Asia’s ‘water tower’ is in trouble, and Chinese scientists are sounding the 
alarm

Accelerated glacier melt on the Tibetan Plateau is threatening water quality 
for 2 billion people, Chinese researchers say

Scientists call for urgent joint research to determine impact on water quality 
from warmer temperatures

By Echo Xie   SCMP  11 Nov, 2022  
https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3199350/asias-water-tower-trouble-and-chinese-scientists-are-sounding-alarm



Global warming is slowly turning one of the world’s most important sources of 
fresh water into toxic mud, but scientists say they do not yet know how bad the 
problem is.

The Tibetan Plateau and its surrounding mountain regions, known in 
environmental circles as the “Asian water tower”, is the source of Asia’s 10 
major rivers, delivering water to almost 2 billion people – about a quarter of 
the world’s population.

But Chinese researchers have called for urgent action to improve the water 
quality in both the upstream and downstream areas of the region, which they 
believe will rapidly deteriorate as global temperatures rise.

In an article published in the journal Nature Reviews Earth & Environment on 
October 11, researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences said climate 
change would accelerate glacier melt, increasing upstream flows of sediments 
and other contaminants that will compromise water quality downstream.

They suggest better monitoring of the problem by creating a research network 
based on water quality data, as well as joint actions by upstream and 
downstream countries to mitigate the issue.

The Asian water tower is home to most glaciers outside the Arctic and 
Antarctica and is highly sensitive to climate change.

>From 1979 to 2020, the average temperature in the region increased by 0.44 
>degrees Celsius per decade – twice the global average rate, according to a 
>study published in the journal in June.


Most studies of the region have focused on water quantity, however water 
quality assessments are becoming increasingly important for local and 
downstream livelihoods, according to the researchers.

“The entire volume of water in the Asian water tower will increase under 
climate change and chemicals in the water will be carried to the downstream 
rivers, but not much attention has been paid to this area,” said a co-author of 
the study in an interview with the Post on Friday.

According to the study, global warming has caused glacier melt and permafrost 
thawing in the region. As a result, sediment fluxes (the flows caused by 
melting) in the headwaters have increased during the past six decades.

The total sediment flux in the Asian water tower is projected to more than 
double by 2050 under an extreme climate change scenario, according to a study 
published in Science in October 2021.

Along with changes in water volume, upstream water brings chemicals, including 
arsenic, calcium and magnesium, to downstream rivers, according to the authors.

As a result, downstream water quality will not only be increasingly impacted by 
human activities and climate change, but also by the changes in upstream water 
quality.

The authors called for joint research from upstream and downstream countries to 
better understand the issue.

“There are relatively few monitoring sites in the Tibetan Plateau region and 
most of them are observing the hydrology. We don’t have systemic and long-term 
monitoring on the water quality,” said the researcher, who requested anonymity 
because he was not authorised to talk to the media.

“The most important thing is to build a joint monitoring network for upstream 
and downstream water quality to carry out long-term observation. We also need 
to develop advanced earth system models to understand water quality changes in 
the long term.”

The study concluded: “We advocate for the creation of a research network that 
collects and stores basin-scale, cross-border, standardised data of surface and 
groundwater quality, glacier run-off geochemistry, permafrost degradation, and 
pollutant release.”


By Echo Xie SCMP.
Echo is a science reporter with the Post. She joined the Post in 2019. She has 
a master's degree in journalism.

_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to