15 million people live under threat of glacial floods, study says

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More than half of the 15 million people living in the shadow of glacial lake outburst floods are in just four countries: India, Pakistan, Peru, and China.

. Alaska’s Mendenhall glacier has had annual small glacial outburst floods in what the National Weather Service calls “suicide basin” since 2011, according to study lead author Caroline Taylor, a researcher at Newcastle University in the United Kingdom.

“We had glacier lake outburst floods in the past that have killed many, many thousands of people in a single catastrophic flooding event,” said study co-author Tom Robinson, a disaster risk scientist at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand. “And with climate change glaciers are melting so these lakes are getting bigger, potentially getting more unstable.”

Robinson said what is different about his study is that it is the first to look at the climate, geography, population, vulnerability and all these factors to get “a good overview of where in the world is the most dangerous places” for all 1,089 glacial basins.“That’s particularly bad,” Robinson said. “Lots of people and they’re very, very vulnerable” because they live in a valley below the lake.

 

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