HomeNewsEnvironmentSikkim flash flood | What melting Himalayan glaciers mean for India and the local ecology

Sikkim flash flood | What melting Himalayan glaciers mean for India and the local ecology

The deadly flash flood in Sikkim on October 4, 2023, has brought back into focus the region’s extreme vulnerability to climate change.

October 14, 2023 / 16:53 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Tsomgo, a glacial lake in Sikkim. The Central Himalayas, of which Sikkim is a part, have been most impacted by glacier loss. (Photo by Shiv's Fotografia via Wikimedia Commons)
Tsomgo, a glacial lake in Sikkim. The Central Himalayas, of which Sikkim is a part, have been most impacted by glacier loss. (Photo by Shiv's Fotografia via Wikimedia Commons)

Earlier this month, a flash flood in Sikkim killed at least 34 people, swept away bridges and roads, and damaged the state’s largest hydropower project, the 1.2 GW Teesta-III. Images released by the Indian Space Research Organisation confirmed that it was triggered by a combination of glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) and excess rainfall.

The disaster once again highlighted the growing risk of GLOFs in the Himalayas. South Lhonak lake, the site of the GLOF in Sikkim, was already recognized as potentially hazardous. Scientists at the National Remote Sensing Centre had warned of a 42 percent chance of a GLOF in as early as 2013.

Story continues below Advertisement

The Himalayan region has witnessed similar GLOF-related disasters in the past. A Nature report cites the 1926 Jammu and Kashmir deluge, the 1981 Kinnaur valley floods, and the 2013 Kedarnath outburst as examples.