New reports identify impacts of climate change on world's highest mountains
DURBAN, SOUTH AFRICA -- Findings from the most comprehensive
assessment to date on climate change, snow and glacier melt in Asia's
mountainous Hindu Kush-Himalayan (HKH) region -- site of Mount Everest
and many of the world's tallest peaks -- highlight the region's extreme
vulnerability to climate change, as rising temperatures disturb the
balance of snow, ice and water, threatening millions of mountain people
and 1.3 billion people living downstream in Asia's major river basins.
The findings, published in three reports by the Kathmandu-based
International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), were
released today during Mountain Day, a convening of mountain experts,
policy makers, and climate change negotiators on the sidelines of UN
climate talks.
Sunday, December 4, 2011
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