Experts
explore reasons for glacier collapses in Tibet
Last
year, two glaciers collapsed in quick succession. Experts studying
the events on the ground and with satellite imagery say they may have
been caused by climate change
17
August, 2017
On
July 17 2016, in a remote region of central Tibet, the Dongru glacier
collapsed. Around 77.6 million cubic metres of ice, spread over 9.5
square kilometres and weighing seven million tonnes, detached from
the glacier and crashed into a lake below. The ice that detached made
up half of the entire glacier, and it collapsed within minutes. The
waters of the lake were pushed 250 metres away from the shore as the
falling ice created a wave nine metres tall. A mark from the wave is
still visible.
Experts
from the Institute
of Tibetan Plateau Research (ITPR)
– part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences – had just started to
examine this extraordinary glacier collapse when a second
occurred. On September 21 2016, a large part of the Aru glacier
– also in central Tibet – collapsed. This time, 72 .8 million
cubic metres of ice crashed down the mountain slope — almost 6.7
million tonnes of ice.
The
glaciers are located in areas without any permanent human habitation;
there are only nomadic herders and, sometimes, scientists in their
monitoring stations. As a result, these extraordinary events
have gone largely unnoticed, though they have been noted with great
concern by glaciologists around the world. Experts from the ITPR who
are studying the events on the ground and with satellite imagery, say
that the collapses may have been caused by climate change. But
glaciology experts from outside of China are more definitive – the
collapses were definitely caused by climate change, they say.
“If
these [collapses] were due to climate change, then they may not be
the last disasters, but rather a sign of the start of a new type of
glacier hazard. This is what worries glaciologists the most,” said
Tian Lide of ITPR to a group of Chinese and Indian journalists at
a recent Indus Basin media forum, organised by the International
Water Management Institute and thethirdpole.net.
Iceberg
on a mountain slope. One of the many chunks of ice left scattered as
one of the glaciers collapsed. (Image courtesy: Tian Lide, ITPR)
If
the ice that crashed down from the Aru glacier collapse had fallen
into the stream at the bottom of the valley, it would have dammed the
stream, creating a potential flash flood hazard, Tian
warned. “Glacier monitoring work is necessary and an early
warning system is urgent to diminish the damage caused by glacier
hazards,” he dded.
The
ITPR has a network of five permanent monitoring stations – in
Muztagata, Ngari and Namco glaciers, in the Everest region, and in
southeastern Tibet. What scientists are finding everywhere is that
glaciers are melting faster. But the melting rate is not uniform
– the further east one goes, the faster glaciers melt. Those in the
Himalayas are melting fastest, the ones in Pamir the slowest.
Faster
glacial melt is one of the most worrying consequences of climate
change because it impacts water availability in the rivers downstream
– including rivers such as the Indus, the Ganga and the Brahmaputra
on which more than one billion people depend for their daily
needs and livelihoods.
That
is also why glacier retreat data is often contested. Scientists now
agree that the most authentic way to measure glacier retreat is by
“mass balance”, monitoring the actual mass of ice in a glacier
over the years. It is also the most difficult way to monitor a
glacier because it cannot be done through satellite imagery alone –
scientists must travel to various points on the glacier again
and again to get the depth of the ice so that they can calculate the
mass.
Accumulated
glacier mass balance for 11 glaciers from 2006 to 2010 (Graph
courtesy: Tian Lide, ITPR)
Scientists
from the ITPR have been calculating the mass balance of 11 glaciers
in Tibet since 2006 and have found that 10 are in retreat. The data
for 2006 to 2010 has appeared in peer-reviewed academic journal.
The
results of the faster melt are there for all to see: expanding lakes,
inundated grasslands, floods, and a desert left behind when the water
flows away. The ITPR scientists have found that throughout Tibet the
number and sizes of lakes have increased dramatically since
1970. Policymakers are already worried about the consequences of
glacier retreat. The collapse of large parts of glaciers takes that
threat to a new level.
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