Climate Change and The Himalayas
Climate Change and The Himalayas
Climate Change and The Himalayas
Shripad Dharmadhikary
Based on Study Done for
International Rivers
Himalayas
Mountain ranges that separate the
Indian sub-continent from the Tibetan
plateau
An arc 2,400 km long
Across Pakistan, India, Nepal, Bhutan
Often Called the Third Pole
Source of Ganga, Indus, Brahamaputra
A Global Heritage
Massive Dam Building Plans
Vast Store of Water
High Slopes, Fast moving rivers
High Hydropower Potential
Plans for over 80,000 MW capacity in
the next 10 years
Himalayas could be the area with
highest concentration of dams in the
world
Hydropower Potential
Total Claimed Capacity Already % Capacity
Potential Developed Remaining
(MW) (MW) to be
Developed
Bhutan 23,760 1,488 93.74 %
precipitation
Melting of permafrost
Country Specific
impacts
Nepal, Bhutan, India, Pakistan
Increased frequency of GLOFs can threaten
dams, population centres
Increased flow can threaten proposed
hydropower dams
Pakistan – increased flow in Indus basin can
exacerbate the problem of flooding
Pakistan – later, dramatic decline in flows …
conceivable by a “terrifying” 30-40%
India – fall in lean season flow can threaten
millions of people in the Ganga-Brahmaputra
plains
High Level of
Uncertainty
Large gaps in knowledge of short and
long term impacts
Impacts of water flow, safety, hazards
Downstream impacts
Need to allow flexibility in planning to
take care of knowledge gap
Large dams will lock huge levels of
resources, block other options
Large Dams Dangerous
Solutions
As climate change increases variability
in river flow, large storage dams
suggested as solutions to even out high-
low flows
This is a high risk, high cost wrong
choice because:
Large Dams Dangerous
Solutions
Climate change will increase threats to dams
from flash floods, initially increased high
flows, GLOFs
Increased variability in rivers means higher
storage required, more cost
Much lower low season flows, or lower total
flows means under-performance of dams
High social and environmental impacts of dams
Uncertainty in climate change effects, large
dams represent high cost, inflexible response