciers if we start now. Unfortunately, that message seems to be falling on deaf ears which is why predictions around 2030 may not be so far off... we are depending on ourselves to fix it.

    • 1 year ago
more from Community:

top videos