These stunning ice sculptures are helping save communities ravaged by climate change

Glaciers are not just spectacular indicators of climate change as they shrink and disappear due to global warming. They are also, for many communities, an irreplaceable source of fresh water. During the melting season in summer, a portion of mountain glacier surface releases water that is essential to the ecosystem in the valleys below, supplying vast cities—and industries—in places like South America and India. But this meltwater is also essential to many remote rural communities for drinking water and crop irrigation. These include those living in the Ladakh Valley, a beautiful, 470-kilometer valley sandwiched between the Greater Himalayan and Karakoram mountain ranges, and home to 300,000 people up to 4,000 meters above sea level. These iconic ranges have an abundance of glaciers, but large areas also fall within the monsoon rain shadow zone, which means they are extremely arid, because rain is blocked by the mountains. The Ladakh Valley is one of the most arid and coldest mountain regions in the world, with annual rain and snowfall rarely exceeding 100 millimeters—little more than the Sahara Desert—and winter temperatures as low as -30 degrees Celsius (-22 degrees Fahrenheit). Severe water shortages are a fundamental issue for the people who live in this cold desert. Their existence relies on the success of their crops, which can only be cultivated over a few short months of the year, often irrigated by diverted glacier meltwater. However, climate change over the past decades has meant that glaciers in the region have been shrinking, or disappearing altogether, at a worrying rate, thus reducing the short growing season further. An increasingly viable solution to this problem is the construction of ice stupas—artificial glaciers built to store winter water for use in the arid months of late spring and early summer, when meltwater is scarce. Invented in 2013 by engineer Sonam Wangchuk in Ladakh, the idea is to conserve this tower of ice as far into the year as possible so that, as it melts, it feeds the fields until the real glacial meltwaters start flowing again later in the summer. [Photo: Ajith Kumar/iStock] Building local resilience In a collaboration with Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, our Cryosphere and Climate Change research group has been conducting a study looking at 2,200 glaciers in the wider Ladakh region. We’ve found that 86% have experienced a rise in the height of the snow line of around 300 meters over the past 42 years. This rate has increased to almost 10 meters a year over the last two decades. Combined with drier winters, this situation has led to frequent and extended droughts, which are now threatening life-sustaining crops in rural communities. Unsurprisingly, entire villages have already been abandoned, or will be soon. The wider issues can only be resolved through the action of governments and society as a whole, so many hopes are pinned on positive outcomes from COP26. But any solutions to augment the limited, and now declining, glacier-derived meltwater could help guarantee a sustainable future for these communities. Locally, ice stupas offer an answer, or at least a partial way to offset the effect of shrinking glaciers in the short term. Using basic and inexpensive techniques, a conical structure of wood and steel is built, and then gravity, rather than electricity, is used to bring water diverted from nearby streams during the rainy season, and sprayed this into the air like a fountain. The sub-zero temperatures quickly freeze the water into the conical structure, so that a mass of ice begins to grow. The end result has the same high, narrow dome-shape typical of Buddhist shrines, hence the “stupa” part of the name, which slows down subsequent melting because the surface area exposed to the sun and warm temperatures is minimized. When the warmer, arid growing season arrives, the lower altitude streams quickly dry up, and there is little water available again until June when the glaciers provide meltwater again. It is in this crucial window that the ice stupas start melting, offering an invaluable source of water for irrigation early in the growing season, extending the cropping season by a few weeks—which makes all the difference in this extreme agricultural environment. Constructing artificial ice reserves is not new, but in the past, these were built in less efficient shapes and much higher up the mountains, making them difficult to manage. Now, these ice stupas are built next to where the water is needed most, right on the outskirts of villages, near their fields. The size and shape make them particularly efficient, inexpensive, and easy to maintain, and they are able to produce millions of liters of water each year. Matteo Spagnolo is a professor of geography and the environment at the School of Geosciences at the University of Aberdeen. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90691707/these-stunning-ice-sculptures-are-helping-save-communities-ravaged-by-climate-change?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Created 4y | Oct 30, 2021, 10:21:57 AM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

Facebook Groups are fueling a black market for Uber and DoorDash accounts, says a new report

A new watchdog report uncovers Facebook groups quietly fueling a black market fo

Apr 17, 2025, 12:50:02 PM | Fast company - tech
He built an AI app to beat coding interviews. Then Columbia suspended him

A software application called Interview Coder promises to help software developers succeed at technical job interviews—by surreptitiously feeding them

Apr 17, 2025, 10:30:03 AM | Fast company - tech
GE Vernova’s CEO on thriving through tariffs and supply chain shifts

Amid tariff whiplash and the rejuggling of global trade, GE Vernova’s CEO Scott Strazik is finding a way to stay “relentlessly optimistic.” Strazik returns to the Rapid Response podcast to share h

Apr 17, 2025, 5:50:02 AM | Fast company - tech
Tesla’s first quarter EV registrations slump 15.1% in California

Tesla‘s electric-vehicle registrations in California dropped 15.1% during the first quarter, industry data showed, signaling an

Apr 16, 2025, 10:50:04 PM | Fast company - tech
TikTok starts testing Footnotes, a new feature that looks a lot like X’s Community Notes

TikTok is launching its own version of community notes on the platform, called “Footnotes.”

The crowd-sourced approach to moderation, where users add additional context to p

Apr 16, 2025, 8:30:10 PM | Fast company - tech
‘I would get way more views if I didn’t help thousands of people’: MrBeast defends his philanthropy‑as‑content strategy

MrBeast has again defended his philanthropy‑as‑content, clapping back at critics who say he is “only in it for the views.”

On April 13, in a post on X, Jimmy Donaldson—better k

Apr 16, 2025, 8:30:09 PM | Fast company - tech
Zuckerberg once floated spinning off Instagram over antitrust fears, email reveals in trial

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg once considered separating Instagram from its parent company due to worries about antitrust litigation, a

Apr 16, 2025, 6:20:05 PM | Fast company - tech