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'Calamity is coming' as Pakistan struggles with climate change

ghazi52

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'Calamity is coming' as Pakistan struggles with climate change


KARACHI: The sprawling megacity lies crumbling, desiccated by another deadly heatwave, its millions of inhabitants suffering life-threatening water shortages and unable to buy bread that has become too expensive to eat.

It sounds like the stuff of dystopian fiction but it could be the reality Pakistan is facing.

With melting glaciers and a surging population — Pakistan's climate change time bomb is already ticking.



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A general view of Passu glacier is seen in Pakistan's Gojal Valley. — AFP

In a nation facing violence and an unprecedented energy shortage slowing economic growth, the environment is a subject little discussed.

But the warning signs are there ─ including catastrophic floods which displaced millions, and a deadly heatwave this summer in Karachi which killed 1,200 people.

Three of the world's most spectacular mountain ranges intersect in the north of Pakistan: the Himalayas, the Hindu Khush and the Karakoram, forming the largest reservoir of ice outside the poles.



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A Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) employee overlooks the Passu glacier in the Gojal Valley. — AFP

The mountain glaciers feed into the Indus River and its tributaries to irrigate the rest of the country, winding through the breadbasket of central Punjab and stretching south to finally merge with the Arabian Sea near Karachi.

The future of Pakistan, whose population the United Nations predicts will surge past 300 million people by 2050, can be read in part by the melting of glaciers like Passu, at the gateway to China.

From its magnificent rocky slopes, the glacial melt is obvious.



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A Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) employee takes observations at a glacier monitoring station, set at an elevation of 4,500 meters, at the 26km-long Passu glacier in the Gojal Valley. — AFP


"When we would come here 25 years ago, the glacier reached that rock up there," explains Javed Akhtar, indicating an area some 500 metres from the tip of the ice.

Akhtar, his face bronzed by the sun, is a villager who has been employed by a team of glaciologists measuring the impact of climate change.



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A Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) employee takes observations at a glacier monitoring station, set at an elevation of 4,500 meters, at the 26km-long Passu glacier in the Gojal Valley. — AFP


Temperatures in northern Pakistan have increased by 1.9 degrees Celsius in the past century, authorities say, causing "glof" — glacial lake outburst floods, where the dams of such lakes abruptly rupture, sending water cascading down the slopes. Today, thirty glacial lakes are under observation in the north.

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), such mass loss of water is "projected to accelerate throughout the 21st century, reducing water availability, hydropower potential, and changing seasonality of flows in regions supplied by meltwater from major mountain ranges".



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Pakistani residents board boats used to cross Attabad Lake, which was formed following a landslide in January 2010, in Pakistan's Gojal Valley. — AFP


Most of the country is fed by the lush, fertile plains of one such region: Punjab.

The breadbasket
Despite its growing population, Pakistan remains self-sufficient in agricultural terms, largely thanks to the rich Punjabi soil.

But in recent years the province has seen unprecedented, deadly floods that wipe out millions of acres of prime farmland.



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Boats are moored in Attabad Lake, which was formed following a landslide in January 2010, in Pakistan's Gojal Valley. — AFP


The disasters are caused by monsoon rains, but are a bellwether for the havoc that melting glaciers could cause, with any variation in water levels threatening farmers' crops.

"When there is too much water it's not good for rice, and when there is not enough, that's also bad. And it's the same for wheat," says farmer Mohsin Ameen Chattha during a walk through his family land just outside of Lahore.

Surplus monsoon water is mostly stored in the country's two large reservoirs, the Tarbela and the Mangla dams — but, warns Ghulam Rasul, director general of the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD), the supply would hardly last 30 days. "That is not sufficient," he says.

Throughout the rest of the year, farmers rely on the rivers, primarily the glacier-fed Indus, to irrigate their land. For now, the production of rice and wheat is still rising.

But if the glaciers were to one day disappear, "we would be totally dependent on the monsoon. And already it varies," says Rasul. "All this has an impact on food security" for the country, he added.



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A Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) employee takes observations at a glacier monitoring station, set at an elevation of 4,500 meters, at the 26km-long Passu glacier in the Gojal Valley. — AFP
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Global Warming is a hoax pushed mostly by green companies with financial incentives.

Temperature on Earth is much more dependent on the behaviour of the sun. Earth has had global ice ages when CO2 levels in the atmosphere were x10 times higher than current day levels.
 
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In the future, we will have desalination plants along the sea purifying sea water and then pumping it through pipelines to the northern parts of Pakistan. The countries without the sea access like Afghanistan and Central Asian states will face greater threat. Pakistan would start building nuclear plants or solar plants in Balochistan to supply electricity to the desalination plants.

Global Warming is a hoax pushed mostly by green companies with financial incentives

Frame this and hang it on the wall. Call back in 25 years !
 
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Suprising how much water turns out from these Glaciers each year , that feeds all life around near by cities

Just imagine how much water is now stored in Antartica if that ever turns from ice to water
 
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Frame this and hang it on the wall. Call back in 25 years !

I use to think like this and blindly follow what others are saying, but empirical evidence has proven me wrong. Arctic ice is increasing.

NASA_Ice.jpg



GLOBAL COOLING: Decade long ice age predicted as sun 'hibernates' | Science | News | Daily Express

At first it was 'Global Warming' then it was 'Man-made Global Warming' now it is 'Climate Change'.

There is evidently not a very strong correlation between CO2 levels in the atmosphere and global temperatures. We have had had a number of mini ice-ages occur during the brief period of recorded human history, and have just recently come out of the last one, read about the Marauder minimum. UN still has not even given a CO2 PPM 'limit' to keep temperatures below a 2C increase nor a direct relationship between increase in atmospheric CO2 levels and temperature.

More and more evidence is showing that Earth temperatures are dependent on Solar cycles. This would perfectly explain why temperatures oscillate so frequently, seemingly independent of CO2 levels, and that there has not been a long period of time where temperatures on Earth remained the same, but rather always falling or increasing.

GLOBAL COOLING: Decade long ice age predicted as sun 'hibernates' | Science | News | Daily Express


The problem is that we have entered a state of McCarthyism or 'Red Scare' where everyone who doesn't agree with the hard-line green party stance is a 'anti-science fascist'. It is mired in political corruption and lobbying.
 
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