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Tuesday, May 21, 2024

World’s ‘rooftops’ caving in because of climate change

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UN Secretary-General António Guterres last week called on the world to “stop the madness” of climate change as he visited the Everest region in Nepal where melting glaciers are putting entire communities at risk of extinction.

Nepal has lost almost a third of its ice volume in 30 years, with glaciers melting 65 percent faster in the last decade than in the previous one.

“The rooftops of the world are caving in,” the UN chief said, warning that the “disappearance of glaciers altogether” looms even larger.

“Glaciers are icy reservoirs—the ones here in the Himalayas supply fresh water to well over a billion people. When they shrink, so do river flows,” he added.

Glaciers high in the Himalayas feed large river systems and sustain crops, livestock and local economies in a region that is home to over 1.8 billion people.

However, with rising global temperatures on the back of climate change, glacial snow ice compressed over centuries is melting faster than ever—not only in the Himalayas, but also in crucial areas such as Antarctica and Greenland.

Guterres warned that in the future, major Himalayan rivers like the Indus, the Ganges and Brahmaputra, could have massively reduced flows and in combination with saltwater, decimate delta regions.

“That spells catastrophe: Low-lying countries and communities erased forever,” he said.

Guterres said his mission to the Everest region was to “cry out from the rooftop of the world.”

“Stop the madness,” he said, underscoring the need to end the age of fossil fuel to protect people on the frontlines of climate change induced destruction.

“We must act now to… limit global temperature rise to 1.5°C, to avert the worst of climate chaos. The world can’t wait,” he warned.

The UN chief is on an official visit to Nepal at the invitation of the government.  UN News

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