Dear teachers

for many years, it has been clear that the glaciers on top of the Himalayas
are melting at faster rates, and the cycle of ice-water-ice that has
sustained the water supply to most of North India is under strain. we are
likely to see heavier rainfall, more water during rainy season and drought
during the dry season. This will be a huge danger to life, agriculture in
North India / gangetic plains... unless we act adequately to reverse the
global warming ....  by reducing our consumption patterns, sharply reducing
fossil fuel use, private transport, bottled water ..... also raise public
awareness on contentious issues like large dams, deforestation, land/soil
degradation, waste recycling and segregation etc.

Protecting our environment is an important learning that we need to take to
our students now.

This crisis is already happening in Bolivia, which depends on the glaciers
on the Andez mountain ranges ....

regards
Guru
IT for Change.

Landlocked Bolivia, located in the Andean mountain heights of central South
America, is heavily reliant upon glaciers for its drinking water. Water
from glaciers also supports agriculture, generates power and nurtures the
country's natural ecosystems. However, those glaciers are now in danger.

Anthropogenic climate disruption (ACD) has shrunk many of Bolivia's
glaciers to record-low coverage, forcing the country's government to
recently declare a state of emergency as it struggles to cope with the
worst drought it has seen in more than a quarter of a century
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-bolivia-drought-idUSKBN13G1P4>.

*To see more stories like this, visit "Planet or Profit?"
<http://truth-out.org/news/item/22419-planet-or-profit>*

President Evo Morales has called on local governments around the country to
steer funds and workers immediately toward drilling water wells and
transporting available water into cities. He also ordered Bolivia's armed
forces to help in these efforts.

*Bolivia's Melting Glaciers*

Recently published research showed that from 1986 to 2014, a time span of
merely one human generation, Bolivia's glaciers shrank by nearly 50 percent
<http://www.the-cryosphere.net/10/2399/2016/>. For many of the country's
residents, that shrinking is a threat to survival. Approximately 2.3
million residents in the cities of La Paz and El Alto rely on glacial
runoff and lakes to feed reservoirs for a significant percentage of their
drinking water, particularly during the dry season.

The aforementioned study stated that nearly all of Bolivia's glaciers will
be either gone or severely diminished by the end of this century.

A recent study by the Stockholm Environment Institute
<https://www.sei-international.org/mediamanager/documents/Publications/SEI-DiscussionBrief-Escobar-Spanish-BoliviaWaterClimate.pdf>
(SEI) revealed that temperatures in Bolivia have risen by 0.5 C between the
years 1976 and 2006. In recent years, the residents of La Paz and El Alto
have been staring directly at evidence of ACD's impact, in the form of the
rapidly shrinking snowpack in the mountains that rise above their cities.

A glacier on Chacaltaya Mountain, which used to host the world's highest
ski resort above the city of El Alto, has already completely vanished.

The SEI report said that if regional ACD models that predict a 2C
temperature increase by 2050 are correct, many of the small glaciers that
provide the cities with their drinking water will completely disappear.
Those that remain will shrink dramatically.

*"Prepare for the Worst"*

All of these problems are compounded by the fact that, like what is
happening across most of the rest of the world, the populations of major
cities are exploding due to economics.

El Alto, which is now home to more than a million people, grew by one third
between 2001 and 2012. Coinciding with that, the city's area expanded by
more than 140 percent <http://blogs.newschool.edu/epsm/2012/05/25/834/> in
just the last 10 years, due to urban sprawl. By 2050, only 34 years from
now, the population of the city is expected to double
<http://blogs.newschool.edu/epsm/2012/05/25/834/>.

When the national state of emergency was declared, more than half of
Bolivia's municipalities had already declared their own states of emergency
due to the drought. The drought had already fomented protests
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-bolivia-drought-idUSKBN13G1P4> across
Bolivia's major cities, as well as conflicts between miners and farmers
over the use of aquifers.

*The three primary lakes that supply the two major cities with water, which
are fed by glacial runoff, are now nearly completely dry, and water
rationing affecting more than 100,000 families has been on-going in La Paz
and El Alto. *President Evo Morales sacked the head of his country's water
company for not warning him earlier of the dangerous situation. At a press
conference earlier this week, Morales stated
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-bolivia-drought-idUSKBN13G1P4>, "We have
to be prepared for the worst."
source -
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/38577-bolivia-is-in-a-drought-state-of-emergency

Guru

IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

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