After All That, The Himalayan Glaciers are Indeed Shrinking

authordefault
on

Remember the Himalayanย glaciers?

They were at the root of the most deserved black-eye to the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change during the intensely politicized period of 2009-2010. In so-called โ€œGlacierGate,โ€ it was revealed that the IPCC had published, in one of its reports, a truly bogus assertion that the Himalayan glaciers would be gone by the year 2035. As I reported at the time:

Not only is this business about 2035 anย exceedingly dubious assertion, but part of the error seems traceable to a simple typoโ€”an original source made predictions for the year 2350, not 2035. ย When doubts were raised about the passage, however, the IPCC failed to respond either quickly or well. IPCC chair Rajendra Pachauri evenย reportedly referredย to a November Indian government report that questioned the IPCCโ€™s findings about the glaciersโ€™ vulnerability as โ€œvoodoo science.โ€ Actually, the voodoo was all the IPCCโ€™s, but the U.N. body onlyย acknowledged its errorย several months after questions were first raised in the Indian report. โ€œIn drafting the paragraph in question, the clear and well-established standards of evidence, required by the IPCC procedures, were not applied properly,โ€ the IPCC coughed out on Januaryย 20.

Climate skeptics and deniers of course seized on โ€œGlacierGateโ€ to try to discredit the IPCC. In reality, while the group did indeed make an error, a little perspective is requiredโ€“this is one mistake in a vast 938 page report! What would be truly amazing would be for the IPCC not to make any mistakes when dealing with such a vast volume of scientificย material.

And anyways, while the IPCC did itself no credit with how it handled โ€œGlacierGate,โ€ the fact remains that the error was acknowledged, period. The story isย over.

In factโ€”and most importantโ€”most Himalayan glaciers are indeed retreating in a manner consistent with climate change (although certainly not at a rate suggesting theyโ€™ll be gone byย 2035).

Still, a comprehensive new study in Nature Climate Changeย (news report here) proves that glacial retreat is indeed underway. This a very big deal, of course, because the Tibetan plateau and the mountains surrounding itโ€“a region containing so much ice that it is often called the โ€œThird Poleโ€โ€“feed huge river bodies like the Indus, upon which a staggering number of peopleย depend.

As usual, the new study shows that the global warming trend affecting the region’s glaciers is superimposed atop regional climate variability. Or as the paper putsย it:

Here we report on the glacier status over the past 30 years by investigating the glacial retreat of 82 glaciers, area reduction of 7,090 glaciers and mass-balance change of 15 glaciers. Systematic differences in glacier status are apparent from region to region, with the most intensive shrinkage in the Himalayas (excluding the Karakorum) characterized by the greatest reduction in glacial length and area and the most negative mass balance. The shrinkage generally decreases from the Himalayas to the continental interior and is the least in the eastern Pamir, characterized by the least glacial retreat, area reduction and positive mass balance. In addition to rising temperature, decreased precipitation in the Himalayas and increasing precipitation in the eastern Pamir accompanied by different atmospheric circulation patterns is probably driving these systematicย differences.

Deniers may try to nitpick about the details here, as the glacial retreat isnโ€™t uniform across the Third Pole, and in some places glaciers are even increasing. But, of course, that would be missing the point. Nobody ever said to expect uniformity in how the world responds to climate change. Rather, scientists told us to expect predictions to be borne out by real world dataโ€“and once again, theyย are.

Moreover, letโ€™s think back to 2009-2010. We now know that โ€œClimateGateโ€ was a trumped up scandal, based on little more than misreading a few emails. And as for โ€œGlacierGateโ€: Well, here there was actually some substance. There was indeed a real IPCCย mistake.

But that doesnโ€™t detract from the big picture: Himalayan glaciers are retreating, and the cost to the region could beย severe.ย 

Can somebody remind me again what else the โ€œskepticsโ€ have to cling to? I’m sure it’sย something.

Related Posts

Analysis
on

The celebrity investor pitched โ€˜Wonder Valleyโ€™ with no committed investors, no Indigenous partnership, and about 27 megatonnes of projected annual emissions.

The celebrity investor pitched โ€˜Wonder Valleyโ€™ with no committed investors, no Indigenous partnership, and about 27 megatonnes of projected annual emissions.
on

City Council OKs private equity firmโ€™s purchase of Entergy gas utility, undermining climate goals and jacking up prices for the cityโ€™s poorest.

City Council OKs private equity firmโ€™s purchase of Entergy gas utility, undermining climate goals and jacking up prices for the cityโ€™s poorest.
on

With LNG export terminals already authorized to ship nearly half of U.S. natural gas abroad, DOE warns build-out would inflate utility bills nationwide.

With LNG export terminals already authorized to ship nearly half of U.S. natural gas abroad, DOE warns build-out would inflate utility bills nationwide.
Analysis
on

We reflect on a year of agenda-setting stories that charted the political influence of fossil fuel interests in the UK and beyond.

We reflect on a year of agenda-setting stories that charted the political influence of fossil fuel interests in the UK and beyond.