Our friend Kevin Hester is in Nepal at present on a trek up to Namche Bazaar and beyond.
He will be using this trip as an opportunity to observe and record changes since he was last there 30 years ago.
There is no doubt from some of the material I have been able to unearth (many thanks to Mike Ohlinger!) shows that, along with the Arctic, the Himalaya is one of the main centres for rapid climate change.
I look forward to further reports from Kevin and will be using this as an opportunity to focus on this part of the world
Kevin
Hester in Nepal
The view from the roof of the Gaju suite hotel. Clear
blue skies viewed through a heavy haze Photo - Kevin Hester
"Just
arrived in a chaotic,dusty, Kathmandu with the eye burning vapour of
two stroke vehicles mixed with dust and whatever else.
"Sat beside Soren Ledet of http://www.worldexpeditions.com/au/ as we flew past Mt Everest with not a cloud above it, in clear sight with the summit appearing almost ice free.Soren has had to abandon two summit attempts due to adverse weather conditions.
"What are the chances of ending up sitting beside a climber who has twice attempted to summit the highest mountain in the world?
not bad if your me.
"Once I sort the downloading of photos from my new digital SLR, I'll uplaod some shots.
Clear
skies overhead, a heavy haze down below where people are trying to
breathe. Yesterday my eyes were watering,my throat sore very quickly - Photo - Kevin Hester
".....Now
do you want the bad news? I went out for a walk and the pollution in
the city was appalling. My eyes started to burn immediately, they stunk of two-stroke and petrol. My throat was sore in minutes, it was
horrible.
This town already looks like it it is on the brink of
collapse."
Here are some of the resouces available on the cost of climat change in the Himalayas
Himalayas
count cost of damage from soot, methane and HFCs
Impact
of short lived pollutants likely to be felt across Indian
subcontinent as Himalayan melt accelerates
By
Kieran Cooke
RTCC,
13
March, 2013
They
are called short-lived climate pollutants (SLCPs), but they play a
significant role in global warming, as well as leading to serious
health problems.
Although
they exist for far shorter time spans in the atmosphere than CO2, the
SLCPs can cause serious changes in climate in that time, particularly
in urban areas or in highly climate-sensitive zones such as the polar
regions and major mountain ranges.
The
SLCPs − which include methane, black carbon or soot, and coolant
gases known as HFCs − are particularly prevalent in some of the
world’s poorest regions.
Firewood,
cow dung and other fuels, incompletely combusted on millions of
household fires, give rise to high levels of SLCPs − as does the
black soot and fumes belching from the exhaust pipes of hundreds of
thousands of trucks and buses.
The
smoke and fumes originating from small industrial concerns, such as
brick factories, also contain high levels of black carbon.
This
pollution is swept by the winds up onto high mountain ranges, falling
on the snow and glaciers and darkening the surface. Losing its
ability to reflect the sun’s heat, the surface warms and a process
of melting is set in motion.
The
Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC) − initiated by the
governments of Bangladesh, Canada, Ghana, Mexico, Sweden and the US,
and the United Nations Environment Programme, and also comprising
private sector groups and environmental organisations − was formed
three years ago with the aim of curtailing SLCP emissions.
Water
crisis
At
a recent meeting in Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, delegates were
told that climate change was happening faster and in a dramatically
more visible manner in the Earth’s cryosphere – the regions of
ice and snow – than anywhere else on earth.
The
consequences of increased melting in the Himalaya-Hindu Kush region
are particularly serious.
According
to the Kathmandu-based International Centre for Integrated Mountain
Development, the area’s mountains store nearly 10% of the world’s
freshwater.
And
many millions of people across one of the planet’s most densely
populated regions are dependent on mountain waters for agriculture
and other purposes.
The
CCAC is launching a series of schemes to combat SLCPs, including
giving funds to city authorities for soot-free bus fleets and
programmes to encourage less polluting agricultural practices.
“Our
work will contribute to the pathway of limiting global warming to
2˚C, harness health, food and energy benefits, and spur sustainable
development,” says Hanne Bjurstroem, Norway’s special envoy for
climate change, and a co-chair of CCAC.
The
SLCPs are also a serious health hazard. According to the World Health
Organisation (WHO), more than four million people die prematurely
each year as a result of household air pollution.
The
WHO estimates that 2.8 billion people cook and heat their homes by
burning coal and biomass – wood, dung, crop wastes and other solid
fuels – on open fires or basic stoves.
Cancer-causing
Fumes
from these fires contain minute levels of toxic substances, such as
carbon monoxide, nitrous and sulphur dioxides and formaldehyde. They
often also contain particles of cancer-causing substances that can
penetrate deep into the lungs.
Women
and children, who spend most time in the home, are particularly
vulnerable. More than 50% of premature deaths among children under
five around the world, the WHO says, are due to pneumonia caused by
particulate matter (soot) inhaled from household air pollution.
Solving
the problem of SLCPs caused by household fires and other sources is
not easy, but progress is being made in some areas.
In
Nepal, the government says it is aiming for big cuts in SLCPs through
various programmes, including the mass introduction of improved
cooking stoves. The goal, it says, is to make Nepal free of indoor
pollution by 2017.
For
a blog on Black Ice in the Himalaya GO
HERE
As
the climate continues to change, it is important, now more than ever,
to quantify what is happening to the glaciers of the Himalaya.
“Boots on the ground” research approaches in Nepal serve as
invaluable ways to gather data in high-resolution and in real-time.
Partnerships with the local communities, trekking and mountain
guides, and other researchers are crucial to obtaining data that
inform and inspire.
Black
Ice consists of a small team of scientists and Sherpas who work
together on Nepal’s glaciers and mountains. Much focus has been on
Ngozumpa glacier, which is an 18-kilometer “river of ice” riddled
with supraglacial lakes. These effectively eat away at the glacier
from above and below. Black Ice studies these lakes and their
behavior through time lapse photography and in-situ field research.
Recently,
we have expanded our knowledge base to the other ends of glaciers –
the accumulation zones, where glaciers grow. As dust and black
carbon (soot) deposits on snow and ice up high, this leads to
enhanced melting (due to the particles’ darker colors and ability
to absorb more solar radiation) and, thus, diminished glacier growth.
This spring (2014), we will be studying these impacts first-hand
in the Western Cwm of Mt. Everest.
To
see the Cryosphere Knowledge Hub GO
HERE
The
Hindu Kush Himalayan region contains the world’s largest reserve of
ice and snow outside the polar regions, and so is sometimes dubbed
“The Third Pole”.
Monitoring is needed to understand the effects
of climate change and its impact on water reяources.
A
film made by the Nepali government 6 years ago
Impact
of Climate Change in the Himalayas (2009)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.