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Mrudul Godbole
13-06-2010, 06:47 PM
Read this news on global warming.

Global warming spells doom for Asia's rivers


BEIJING: The livelihood of thousands of Tibetans living on China's highest plateau is under threat as global warming and environmental degradation dry up water sources for three mighty Asian rivers, experts say.

Dwindling glaciers and melting permafrost in the mountains surrounding the fragile Qinghai-Tibet plateau are leading to erosion of grasslands and wetlands, threatening the watershed of the Yangtze, Yellow and Mekong rivers.

One prominent US environmental campaigner has even warned that the looming water crisis could trigger a major regional food shortage, as the rivers help irrigate vast wheat fields and rice paddies in China and southeast Asia.

"The melting of the glaciers is a fairly serious phenomenon," Xin Yuanhong, a government scientist who headed a major environmental survey of the Yangtze source region, said.

"We expect that under current conditions, up to 30 percent of the glaciers in this region could disappear within 10 years. If global warming worsens, the glaciers will melt faster and the situation will worsen."

The region provides nearly half of the water volume of the Yellow River, 25 percent of the Yangtze's water and 15 percent of the Mekong, Southeast Asia's most important waterway.

Up to 580 million people live in the basins of the three rivers -- all major grain-producing areas that have been hit by serious droughts and falling water levels in the last few months.

In 2005, China launched a 7.5 billion yuan (1.1-billion-dollar) programme to arrest erosion in the source area, in what was described as the nation's biggest-ever ecological conservation project.

"As the permafrost melts, the land loses its capacity to absorb water," Xin said. "As more water runs off, there is more erosion, while the drier conditions allow for a rise in the rodent population, which further decimates the soil."

As part of the conservation effort about 20,000 Tibetan herdsmen had migrated off the grasslands and been resettled in permanent villages by the start of this year, the state Xinhua news agency has said. Grazing has been restricted, while more and more herds are being raised in enclosures.

For many Tibetan herdsmen, resettlement in villages has meant an end to a traditional nomadic life that goes back centuries.

About half of the 270,000 people in Yushu prefecture -- which covers most of the source area -- rely on herding or the livestock industry to make their livings, according to government sources and media reports.

Officials at a Yushu environmental protection association refused to comment when contacted, apparently due to the sensitivity of the issue.

Besides desertification and grassland shrinkage, the region's lakes and wetlands are also drying up, experts say.

"From 1976 to 2008, grassland marshes and swamplands have shrunk by over 32 percent" in the three river source area, Wang Genxu, a water expert at Qinghai's Institute of Mountain Hazards and the Environment, said.

"The area of lakes in the region has been reduced by 228 square kilometres (140 square miles), about 8.6 percent of the overall lakeland area," said Wang, whose institute is attached to the China Academy of Sciences.

At a regional summit in April, Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva warned that the Mekong was "threatened by serious problems arising from both the unsustainable use of water and the effects of climate change".

The Mekong "will not survive" without good management, he said.

Earlier this year, water on the so-called "Mighty Mekong" dropped to its lowest level in 50 years in northern Thailand and Laos, alarming communities who depend on the river for food, transport, drinking water and irrigation.

At the summit in the Thai resort town of Hua Hin, China denied its policies in the upper Mekong -- including the construction of dams and massive water use -- were to blame for lower water levels.

But prominent US environmentalist Lester Brown warned last week on a trip to Beijing that the situation could provoke a serious food crisis in Asia, severely curtailing crop growth in China and elsewhere.

"The melting of these mountain glaciers in the Himalayas and the Tibetan plateau represents the most massive projected threat to food security we have ever encountered," Brown said.

Link - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/environment/global-warming/Global-warming-spells-doom-for-Asias-rivers-/articleshow/6030990.cms

Sabyasachi Patra
16-06-2010, 02:09 PM
It is a sad reality. Many a civilisation has persished due to lack of water. It is said that water scarcity will stop the Indian economy from development. One can already see the water scarcity hitting our top cities. Residents of posh localities in Delhi have to buy water. One can imagine the impact in future.

The impact of global warming is already felt in ladakh where the villagers depend upon glacial melt.

Cheers,
Sabyasachi

Lakshminarayanan Nataraja
18-06-2010, 07:43 AM
Global warming in fact has very little destruction role to play as far as Indian rivers are concerned. Most of the rivers are already in great peril while several are already dead.

Sand mining, pollution, multipurpose projects, vanishing catchment areas, disappeared feeder rivers, loss of gallery forests etc - have already claimed most of our motherly rivers.

Rivers are now just a drain to carry surplus water during monsoon.

Mrudul Godbole
28-06-2010, 10:18 PM
Himalayan river basins to face acute water shortage
Singapore, June 28, (DPA):

Himalayan river basins in China, Bangladesh, India and Nepal will face a massive water depletion within 20 years, leading to a decline in food and mass migration, a research group warned on Monday.

Due to natural reasons like glacial melting, the four countries would lose almost 275 billion cubic metres of annual renewable water in the next two decades, more than the total amount of available water in Nepal at present, India-based Strategic Foresight Group said in a report.

"What we are looking at here is a major catastrophe ... going to happen in 20, 25 years," the group's president, Sundeep Waslekar, told a seminar at the Singapore International Water Week.

Water scarcity and effects like desertification and soil erosion would bring rice and wheat yields in China and India down by as much as 50 percent by 2050, the report said.
"China and India alone will need to import more than 200 to 300 million tonnes of wheat and rice," it said.

"This will create a havoc in the global food market ... for people everywhere, because the prices will go up substantially," Waslekar said.

Water depletion in the river basins would displace millions of people in the four countries by 2050, he said.

"We are looking towards a disaster of more than 100 million migrants," he said, "and conflicts within and between countries."

The report called for more cooperation between the four nations in the management of the river basins.

The basins of the rivers, including the Yellow River and the Yangtze in China and the Ganges in India, are home to 1.3 billion people.

Link -http://www.deccanherald.com/content/77968/himalayan-river-basins-face-acute.html