Researchers led by the University of Zurich in Switzerland and
funded by the EU have discovered that the Himalayan glaciers are in
better shape than previously thought. The scientists claim that
previous predictions made in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) overstated the decline of the Himalayan glaciers.
The results are an outcome of the HIGHNOON-project,
working on changing water resources availability in northern India
with Himalayan glacier retreat and changing monsoon pattern. The
project received EUR 3.3 million under the Environment Theme of the
EU's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
Detect change in an early stage
The state of the Himalayan glaciers is vitally important,
considering that several hundreds of millions of people in
Southeast Asia depend, to varying degrees, on the freshwater
reservoirs that are provided to them. Given this significance,
researchers believe that it is important to detect the potential
impact of climate changes on the Himalayan glaciers at an early
stage.
For this reason the researchers teamed up with the European Space
Agency to undertake the most up-to-date satellite surveying,
revealing that the glaciers in the Himalayas and Karakoram cover a
total area of approximately 40.800 square kilometres.
While this is around 20 times larger than all the glaciers of the
European Alps put together, it is as much as 20% smaller than was
previously assumed. Lead scientist Tobias Bolch, who conducts
research at the University of Zurich and Dresden University of
Technology in Germany, mainly put this down to erroneous mappings
in earlier studies. From this survey, the team concluded that the
glaciers in the Himalayas are declining less rapidly than was
previously thought.
Shrinking but not disappearing
'The detected length changes and area and volume losses
correspond to the global average,' explained Dr Bolch, summarising
the new results. 'The majority of the Himalayan glaciers are
shrinking, but much less rapidly than predicted earlier.'
For the purposes of their study, the scientists considered all
the existing measurements of length, area and volume changes, and
mass budgets. However, it should be noted that continuous
measurement data series do not go back further than 10 years. The
researchers recorded average length decreases of 15 metres to 20
metres and area decreases of 0.1% to 0.6% per year in recent
decades. Based on their analyses, the researchers assume that
glacier shrinkage will not have a major impact on the water
drainage of large rivers like the Indus, Ganges and Brahmaputra in
the coming decades.
Greater seasonal variability
Despite the partial all-clear for the Himalayan glaciers,
however, Dr Bolch advised caution: 'Due to the expected shrinkage
of the glaciers, in the medium term we can expect a greater
variability in the seasonal water drainage. Individual valleys
could dry up seasonally.'
That said, the scientists do see considerable hazard potential
from outbursts of glacial lakes. Dr Bolch and his colleagues also
see a very serious threat to the local population in newly formed
or rapidly growing glacial lakes. The deluge of water and debris
from potential outbursts of these lakes could have devastating
consequences for low-lying regions. According to the scientists,
increased efforts are urgently needed to monitor the lakes as well
as changes in the glaciers and the climate in the Himalayas.