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Reuters
Reuters
Environment
Gopal Sharma

Thaw of Himalayas set to disrupt Asia's rivers, crops: study

FILE PHOTO: Trekkers and porters hike down the Baltoro glacier in the Karakoram mountain range in Pakistan September 7, 2014. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File Photo

(This February 4 story was corrected to remove incorrect reference to 1.5 meter sea-level rise in paragraph 7)

KATHMANDU (Reuters) - At least a third of the ice in the Himalayas and the Hindu Kush will thaw this century as temperatures rise, disrupting river flows vital for growing crops from China to India, scientists said on Monday.

FILE PHOTO: Farmers carry baskets filled with cucumbers through the waters of river Ganges at Phaphamau in the northern Indian city of Allahabad March 21, 2010. REUTERS/Jitendra Prakash/File Photo

Vast glaciers make the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) region - which is home to the world's highest peaks topped by Mount Everest and K2 - a "third pole" behind Antarctica and the Arctic region, they said.

"This is the climate crisis you haven't heard of," said Philippus Wester, who led the report.

"Global warming is on track to transform the frigid, glacier-covered mountain peaks of the HKH cutting across eight countries to bare rocks in a little less than a century," said Wester of the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD).

FILE PHOTO: Climbers walk towards their helicopter (not seen) after their Mount Everest expeditions were cancelled in Solukhumbu district April 27, 2014. REUTERS/Phurba Tenjing Sherpa/File Photo

The report, by 210 authors, said that more than a third of the ice in the region will melt by 2100 even if governments take tough action to limit global warming under the 2015 Paris climate agreement.

And two-thirds of the ice could vanish if governments fail to rein in greenhouse gas emissions this century. "To me this is the biggest worrying thing,” Wester told Reuters on the sidelines of an event to launch the report in Kathmandu.

Glaciers have thinned and retreated across most parts of the region since the 1970s. A melt would push up sea levels but ICIMOD said the exact amount was unknown.

FILE PHOTO: A woman walks past vegetable patches outside apartment blocks in the area known as Old Badong county next to the Yangtze River in Hubei Province near the town of Badong in central China November 5, 2007. REUTERS/David Gray/File Photo

MOUNTAIN CLIMATE HOTSPOTS

The region stretches 3,500 km (2,175 miles) across Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Myanmar, Nepal and Pakistan.

FILE PHOTO: A photographer walks past Mount Thamserku at Syangboche in Nepal December 3, 2009. REUTERS/Gopal Chitrakar/File Photo

The study said the thaw will disrupt rivers including the Yangtze, Mekong, Indus and Ganges, where farmers rely on glacier melt water in the dry season. About 250 million people live in the mountains and 1.65 billion people in river valleys below.

Changes in river flows could also harm hydropower production and cause more erosion and landslides in the mountains.

But more research is needed to gauge exactly how glaciers affect distant crops, said Wouter Buytaert, of Imperial College in London, who was not involved in the study.

"While glacier meltwater propagates downstream, it mixes with water from other sources such as direct rainfall, wetlands, and groundwater, up to a point where the impact of glacier melting may become negligible," he said.

The authors said that people living in small island states were often viewed as the most vulnerable to climate change because of rising sea levels.

"It's not just occupants of the world's islands that are suffering," said Dasho Rinzin Dorji, an ICIMOD board member from Bhutan. He said in a statement that mountain regions were also extremely vulnerable as "climate hotspots".

(Writing by Alister Doyle; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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