Extreme weather conditions likely as Tibetan Plateau becomes warmer and wetter

Published: 
Listen to this article
  • Scientists fear the warmer and wetter conditions will destabilise the weather in China
SCMP |
Published: 
Comment

Latest Articles

Maasai Olympics: Giving indigenous Kenyan women opportunities through sports

Many young people in Hong Kong consider themselves ‘failures’

Scientists discover world’s largest coral near the Solomon Islands

Why are so many Hong Kong elderly depressed?

The Lens: Pulau Ubin and balancing urbanisation with ecological preservation

Extreme weather risks are rising as the Tibetan Plateau gets hotter and wetter, scientists warn. photo: Xinhua

Scientists have warned that there is a rising risk of extreme weather events as a result of the Tibetan Plateau becoming warmer and wetter.

The plateau is sometimes described as the “Asian water tower” because it is the source of many of the continent’s major rivers, including the Indus, Ganges, Mekong, Yangtze and Yellow rivers.

The researchers, led by the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, presented a summary of their findings from ongoing work on Sunday.

The plateau will enter a super warm and humid phase that will see more than half the glacier mass melting in some areas and lake water levels rising by more than 10 metres (33 feet) by the end of the century, according to the researchers.

They said global warming meant that the amount of grassland and forest had increased by 6 and 12 per recent respectively over the last 15 years – but warned that these changes also carried an increased risk of extreme weather events.

Although the increase in vegetation will help prevent desertification, in the long run it will cause a shift in monsoon circulation, resulting in more heavy rainfall during the summer.

Nine phrases related to overcast weather that will enrich your English writing

These changes “could lead to significant shifts in the Asian monsoon circulation, potentially increasing the frequency of extreme weather events in China”, Yao Tandong, the leader of the research team, warned.

In a paper published in Nature in 2022, Yao warned that the rise in water levels was primarily occurring in the northern inland areas, but southern outflow regions – including the Indus and Ganges River basins, which are vital for agriculture in India and Pakistan – were experiencing a decline.

The researchers said these changes meant that more effective water resource management would be needed in downstream countries in future.

The China Meteorological Administration has previously warned that the total glacier area on the plateau may fall by 40 per cent by 2050, increasing the risk of severe storms and floods in downstream areas.

The researchers have also mapped the distribution of active faults that could trigger major earthquakes along critical transport corridors and developed a disaster risk assessment system to support the construction of major infrastructure projects in the region.

The team has also discovered more than 3,000 new species and evidence that suggests the earliest human activity on the Tibetan Plateau may date back over 190,000 years, according to state news agency Xinhua.

Sign up for the YP Teachers Newsletter
Get updates for teachers sent directly to your inbox
By registering, you agree to our T&C and Privacy Policy
Comment