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Reuters
Reuters
Environment
Emma Farge and Cecile Montovani

World unprepared for impact of climate change on mountain water supplies: experts

FILE PHOTO: Seracs are pictured at the Bossons glacier in the Mont-Blanc massif on a sunny autumn day in Chamonix, France October 8, 2019. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo

GENEVA (Reuters) - The world faces increased flooding, droughts and possible conflicts due to the effects of climate change on fresh water supplies drawn from mountains but is "woefully unprepared" to tackle these risks, experts said.

Mountain-sourced water supplies, which provide about half of all drinking water worldwide, is becoming more unpredictable as warmer temperatures melt glaciers and change precipitation patterns and river levels, affecting countries unevenly.

FILE PHOTO: People stand in front of the Ice Cave, covered with material to prevent the ice from melting, at the Rhone Glacier at the Furka, Switzerland, August 21, 2019. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo

In some areas, such as the Alps, extra water from glaciers has caused flash floods while shrinking snow cover in the Andes has led to droughts in places like Chile.

Scientists gathered for a "High Mountain Summit" at the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) in Geneva this week are seeking better cooperation between governments, researchers and space agencies.

"We are woefully underprepared. Our infrastructure was built in the 19th and 20th centuries in the mountains and downstream of the mountains and we don't have that climate any more," said John Pomeroy, a professor at Canada's University of Saskatchewan, who is co-chairing the event.

FILE PHOTO: The Glacier 3000 cable car is pictured at the Mario Botta arrival building beside the Zanfleuron Glacier in Les Diablerets, Switzerland, August 4, 2017. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo

Switzerland, the host country, estimates that damage to its infrastructure, including railways, caused by climate change could cost 1 billion Swiss francs ($1 billion) a year. But many poorer countries experiencing similar challenges are unlikely to have funds on that scale to fix problems.

"There are quite some gaps not only in the way our infrastructure has been designed but also the infrastructure we have in place to monitor for change," said Carolina Adler, executive director of the Mountain Research Initiative at the University of Bern who is the summit's other chair.

To cope with the effects of climate change on water systems, dams will have to be redesigned and irrigation systems overhauled, Pomeroy added.

FILE PHOTO: People enter the Ice Cave, covered with material to prevent the ice from melting, at the Rhone Glacier at the Furka, Switzerland, August 21, 2019. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo

SENSITIVE DATA

Unlike weather data, which U.N. member states have shared voluntarily with the WMO for decades, the pooling of data on water is in its infancy.

One challenge will be persuading governments to commit to share more information on hydrology. One official described this as "very sensitive", with some governments deeming this a question of national security.

Adler said cooperation was nonetheless required to avoid tensions -- such as those between India and Pakistan over water supplies after New Delhi released water from a dam in August -- and to avert conflict.

The summit is expected to create the Integrated High Mountain Observation and Prediction Project intended to help deal with hazards through early warning systems, according to a draft list of aims seen by Reuters.

It also urges greater collaboration between space agencies on satellite images of mountain areas.

"We may decide that some communities are located in inherently dangerous situations and need to be moved and migration may be part of this, so these are very serious considerations," said Pomeroy.

(Editing by Gareth Jones)

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