Tibet's Warming Provides Global Warning

authordefault
onJul 25, 2007 @ 17:32 PDT

While it’s impossible to attach a current economic value, Tibet’s most important export arguably is water. Twenty per cent of the world’s population depend for fresh water on one of four great rivers that originate on the Tibetanย plateau.

Given that fact, the world should be concerned that, as New Scientist magazine reported this week: โ€œThe Tibetan plateau is heating up by 0.3ยฐC each decade, more than twice the worldwide average, according to a new study from the Tibet Meteorologicalย Bureauโ€

Where climate change is concerned, too many people have taken reassurance from the small numbers and long time frames that always seem to define global warming predictions: 0.3ยฐC each decade, forย example.

But if faster melting means that the torrential rivers that now burble out of Tibet’s great glaciers start to flow more quickly, the downstream devastation could be severe. And if those glaciers melt completely – as they are predicted to do by 2035 – there are huge risks that those rivers will slow, or dry up all together, in the hot summers on the Chinese and Indianย plains.

It’s time people stopped taking refuge in the climate change averages and start contemplating the likely results of the increasing climate extremes. That’s NOT an extremist position; it is modestly prudent – the least we should expect of the world’sย leaders.

authordefault
Admin's short bio, lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Voluptate maxime officiis sed aliquam! Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit.

Related Posts

onNov 25, 2025 @ 22:00 PST

The programme is โ€œyet another bung to industrial productionโ€, experts say.

The programme is โ€œyet another bung to industrial productionโ€, experts say.
Analysis
onNov 24, 2025 @ 09:00 PST

Critics say new LNG ventures in British Columbia saddle Indigenous communities with debt, opaque ownership structures, and financial risk that could leave them owing billions.

Critics say new LNG ventures in British Columbia saddle Indigenous communities with debt, opaque ownership structures, and financial risk that could leave them owing billions.
onNov 24, 2025 @ 07:38 PST

Campaigners have highlighted the irony of the Tory peer warning about threats to free speech at a think tank bankrolled by a repressive regime.

Campaigners have highlighted the irony of the Tory peer warning about threats to free speech at a think tank bankrolled by a repressive regime.
Analysis
onNov 21, 2025 @ 16:13 PST

Corporate pledges to fight deforestation by turning degraded pasture into cropland seen boosting demand for harmful chemical inputs.

Corporate pledges to fight deforestation by turning degraded pasture into cropland seen boosting demand for harmful chemical inputs.