The Prague Post - Glacier lakes swollen by global warming threaten millions

EUR -
AED 4.290054
AFN 72.42575
ALL 95.503191
AMD 432.173262
ANG 2.090865
AOA 1072.367827
ARS 1654.62964
AUD 1.63286
AWG 2.105602
AZN 1.993611
BAM 1.953427
BBD 2.352323
BDT 143.624334
BGN 1.948604
BHD 0.440759
BIF 3479.259433
BMD 1.168156
BND 1.491276
BOB 8.070164
BRL 5.842069
BSD 1.167872
BTN 110.358022
BWP 15.79568
BYN 3.29517
BYR 22895.862222
BZD 2.348937
CAD 1.597571
CDF 2715.963068
CHF 0.92379
CLF 0.026658
CLP 1048.933841
CNY 7.970505
CNH 7.99225
COP 4228.410171
CRC 531.250231
CUC 1.168156
CUP 30.95614
CVE 110.1303
CZK 24.37504
DJF 207.977405
DKK 7.472824
DOP 69.385135
DZD 154.88931
EGP 61.670358
ERN 17.522344
ETB 182.360337
FJD 2.570875
FKP 0.862058
GBP 0.867479
GEL 3.136506
GGP 0.862058
GHS 12.964199
GIP 0.862058
GMD 85.275208
GNF 10248.46517
GTQ 8.923086
GYD 244.343237
HKD 9.154081
HNL 31.045029
HRK 7.532388
HTG 152.992875
HUF 365.379465
IDR 20190.178748
ILS 3.492201
IMP 0.862058
INR 110.555532
IQD 1529.928754
IRR 1536125.450142
ISK 143.225439
JEP 0.862058
JMD 184.016506
JOD 0.828175
JPY 186.617663
KES 150.93771
KGS 102.131433
KHR 4680.275586
KMF 490.625211
KPW 1051.335721
KRW 1726.015078
KWD 0.359605
KYD 0.97331
KZT 535.335235
LAK 25638.751153
LBP 104645.057227
LKR 372.274673
LRD 214.308798
LSL 19.376201
LTL 3.449262
LVL 0.706606
LYD 7.410999
MAD 10.809879
MDL 20.199294
MGA 4855.082561
MKD 61.579187
MMK 2453.174057
MNT 4201.104491
MOP 9.42731
MRU 46.44819
MUR 54.646713
MVR 18.059189
MWK 2025.123085
MXN 20.39151
MYR 4.616526
MZN 74.635995
NAD 19.376201
NGN 1601.51884
NIO 42.977435
NOK 10.886603
NPR 176.573035
NZD 1.990567
OMR 0.449162
PAB 1.167877
PEN 4.094093
PGK 5.073794
PHP 71.589274
PKR 325.479535
PLN 4.248567
PYG 7321.045677
QAR 4.245743
RON 5.093627
RSD 117.391485
RUB 87.72965
RWF 1707.21192
SAR 4.381491
SBD 9.402002
SCR 16.008867
SDG 701.475152
SEK 10.847207
SGD 1.493026
SHP 0.872147
SLE 28.735721
SLL 24495.647708
SOS 667.483605
SRD 43.648182
STD 24178.475583
STN 24.470071
SVC 10.219501
SYP 129.13882
SZL 19.360321
THB 38.018235
TJS 10.955095
TMT 4.094388
TND 3.405778
TOP 2.81264
TRY 52.630925
TTD 7.941287
TWD 36.873982
TZS 3043.190704
UAH 51.469848
UGX 4344.686043
USD 1.168156
UYU 46.093623
UZS 14049.815763
VES 565.311069
VND 30778.580501
VUV 138.105975
WST 3.186512
XAF 655.155683
XAG 0.016108
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.157
XCG 2.104826
XDR 0.815044
XOF 655.161285
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.702846
ZAR 19.433985
ZMK 10514.807479
ZMW 22.158992
ZWL 376.145831
  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.85

    -0.04%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    15.2

    -1.32%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    64

    0%

  • GSK

    0.7250

    54.945

    +1.32%

  • RIO

    -1.2800

    98.67

    -1.3%

  • BP

    0.8000

    46.77

    +1.71%

  • BTI

    0.8800

    58.2

    +1.51%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    23.61

    +0.21%

  • AZN

    -0.2700

    187.24

    -0.14%

  • NGG

    0.3900

    87.62

    +0.45%

  • RELX

    -0.2400

    36.15

    -0.66%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.25

    -0.04%

  • VOD

    -0.1150

    15.395

    -0.75%

  • BCC

    -0.7200

    83.14

    -0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.84

    +0.08%

Glacier lakes swollen by global warming threaten millions
Glacier lakes swollen by global warming threaten millions / Photo: Abdul MAJEED - 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.

U.Ptacek--TPP