Abstract

In High Mountain Asia (HMA), rising temperatures and retreating glaciers are leading to the formation of new glacial lakes and the expansion of existing ones. The sudden release of water from such lakes can lead to devastating glacial lake outburst floods (GLOF) threatening people and infrastructure for many kilometers downstream. Therefore, information on future glacial lakes, e.g., their location, area and volume as well as the timing of their development, is vital for sustainable development of settlements and infrastructures. In this study, we present comprehensive estimates for future glacial lake development in HMA with unprecedented temporal resolution. We rely on an ensemble of fifteen global climate models using the newest CMIP6 data and employ a set of four Shared Socioeconomic Pathway (SSP) scenarios. With the Open Global Glacier Model (OGGM), we use a modeling framework that explicitly simulates glacier dynamics in order to model glacier change until 2100 and estimate the formation period for each of the 2,700 largest future glacial lakes (>0.1 km2) in HMA. We estimate the glacial lake area in the entire region to grow by 474 ± 121 km2 for SSP126 and 833 ± 148 km2 for SSP585. Following recent estimates of currently existing glacial lakes (>0.1 km2), this would constitute an increase in lake area of ∼120–∼210% in 2100 compared to 2018. The lake volume is expected to increase by 22.8 ± 6.7 km3 for SSP126 and 39.7 ± 7.7 km3 for SSP585. This range includes a drastic tenfold increase in lake volume, from estimated 3.9 km3 in 2018 to 43.6 ± 7.7 km3 in 2100. However, there is a considerable spread between total and relative increase in glacial lake area and volume for different sub-regions of High Mountain Asia. As both, lake area and lake volume, could to lead to an increase in GLOF risk, the results emphasize the urgent need for more localized, in-depth studies at especially vulnerable locations in order to enable local communities to adapt to emerging challenges, to implement risk minimization measures, and to improve sustainable development in High Mountain Asia.

Highlights

  • As a result of climate change, temperatures are rising globally causing glacial melting in most glaciated regions of the world (Hugonnet et al, 2021)

  • This is accompanied by an increase in both glacial lake area and glacial lake volume in the coming decades which confirms the results of previous studies (e.g., Shugar et al, 2020; Zheng et al, 2021)

  • We use the current generation of CMIP6 climate model outputs under the new Shared Socioeconomic Pathway (SSP) scenarios to simulate the development of glacial lakes in High Mountain Asia (HMA) until 2100 using the glacier evolution model Open Global Glacier Model (OGGM)

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Summary

Introduction

As a result of climate change, temperatures are rising globally causing glacial melting in most glaciated regions of the world (Hugonnet et al, 2021). The acceleration of this phenomenon is especially visible in High Mountain Asia (HMA) (Lee et al, 2021), where glaciers are estimated to lose 29%–67% of their ice mass until 2100 (Rounce et al, 2020). In this region, research has shown a substantially more negative mass balance for laketerminating glaciers compared to land-terminating glaciers (King et al, 2019; Watson et al, 2020) and the world’s fastest long-term ice loss acceleration (Lee et al, 2021). If the initial lake growth decouples from climate, glacial lakes can cause even more rapid melting due to their development at the termini of downwasting glaciers (Bolch et al, 2012; Trüssel et al, 2013)

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