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Can artificial glaciers help with water shortages?

Alistair Walsh
07/05/2024 09:35:00
A cafe in an artificial glacier or stupa in India Ciril Jazbec for National Geographic/AP Photo/picture alliance

About 1.9 billion people around the world rely on glaciers and snowpacks as a source of drinking water.

As glaciers undergo a normal process of melting during the year's warmer months, they steadily pour vast quantities of water into rivers, sustaining humans, industry, and ecosystems. But to be able to do this, glaciers have to replenish at a similar rate during winter months when snow falls.

Yet as global temperatures rise and rainfall patterns change, the system has been thrown off. Now the world's glaciers are shrinking by 1.2 trillion tons of ice a year. Even if humanity can limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit), half of the world's mountain glaciers could disappear by 2100.

One of the world's most vulnerable areas is the Indus basin, which provides water to at least 250 million people in Afghanistan, China, India, and Pakistan.

But one group in the Himalayas, the Students' Educational and Cultural Movement of Ladakh (SECMOL), says it has found a solution — growing artificial glaciers.

What is an artificial glacier?

Stories of artificial glaciers go back to at least the 13th century AD, when according to legend, the residents of modern-day Pakistan seeded glaciers in key mountain passes to block the approach of Genghis Khan's marauding army. For centuries, communities in the Hindu Kush and Karakoram mountain ranges have created rudimentary glaciers to strengthen water supplies.

More recently in the 1990s, as glaciers retreated further up the mountains in India's cold desert mountain region of Ladakh, important meltwater started arriving later in the growing season, causing problems for water-sensitive staple crops. In response, local engineers started creating artificial glaciers that would counter water shortages by melting earlier and more reliably.

One of the techniques used required the construction of a series of cascades on perennial rivers to allow ice to accumulate on the exposed surfaces. Large streams can also be diverted into smaller streams that are shaded by mountains and then freeze over. Another option is to build massive basins and fill them up in fall to slowly freeze. The Himalayan city of Leh relies on one of these.

Ice stupas provide water during critical sowing periods for farmers Ciril Jazbec for National Geographic/AP Photo/picture alliance

When the stored ice melts, they provide an important water source for farmers in the sowing months of April and May, before the rivers start fully flowing again in June.

However, these approaches can be unreliable due to susceptibility to flash floods, landslides, erosion, and sedimentation. Reconstruction efforts after such problems can be enormously taxing for villagers, and often coincide with labor demands for agriculture.

To address these concerns, a new technique was developed — the ice stupa, a large cone of ice that looks vaguely like Buddhist ceremonial burial mounds called stupas. Hence the name.

During the wet season, a gravity-fed underground pipe brings water from high-altitude streams down the valley. There it is sprayed into a vertical fountain at night, allowing the water to refreeze over a cone-shaped base. Stupas are built next to villages and are less prone to melting due to their low surface area.

Looming floods - Passu village in the Hindu Kush-Himalayan region is in great danger. As glaciers in the Karakoram mountain range melt, new lakes have started to form and expand. Eventually, they burst their banks, sending torrents of water roaring down into the valley below. In 2008, one such tidal wave smashed into Passu. Since then, an early warning system has been set up to protect residents. AKHTAR SOOMRO/REUTERS
Disappearing glaciers - With temperatures rising due to climate change, glaciers in the Karakoram mountain range are vanishing. This is one of the highest mountain ranges in world, and includes the world's second tallest mountain, the K2, as well as the Broad Peak, Gasherbrum I and Gasherbrum II mountains — all which top 8,000 meters (over 26,200 feet). The range extends across northern Pakistan, India and western China. Pawel Opaska/picture alliance
Preparing for the worst - Tariq Jamil, 51, heads the UN-backed disaster risk management center in Hassanabad village, which monitors the glacier in the Hunza Valley. It's difficult to predict if and when glacial lakes might overflow. Even so, Jamil and his team have drawn up evacuation plans and are working on an early warning system, like in Passu. AKHTAR SOOMRO/REUTERS
Total destruction - Zahra Ramzan's life was upended when a glacial lake overflowed last year, sending a torrent of black water through Chalt village. The flood destroyed farmland, swept away bridges and buildings and Ramzan's 11-year-old son, Ali Mohammad. "I'm in very deep grief. I could not see my son again, even a body," she told the Reuters news agency, holding a photo of her son (Ali pictured left). AKHTAR SOOMRO/REUTERS
Funds needed - Every summer, Tariq Jamil and his team of 23 consult with external experts and advisers as they look to raise funds to extend their flood barrier. They are also seeking interest-free loans to rebuild destroyed houses, and establish better mobile phone reception in the area. AKHTAR SOOMRO/REUTERS
Glacier loss 'largely irreversible' - Himalayan glaciers are on track to lose up to 75% of their ice by 2100 due to global warming, changes the International Center for Integrated Mountain Development have said are "largely irreversible." More than 200 glacial lakes are considered dangerous. And the UN has estimated that at least $200 billion (€185 billion) will be needed every year for post-disaster and reconstruction efforts. AKHTAR SOOMRO/REUTERS
Stay, or move way? - Jamil's family is thinking about leaving the area for good. "If the flood cuts us off, we will miss the nature of this village, our neighbors and relatives," said his 15-year-old daughter Tehzeeb. While Jamil is open to leaving before disaster, he would prefer to stay and help boost flood defenses in his home. "It's my responsibility to prevent the community from [facing] any disaster," he said. AKHTAR SOOMRO/REUTERS

The large mounds of ice survive long after the surrounding area has melted, slowly releasing water over the spring and summer months.

The technique has since been adopted globally, with stupas popping up in Kyrgyzstan, Chile, Mongolia and other countries where they have proven to help villages with water supplies.

To what extent can artificial glaciers prevent water scarcity?

Because human-caused climate change is reducing snowfall in the mountains, the total amount of available water in those environments is not what it once was. Ice stupas can do nothing to remedy this. And scientists say as the world heats up, these artificial glaciers will ultimately suffer the same fate as their natural cousins.

A 2018 review of various ice reservoir projects found they could be helpful in specific local contexts but were a questionable solution to the overall problem of melting glaciers due to climatic variability, natural hazards, and socioeconomic issues.

Some communities in the European Alps have started covering glaciers in blankets over summer Filippo Venezia/ANSA/ZUMA Press Wire/picture alliance

The Ladakh projects have also suffered some backlash from villagers, who question the organization's right to draw water from the streams, as well as who gets to reap the benefits.

Proponents claim that the meltwater harvested would otherwise go to waste, but critics say the streams recharge springs that provide drinking water for the villages.

Are there other ways to prevent glaciers from receding?

Countries such as Switzerland and Italy have resorted to protecting their glaciers with giant blankets over summer. Another approach is to spray them with vast quantities of artificial snow to grow their size and reduce melting.

These both help, but only slow the inevitable. They also come with high price tags and heavy environmental tolls including plastic pollution and emissions from high energy use.

Experts agree that the most effective way to protect the world's cryosphere is by limiting climate change. And the best way to do that is to stop burning fossil fuels.

Edited by: Tamsin Walker

Sources:

Half of world's glaciers to 'disappear' with 1.5C of global warming, Carbon Brief, 2023 https://www.carbonbrief.org/half-of-worlds-glaciers-to-disappear-with-1-5c-of-global-warming/

Review article: Earth's ice imbalance, Copernicus, 2021 https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/15/233/2021/

Socio-hydrology of "artificial glaciers" in Ladakh, India: assessing adaptive strategies in a changing cryosphere, Regional Environmental Change, 2018 https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10113-018-1372-0

by DW UK