<p>Garbage on the bank of Indus near Choglamsar in Ladakh [image by: Athar Parvaiz]</p>
icon/64x64/pollution Pollution

Photo essay: Tourists and trash at Pangong Lake

Popular Hindi movies have made the remote Pangong Lake in Ladakh a tourist attraction, and with tourists has come mountains of trash, bleeding into the Indus

The sparsely inhabited Leh district in the Indian state of Jammu & Kashmir has been one of the least polluted parts of the state. The famous water bodies of this high altitude cold desert, such as Indus River and Pangong Lake,  have faced little threat of pollution until recently.

But an enormous increase in tourism to this corner of the Himalayas has started to change this. Last year the region received a record number of tourists, with 277,255 people visiting Ladakh. This is more than double the entire population of Leh district.

The area around Pangong Lake in Ladakh was not popular among Indian tourists until Bollywood blockbusters 3 Idiots and Jab Tak Hai Jan were filmed there in 2009 and 2012. Today, thousands of tourists visit the lake often via the ecologically fragile Khardung La pass, which is over 5,300 metres above sea level. The Pangong lake straddles India and China, over 750 square kilometres, and is one of the largest lakes in the region.

75 year old Tsering Angdo has seen the number of tourists grow in recent years. In the past, only foreign tourists used to come to Leh. If there were any Indian tourists, he said, one could count them on fingers [image by Athar Parvaiz]
Pangong Lake
Pangong Lake, with its shimmering blue waters spread over 125 kilometres, has become immensely popular with Indian tourists since Bollywood movies 3 Idiots and Jab Tak hai Jan were filmed in and around the lake in 2009 and 2012.  [image by: Athar Parvaiz]
Pangong Lake tourists
According to Leh officials over 600 vehicles go to Pangong Lake every day. Many of these vehicles go right up to the Lake shore although a sign cautions tourists that this is forbidden. [image by Athar Parvaiz]
Pangong Lake litter
Plastic waste littering a ridge near Khardung La pass, where tourists pass through to Nubra Valley and Pangong Lake [image by Athar Parvaiz]
bird flying over Pangong Lake
A Brown headed gul flying over Pangong Lake [image by: Athar Parvaiz]
litter at Pangong Lake
Solid waste lying at a large dump site, Bomgard, near Leh town. Locals said that waste often gets carried away by the wind and some of it ends up in the Indus [image by Athar Parvaiz]
Waste from restaurants, hotels and households is collected every morning from the markets of Leh town to keep it clean. But this waste is dumped in the open without any treatment. Authorities in Leh said they are in the process of putting a mechanism in place to treat waste. [image by Athar Parvaiz]
A boy crossing a small channel containing sewage which drains into the Indus near Choglamsar in Leh [image by Athar Parvaiz]
Many cafes and restaurants have been built quite close to the lake. Environmental activists and nature lovers in Leh said that there has been no planning permission for these buildings. But officials of district administration in Leh said that they will now create a 100 metre buffer between the lake and the cafes [image by Athar Parvaiz]
Three young boys trying to act like the title characters in the movie “3 Idiots” [image by Athar Parvaiz]
A poster of the movie “3 Idiots”. The posters have helped popularise Pangong Lake for Indian tourists who now throng to the place in hordes [image by Athar Parvaiz]
Two tourists near a poster of the movie “Jab Tak Hai Jan” [image by Athar Parvaiz]