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Scientists predict warmer and wetter Himalayas

Water levels of the critical rivers that originate in the Himalayan glaciers will not drop over the next century, say scientists

New research indicates that water levels of Himalayan rivers will not drop over the next century due to an increase in monsoon rains in the region. The new research published in Nature Geoscience was led by Walter Immerzeela, a visiting scientist at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) in Nepal. In contrast, his earlier work indicated a worrisome drop in the levels of the same rivers by 2050.

The research indicates that increasing rains will prevent Himalayan rivers from drying up. However, climate change will result in smaller glaciers and less meltwater in the Himalayas. The research shows that although the size of the glaciers in the basins of the Indus and the Ganga will decrease in the twenty-first century, water discharge will however increase.

While the results of the research predict a sombre future for the Himalayan glaciers, they offer some good news for water and food security in India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. The rivers in the Himalayas, such as the Indus and the Ganga whose waters depend on the melting of glaciers and snow, are essential to the food supply of hundreds of millions of people in the lower-lying areas.

Therefore, understanding the impact of climate change on the glaciers in upstream areas plus snowmelt and monsoon patterns is crucial.

Advances in glacier modelling 

“We are now using a more advanced glacier model that takes into consideration how slowly glaciers respond to climate change,” explains Immerzeel. “The key difference is that previous work by our group and other scientists showed that the extent to which precipitation in the western Himalayas increases with altitude is much greater than we previously thought. The computer model used for this research takes these new insights into consideration.”

To understand the impact of climate change on river discharge in the Himalayas, the researchers created computer models of the glacier movements and water balance in two watersheds that vary greatly with regard to the climate and size of the glaciers.

In the eastern watershed (Langtang in Nepal, where the Ganga has its source), the relatively smaller glaciers melt quite quickly, and the increased water discharge is a result of the increase in monsoon rains. The western watershed (Baltoro in Pakistan, where the Indus has its source), on the other hand, is dryer and colder and has much larger glaciers. The increase in discharge in the basin there is due to increased glacial melting.

According to the study, glacial melting will hit the peak somewhere around 2070 and the glacial discharge will start to drop. However, at that time too the increase in precipitation will compensate for this, as a result of which the annual discharge from the river basin will increase again.

The researchers, however, emphasise that the results should be interpreted with caution.

“The research concerns two basins, and while the models are representative they only relate to a small area of the Himalayas,” says Glaciologist Francesca Pellicciotti of ETH Zürich, a science and technology university in Switzerland and also a visiting scientist at ICIMOD. “Furthermore, we concentrated on the impact on average discharge, rather than extremes.”

The Regional Programme Manager at ICIMOD, Arun Shrestha, says the results very much depend on the climate scenarios used for the analysis and available scenarios have high uncertainties in projecting monsoon precipitation but do provide scope for improvement in the future.

Director General of ICIMOD, David Molden, says this important research challenges perception of the impact on climate change on water resources. “However much work remains, including better understanding of changes in monsoon patterns and snowmelt, and resulting variability in river flows, including low flows and flood peaks.”

Read more about the study: ‘Rising river flows throughout the twenty-first century in two Himalayan glacierized watersheds’, Nature Geoscience, by Walter Immerzeel, Francesca Pellicciotti, and M.F.P. Bierkens.

An earlier version of this blog was published by ICIMOD.

 

Comments (3)

After founding myself in dilemma that i should take it as good or bad news…i take it as a good news. i wonder what could be the further unexpected consequences of global warming. Its sad that there is no awareness and no quality research are taking place in Indian subcontinent on environmental issues.

This is some good news. However, not to forget that in the past, critics have cited ‘Albedo effect’ and ‘Island effect’ to negate the negate the findings of such researches thus putting the actual effect of global warming under a big question mar. hope this is error free

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