Syllabus: GS-III & V: Natural Disaster
Why in the News?
Recent studies by the Centre for Earth Sciences and Himalaya Studies (CESHS) highlight rapid glacier melting in Arunachal Pradesh.
The Khangri glacier in Tawang is of particular concern, increasing the risk of Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs).
What are GLOFs?
A Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) is a sudden release of meltwater from a moraine- or ice-dam glacial lake due to dam failure.
This results in catastrophic downstream flooding.
Key Features
Sudden release of water.
Rapid events, lasting hours to days.
River discharge often 10x higher than normal flow.
Causes of GLOFs
Avalanches & Landslides – Sudden slope failures displacing lake water (e.g., 2021 Chamoli disaster).
Heavy Rainfall/Snowmelt – Unusual rainfall or warming triggers overtopping (e.g., 2013 Kedarnath floods).
Cascading Events – Overflow from upstream lakes causes downstream breaches.
Earthquakes – Seismic activity destabilises dams.
Ice Melt in Dams – Rising temperatures weaken moraine-ice dams.
Blocked Subsurface Outflows – Blocked drainage raises water pressure.
Long-Term Erosion – Natural degradation of moraine dams.
Impacts of GLOFs
Loss of Life & Property – Hundreds killed, thousands displaced in the Himalayas.
Infrastructure Damage – Roads, bridges, and hydropower projects like Teesta III destroyed.
Environmental Impact – Severe erosion, habitat loss, water pollution.
Landscape Alteration – Past mega-floods permanently changed valley systems.
Proneness of Arunachal Pradesh
Over 100 glaciers lost in the last three decades.
Expansion of pro-glacial lakes near retreating glaciers.
Weak natural composition of dams (sand, ice, debris, pebbles).
Hotspot zones:
Khangri glacier, Tawang.
Gorichen range.
Glaciers in West Kameng & Upper Subansiri.
Steps Taken by the Government
National GLOF Risk Mitigation Project (NGRMP), 2024:
Early warning systems & automatic weather stations.
Satellite-based glacial lake inventory (ISRO).
Strengthening local disaster preparedness.
International Cooperation – ICIMOD, ESA, USGS, NOAA monitoring support.
NDMA Guidelines – Focus on community awareness and training.
Mitigation Strategies
Structural Measures
Controlled drainage channels/tunnels.
Siphoning to lower lake water levels.
Dam reinforcement with rock/concrete.
Spillways & check dams to manage outflow.
Non-Structural Measures
Early Warning Systems – Satellite sensors + last-mile alerts.
Risk mapping of vulnerable valleys.
Community preparedness – evacuation drills.
Policy – Restrict construction in floodplains.
Research – SAR technology, climate models.
Climate action – Limit warming to <1.5°C.
Way Forward
Speed up NGRMP implementation with modern tools.
Promote community-based disaster management using local knowledge.
Ensure cross-border cooperation (Nepal, Bhutan, China) for data-sharing.
Mainstream GLOF preparedness in hydropower and infrastructure planning.
Launch awareness campaigns on climate risks.
Conclusion
GLOFs are a growing climate-induced disaster in the fragile Himalayas.
Arunachal Pradesh, with its rapidly retreating glaciers, is at high risk.
Combining technology, infrastructure, and community preparedness is essential.
GLOF management must be treated as both a climate adaptation priority and a developmental necessity to safeguard lives and strategic assets in the Northeast.
Q. “Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs) are emerging as a climate-driven disaster in the Himalayas. Analyse their causes, impacts, and Arunachal Pradesh’s vulnerabilities. Suggest mitigation measures for sustainable development.”
(15 marks / 250 words)
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