HomeNewsIndiaHow an underground phenomenon triggered by global warming is damaging the Himalayas

How an underground phenomenon triggered by global warming is damaging the Himalayas

Scientists fear that the IPCC recommendation of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius may not be enough to stop the permafrost from thawing

June 18, 2022 / 15:28 IST
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Tehri, Uttarakhand. Dams and hydropower stations in these regions are at the risk of being damaged if the thawing of permafrost intensifies. Photo by India Water Portal/ Flickr.
Tehri, Uttarakhand. Dams and hydropower stations in these regions are at the risk of being damaged if the thawing of permafrost intensifies. Photo by India Water Portal/ Flickr.

-Permafrost thaw, one of the changes to the mountain cryosphere in the Himalayas, triggered by global warming is causing irreparable loss and damage to the valley. -Considered the largest terrestrial carbon sink on Earth, an estimate suggests that currently, permafrost is a reservoir of up to 1600 billion tons of carbon – that’s more than what the world’s soils store. -Scientists fear that the IPCC recommendation of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius may not be enough to stop the permafrost from thawing.

Arathi Menon 

It is late April 2022. At Namche Bazaar, a town in the Everest region of Nepal at an elevation of 3555 metres above sea level (m a.s.l), life, and business have not been the same since the COVID-19 outbreak. Located on the way to the Everest south base camp, this bustling market has seen reduced footfall because of the pandemic.

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Setbacks are not new to the residents of Namche Bazaar; however, the last two years seemed worse, admitted Dilkumari Rai from the Solu region of the Solukhumbu district, who runs a small Nepalese and Chinese eatery. “The business is not profitable,” she said.

The pandemic has added to the effects of constantly changing weather that worry the local communities. Avalanches, landslides, and unseasonal rains are becoming terrifyingly frequent.