Chris Buckley PlanetArk 8 Dec 10;
Residents of the Himalayas and other mountain areas face a "tough and unpredictable future" as global warming melts glaciers and threatens worse floods and water loss, officials said during U.N. climate talks on Tuesday.
A study said that glaciers in southern Chile and Argentina, followed by ones in Alaska, had been losing mass "faster and for longer than glaciers in other parts of the world."
Negotiators at two-week talks in Cancun, a seaside resort in Mexico, have been seeking agreement on how to cut the greenhouse gases from fossil fuels, forest loss and land changes that are stoking global warming and threatening dangerous climate changes.
Tuesday's report, by the United Nations Environment Program, found that many people in vulnerable mountainside homes are already living with the growing risks of global warming and need more support to help them adapt to a changing landscape.
The melting of glaciers was triggering more frequent "glacial lake outburst floods," when masses of melted water burst through brittle rock barriers and inundating valleys below, said the report.
"People in the Himalayas must prepare for a tough and unpredictable future," said Erik Solheim, Norway's environment minister, in a statement accompanying the report.
"Global climate change has posed a serious threat to the Himalayan region. Countries are highly vulnerable to climate change, due to their vast dependence on water...originating in high mountains," said Madhav Karki, of the Nepal-based International Center for Integrated Mountain Development, at a news conference to release the report.
An earlier U.N. scientific panel's assessment of global warming was criticized for overstating the rate of melt of Himalayan glaciers and wrongly claiming they could all vanish by 2035.
The new report said the threat to glaciers was likely to unfold unevenly and over a longer time.
"In some regions, it is very likely that glaciers will largely disappear by the end of this century, whereas in others glacier cover will persist but in a reduced form for many centuries to come," it said.
Paradoxically, in parts of some mountain ranges, such as the Karakoram in Asia, glaciers have expanded, apparently due to increased snowfalls brought by the warmer, moister air caused by climate change, the report said.
It can be found on the U.N. Environment Program's website (www.unep.org).
(Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
Glaciers melting fastest in South America, Alaska: UN
Sophie Nicholson Yahoo News 7 Dec 10;
CANCUN, Mexico (AFP) – Glaciers are melting fastest in southern South America and Alaska and communities urgently need to adapt to the meltdown, according to a UN report released Tuesday.
Many low-lying glaciers may disappear over the coming decades, with the northwest United States, southwest Canada and the Arctic also affected, according to the report compiled by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and scientists, presented at UN climate talks in Cancun, Mexico.
Most glaciers -- which are formed by accumulations of snow and ice -- started shrinking around 150 years ago, but the rate of ice loss has increased significantly since the 1980s, the report said.
"Averaged over their entire areas, within the period 1960 to 2003 glaciers in Patagonia and Alaska have thinned by approximately 35 meters and 25 meters, respectively," it said.
Warmer temperatures due to climate change were a major factor in melting the glaciers. Another cause could be the deposit of soot, reducing the reflection of heat back into space, according to the report.
The changed glaciers alter rain patterns and reduce water in rivers as well as food supply to nearby communities.
"Adaptation is crucial and urgently needed to assist people who will be affected," said John Crump, UNEP polar issues coordinator, at a news conference.
Though glaciers are shrinking overall worldwide, high levels of rain have actually increased the size of others, including in western Norway and New Zealand's South Island, the report said.
And as glaciers melt, lakes can form and eventually burst, leading to flooding.
Such floods have increased in the past 40 years, from China to Chile, the report said.
Peru has siphoned off the water from lakes formed by melted glaciers while similar projects, which can be costly and technically challenging, have been tried by Nepal and Bhutan.
Norway on Tuesday pledged more than 12 million dollars to help one major region where glaciers are melting -- the Himalayas.
Madhav Karki, from the International Center for Integrated Mountain Development, pointed to aerial pictures of glaciers that he said were shrinking some five to 15 meters per year in the eastern Himalayas.
The five-year investment aims to help communities, mainly in India, Pakistan and China, to adapt to changes in the glaciers they depend on and investigate why they are happening, said Norwegian Environment Minister Erik Solheim.
"South Asia for me is probably the most vulnerable continent on the globe when it comes to climate change," he said. "Norway is at the opposite end of the spectrum."
More than 40 percent of the world?s floods takes place in Asia, and have affected nearly a billion people between 1999 and 2008, according to the UN.
Pakistan this year was ravaged by floods that covered the size of England, killing more than 1,700 people and affecting more than 21 million more.
Bangladeshi Environment Minister Hasan Mahmud expressed concern Tuesday over glacial melting affecting his delta country, which is ravaged annually by floods from the Himalayas.
"If for any reason this is exacerbated, this will have a devastating impact, beyond our imagination," Mahmud said.