Ice-Capped Roof of World Turns to Desert
By Geoffrey Lean
The Independent UK
Sunday 07 May 2006
Scientists warn of ecological catastrophe across Asia as
glaciers melt and continent's great rivers dry up.
Global warming is rapidly melting the ice-bound roof of the
world, and turning it into desert, leading scientists have
revealed.
The Chinese Academy of Sciences - the country's top scientific
body - has announced that the glaciers of the Tibetan plateau
are vanishing so fast that they will be reduced by 50 per cent
every decade. Each year enough water permanently melts from them
to fill the entire Yellow River.
They added that the vast environmental changes brought about by
the process will increase droughts and sandstorms over the rest
of the country, and devastate many of the world's greatest
rivers, in what experts warn will be an "ecological
catastrophe."
The plateau, says the academy, has a staggering 46,298 glaciers,
covering almost 60,000 square miles. At an average height of
13,000 feet above sea level, they make up the largest area of
ice outside the polar regions, nearly a sixth of the world's
total.
The glaciers have been receding over the past four decades, as
the world has gradually warmed up, but the process has now
accelerated alarmingly. Average temperatures in Tibet have risen
by 2 degrees Fahrenheit over the past 20 years, causing the
glaciers to shrink by 7 per cent a year, which means that they
will halve every 10 years.
Prof Dong Guangrong, speaking for the academy - after a study
analysing data from 680 weather stations scattered across the
country - said that the rising temperatures would thaw out the
tundra of the plateau, turning it into desert.
He added: "The melting glaciers will ultimately trigger more
droughts, expand desertification and increase sand storms." The
water running off the plateau is increasing soil erosion and so
allowing the deserts to spread.
Sandstorms, blowing in from the degraded land, are already
plaguing the country. So far this year, 13 of them have hit
northern China, including Beijing. Three weeks ago one storm
swept across an eighth of the vast country and even reached
Korea and Japan. On the way, it dumped a mind-boggling 336,000
tons of dust on the capital, causing dangerous air pollution.
The rising temperatures are also endangering the newly built
world's highest railway, which is due to go into operation this
summer. They threaten to melt the permafrost under the tracks of
the £1.7bn Tibetan railway, constructed to link the area with
China's northwestern Qinghai province.
Perhaps worst of all, the melting threatens to disrupt water
supplies over much of Asia. Many of the continent's greatest
rivers - including the Yangtze, the Indus, the Ganges, the
Brahmaputra, the Mekong and the Yellow River - rise on the
plateau.
In China alone, 300 million people depend on water from the
glaciers for their survival. Yet the plateau is drying up,
threatening to escalate an already dire situation across the
country. Already 400 cities are short of water; in 100 of them -
including Beijing - the shortages are becoming critical.
Even hopes that the melting glaciers might provide a temporary
respite, by increasing the amount of water flowing off the
plateau - have been dashed. For most of the water is evaporating
before it reaches the people that need it - again because of the
rising temperatures brought by global warning.
Yao Tandong, head of the academy's Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
Research Institute, summed it up. "The full-scale glacier
shrinkage in the plateau regions will eventually lead to an
ecological catastrophe," he said.
http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/050806EA.shtml
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