News Flash
ISLAMABAD, April 21, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Snowfall in Asia's Hindu Kush-Himalayan
mountain range has reached a 23-year low, threatening nearly two billion
people dependent on snowmelt for water, scientists warned in a report on
Monday.
The Hindu Kush-Himalayan range, which stretches from Afghanistan to Myanmar,
holds the largest reserves of ice and snow outside the Arctic and Antarctica
and is a vital source of fresh water for about two billion people.
Researchers found "a significant decline in seasonal snow across the Hindu
Kush Himalaya region, with snow persistence (the time snow remains on the
ground) 23.6 percent below normal - the lowest in 23 years," the
International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) said.
"This trend, now in its third consecutive year, threatens water security for
nearly two billion people," it said in its Snow Update Report.
The study also warned of "potential lower river flows, increased groundwater
reliance, and heightened drought risk".
Sher Muhammad, the lead author of the ICIMOD report, told AFP that "this year
the snowfall started late in January and remained low in the winter season on
average".
Several countries in the region have already issued drought warnings, with
upcoming harvests and access to water at risk for populations already facing
longer, hotter, and more frequent heatwaves.
The inter-governmental ICIMOD organisation is made up of member countries
Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Myanmar, Nepal and Pakistan.
It urged countries that rely on the 12 major river basins in the region to
develop "improved water management, stronger drought preparedness, better
early warning systems, and greater regional cooperation".
The Mekong and Salween basins -- the two longest rivers in Southeast Asia
supplying water to China and Myanmar -- had lost around half of their snow
cover, it noted.
Pema Gyamtsho, ICIMOD's director general, called for changes in policy to
address the low snow levels in the long term.
"Carbon emissions have already locked in an irreversible course of recurrent
snow anomalies in the HKH (Hindu Kush-Himalayas)," Gyamtsho said.
Asia is the region most affected by climate-related disasters, according to
the UN's World Meteorological Organization, which reported last month that
five of the past six years have seen the most rapid glacier retreat on
record.