Himalayan glaciers are melting fast and may disappear within decades, affecting as many as 750 million people downstream who depend on the glacial melt for their water, according to a new UN report.
Rivers in the region such as the Ganga, the Indus and the Brahmaputra, as well as others criss-crossing northern India may soon become seasonal rivers - a development that has ramifications for poverty and the economies in the region, warns the report released by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP).
On the Indian subcontinent, the report said, people in the Himalaya and
The trend in the
The average glacier shrank 1.4 meters in 2006, compared to half a meter in 2005 and 0.3 meters in the eighties and the nineties.
Some of the most dramatic shrinking has taken place in Europe, with
It has been tracking the fate of glaciers for over a century.” The latest figures are part of what appears to be an accelerating trend with no apparent end in sight.” Millions if not billions of people depend directly or indirectly on these natural water storage facilities for drinking water, agriculture, industry and power generation during key parts of the year."
A two degree Celsius warming by the 2040s is likely to lead to sharply reduced summer flows in most rivers fed by glaciers, which will coincide with sharply rising demand for water.
