The China Mail - Glacier lakes swollen by global warming threaten millions

USD -
AED 3.673099
AFN 71.025985
ALL 86.949831
AMD 389.450198
ANG 1.80229
AOA 916.000203
ARS 1164.994971
AUD 1.56509
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.701759
BAM 1.71838
BBD 2.002943
BDT 121.466383
BGN 1.71689
BHD 0.376938
BIF 2973.281671
BMD 1
BND 1.309998
BOB 6.907549
BRL 5.619785
BSD 0.999671
BTN 85.150724
BWP 13.648225
BYN 3.271568
BYR 19600
BZD 2.008127
CAD 1.382625
CDF 2878.000017
CHF 0.823455
CLF 0.024644
CLP 945.690037
CNY 7.269498
CNH 7.26815
COP 4197
CRC 505.37044
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 97.14957
CZK 21.893987
DJF 177.719903
DKK 6.552957
DOP 58.850011
DZD 132.28903
EGP 50.803098
ERN 15
ETB 131.849836
EUR 0.87781
FJD 2.290499
FKP 0.746656
GBP 0.74558
GEL 2.745035
GGP 0.746656
GHS 15.297057
GIP 0.746656
GMD 71.500526
GNF 8656.000059
GTQ 7.699235
GYD 209.77442
HKD 7.758725
HNL 25.824996
HRK 6.615497
HTG 130.805895
HUF 354.894502
IDR 16717.55
ILS 3.623935
IMP 0.746656
INR 85.17125
IQD 1310
IRR 42100.000123
ISK 128.229838
JEP 0.746656
JMD 158.360167
JOD 0.709201
JPY 142.322502
KES 129.504675
KGS 87.450007
KHR 4002.999591
KMF 432.250165
KPW 900.101764
KRW 1431.070178
KWD 0.30622
KYD 0.833088
KZT 511.373521
LAK 21619.999738
LBP 89549.99972
LKR 299.461858
LRD 199.525007
LSL 18.560047
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.455025
MAD 9.26225
MDL 17.204811
MGA 4510.00033
MKD 54.016924
MMK 2099.785163
MNT 3572.381038
MOP 7.988121
MRU 39.725023
MUR 45.195004
MVR 15.405152
MWK 1735.999776
MXN 19.551245
MYR 4.324002
MZN 64.009864
NAD 18.559961
NGN 1603.189819
NIO 36.702674
NOK 10.376205
NPR 136.24151
NZD 1.684466
OMR 0.384994
PAB 0.999671
PEN 3.666498
PGK 4.030502
PHP 56.070013
PKR 281.049939
PLN 3.74768
PYG 8005.869096
QAR 3.641499
RON 4.368904
RSD 102.971863
RUB 81.998675
RWF 1417
SAR 3.750917
SBD 8.361298
SCR 14.236431
SDG 600.498111
SEK 9.645325
SGD 1.307665
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.75011
SLL 20969.483762
SOS 571.498004
SRD 36.850246
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.747337
SYP 13001.961096
SZL 18.560117
THB 33.448986
TJS 10.556725
TMT 3.51
TND 2.974021
TOP 2.342102
TRY 38.48222
TTD 6.782788
TWD 32.336697
TZS 2689.999794
UAH 41.532203
UGX 3663.759967
UYU 42.093703
UZS 12944.999923
VES 86.54811
VND 26005
VUV 121.306988
WST 2.770092
XAF 576.326032
XAG 0.030331
XAU 0.000301
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.715661
XOF 575.000121
XPF 105.250222
YER 245.049681
ZAR 18.54225
ZMK 9001.195433
ZMW 27.966701
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    22.35

    -0.58%

  • SCS

    0.1500

    10.01

    +1.5%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    73.04

    +0.26%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    22.24

    -0.36%

  • RELX

    0.4300

    53.79

    +0.8%

  • RIO

    0.0100

    60.88

    +0.02%

  • BCC

    -0.8300

    94.5

    -0.88%

  • GSK

    0.9100

    38.97

    +2.34%

  • BTI

    0.4700

    42.86

    +1.1%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    12.93

    +1.01%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    21.92

    +0.5%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    10.12

    -1.28%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.58

    +0.1%

  • AZN

    1.7800

    71.71

    +2.48%

  • BP

    -1.0600

    28.07

    -3.78%

Glacier lakes swollen by global warming threaten millions
Glacier lakes swollen by global warming threaten millions / Photo: © AFP/File

Glacier lakes swollen by global warming threaten millions

Violent flooding from glacier lakes formed or enlarged by climate change threatens at least 15 million people worldwide, most of them in four countries, researchers said Tuesday.

Text size:

More than nine million people across so-called High Mountain Asia live in the path of potential glacial lake outburst floods, including five million in northern India and Pakistan, they reported in Nature Communications.

China and Peru are also especially exposed to the danger of abrupt flooding from melting glaciers, according to the study, the first global assessment of areas most at risk.

The volume of lakes formed as glaciers worldwide disintegrate due to global warming has jumped by 50 percent in 30 years, according to a 2020 study based on satellite data.

Earth's average surface temperature has risen nearly 1.2 degrees Celsius since preindustrial times, but high-mountain regions around the world have warmed at twice that pace.

Glacier lakes are particularly unstable because they are most often dammed by ice or sediment composed of loose rock and debris. When accumulating water bursts through these accidental barriers, massive flooding can occur downstream.

This kind of flooding has been responsible for thousands of deaths in the last century, as well as the destruction of communities, infrastructure and livestock.

"It's not the areas with the largest number or most rapidly growing lakes that are most dangerous," said lead author Caroline Taylor, a doctoral student at Newcastle University in England.

"Instead, it is the number of people, their proximity to a glacial lake, and, importantly, their ability to cope with a flood that determines the potential danger," she explained.

Thousands of people, for example, have been killed by glacier lake outburst floods in High Mountain Asia but only a handful in North America's Pacific Northwest, even though that region has twice as many glacial lakes.

To carry out the study, Taylor and her colleagues compared three sets of data: the number and condition of lakes fed by melt-water, the number of people living within 50 kilometres of a glacial lake basin, and how prepared communities are to cope with disaster should it arrive.

Some 90 million people across 30 countries live in 1,089 glacial lake basins, they found. 15 million of them reside within one kilometre of the track an outburst flood would take.

- Exposure vs. vulnerability -

Pakistan is home to more than 7,000 glaciers in the spectacular Himalaya, Hindu Kush and Karakoram mountain ranges, more than anywhere else on Earth outside the poles.

Last summer, on the heels of a two-month heat wave and during sustained rains that followed, raging torrents from melting glaciers in northern Pakistan ripped up thousands of kilometres of roads and railway tracks, destroyed bridges, and washed away entire villages.

In Peru, a 41-year-old farmer who lives in mountains near the city of Huaraz has filed suit against the German firm RWE, saying its greenhouse gas emissions are partly responsible for the melting of nearby glaciers.

Last year a delegation of German judges visited the region to determine what risk the expanding lake below the Palcacocha glacier poses to city of Huaraz and its 120,000 inhabitants.

Half of the Earth's 215,000 glaciers and a quarter of their mass will melt away by the end of the century even if global warming can be capped at 1.5 degrees Celsius, the ambitious Paris Agreement target that many scientists now say is beyond reach, a recent study found.

Over the past century, a third of global sea-level rises came from glacier melt, according to earlier research.

S.Davis--ThChM