Daily Times

Daily Times

Home |  RSS | Archives | Company Financials | Contact Us | Thursday, February 07, 2008 

Main News
National
Islamabad
Karachi
Lahore
Briefs
Foreign
Editorial
Business
Real Estate
Sport
Infotainment
Advertise
 
Sunday Magazine
 
External Links
Upperhost.com
Best Web Hosting
Remove Security Tool
Jobs in Pakistan
Florence and the Machine Tickets
 
Google


 
Thursday, August 02, 2007 E-Mail this article to a friend Printer Friendly Version

Share this story!  del.icio.us digg Reddit Furl Fark TailRank Ma.gnolia NewsVine Simpy Spurl 

‘Brown Cloud’ speeding up melt of Himalaya glaciers

PARIS: The haze of pollution that blankets southern Asia is accelerating the loss of Himalayan glaciers, bequeathing an incalculable bill to China, India and other countries whose rivers flow from this source, scientists warned on Wednesday.

In a study released by the British journal Nature, the investigators say the so-called Asian Brown Cloud is as much to blame as greenhouse gases for the warming observed in the Himalayas over the past half century. Rapid melting among the 46,000 glaciers on the Tibetan Plateau, the third-largest ice mass on the planet, is already causing downstream flooding late summer. But long-term worries focus more on the danger of drought, as the glaciers shrink.

The new report triggered an appeal from UN Environment Programme (UNEP) chief Achim Steiner, who urged the international community “to ever greater action” on tackling climate change. Researchers led by Veerabhadran Ramanathan, a professor of atmospheric sciences at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in California, used an innovative technique to explore the Asian Brown Cloud.

The plume sprawls across South Asia, parts of Southeast Asia and the northern Indian Ocean, spewed from tailpipes, factory chimneys and power plants, forests or fields that are being burned for agriculture, and wood and dung which are burned for fuel. Emissions of carbon gases are known to be the big drivers of global warming, but the role of particulate pollution, such as brown clouds, is unclear. afp

Home | Foreign


Share this story!  del.icio.us digg Reddit Furl Fark TailRank Ma.gnolia NewsVine Simpy Spurl 
Australia deploys loudspeakers and sneak raids against terror
Saudi Arabia to attend Mideast conference
Cheney admits he was wrong about ‘last throes’ in Iraq
Saudi king fetes Rice, Gates as sharks swim by
White House says spying broader than known
Sudan accepts resolution on Darfur force
US ‘surge’ not enough without political progress
US cannot account for 190,000 guns in Iraq
R E G I O N: Australia considers India uranium deal this month
Russia delays India aircraft carrier by 3 years
Myanmar names envoy to N Korea
‘Brown Cloud’ speeding up melt of Himalaya glaciers
Maoists blow up railway stations in India
Haneef could face new charges: Australia
Man cuts off hand as offering to goddess
A massive phenomenon in Afghanistan: Television
 
Daily Times - All Rights Reserved
Site developed and hosted by WorldCALL Internet Solutions