Srinagar, Dec 10 (KNO): The Union Government on Wednesday said it is monitoring glaciers in Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh through multiple national programmes to study the effects of climate change on the Himalayan region.
Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Science and Technology and Earth Sciences, Dr Jitendra Singh, as per the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), said the Ministry of Earth Sciences, through the National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research (NCPOR), has been monitoring Himalayan glaciers under the Cryosphere and Climate programme, a component of the PACER sub-scheme.
NCPOR has been monitoring representative glaciers in the western and eastern Himalaya to understand glacial responses to climate change and their impact on downstream hydrology.
Dr Singh said the Department of Science and Technology has supported several research and development projects on Himalayan glaciers under the National Mission for Sustaining Himalayan Ecosystem and the National Mission on Strategic Knowledge for Climate Change.
The National Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOF) Risk Mitigation Programme, implemented by the NDMA in four states and the Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh, aims to establish Early Warning Systems to strengthen GLOF response.
The government said several Indian institutions and universities monitor Himalayan glaciers for studies, including glacier retreat and mass loss. The mean retreat rate of Hindu Kush Himalayan glaciers is 14.9 ± 15.1 metres per annum, with retreat rates varying across river basins.
NCPOR has been monitoring six glaciers in the Chandra basin in the western Himalaya since 2013, and field research is conducted through the ‘Himansh’ station.
Data shows the basin has lost about 6 per cent of its glacial area over 20 years. Annual retreat rates in the basin range from 13 to 33 metres.
The Union Minister further said more than 20 national institutions and state universities conduct glacier research, including the National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research, Geological Survey of India, Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, National Institute of Hydrology, National Remote Sensing Centre, Divecha Centre for Climate Change, and universities in Delhi, Kashmir, Jammu, Ladakh, and several Indian Institutes of Technology.
Two glacial lakes in Sikkim — South Lhonak and Shako Cho — are monitored in real time.
Three Centres of Excellence for Glacial Studies were established at the Universities of Sikkim, Tezpur and Kashmir under programmes of the Department of Science and Technology.
On the ground, the retreat of glaciers such as Kolahoi is already reshaping ecosystems and livelihoods.
Once a major source of irrigation for rice paddies, apple orchards, saffron fields, and grazing lands, Kolahoi has thinned significantly, exposing bare rock and altering alpine habitats.
Scientists report that species such as musk deer, Himalayan ibex, and Hangul face shrinking habitats, while predators like snow leopards are increasingly spotted near villages.
Dr Shakeel Ahmad Romshoo, a renowned geologist and VC of IUST, said the glacier loses about 0.65 metres of ice thickness for every 1°C rise, reducing autumn streamflow and threatening water security downstream.
Historical data show Kolahoi has lost nearly a quarter of its area over six decades, with ongoing pollution, deforestation, and rising temperatures accelerating melt.
Experts warn that continued retreat could reshape agriculture, biodiversity, and human settlements across Kashmir, while glacial lake outburst floods pose an additional hazard—(KNO)