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Keywords
Climate (campaign title)
Climate change
Climate change impacts
Day
Glacier melt
Herds
KWCI (GPI)
Local population
Men
One person
Outdoors
Portraits
Rural scenes
Sheep
Shepherd in Indian Himalayas
Shepherd Atol Singh, 40 year old, explains: "Ten years ago we could predict the monsoon and the weather, now everything is unpredictable". Due to climate change in the last decade, shepherds often have to travel as much as 30 km per day to find fertile grazing area on higher grounds.
Unique identifier:
GP01VBF
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
31/05/2009
Locations:
Gangotri
,
Himalayas
,
India
,
South Asia
,
Uttarkhand
Credit line:
© Greenpeace / Peter Caton
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
Climate Voices from Gangotri India
The source of the Ganges, Asia's longest and most auspicious river, is being heavily affected by climate change: the Gangotri glacier, one of the largest in the Himalayas, is receding at around 25 meters a year; the mouth where the “holy” river flows from the glacier has started to shrink. Snow that once laid on all the mountain peaks has disappeared and the peaks are now bare and only display snow for a few hours after an unusually cold night. The land is naked and barren. Doves and crows are seeing flying above - something that would have been unheard of a decade ago at such a high altitude. If the Gangotri glacier continues to recede at this current rate the Ganges river will only be fed by the seasonal monsoon. The consequences for billions of Indian people in the world’s most densely populated regions would be immense. If the glacier disappears the rice bowl of India that relies on irrigation from the Ganges will be empty causing catastrophic food shortages.
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