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

  1. Avalanches & Landslides – Sudden slope failures displacing lake water (e.g., 2021 Chamoli disaster).

  2. Heavy Rainfall/Snowmelt – Unusual rainfall or warming triggers overtopping (e.g., 2013 Kedarnath floods).

  3. Cascading Events – Overflow from upstream lakes causes downstream breaches.

  4. Earthquakes – Seismic activity destabilises dams.

  5. Ice Melt in Dams – Rising temperatures weaken moraine-ice dams.

  6. Blocked Subsurface Outflows – Blocked drainage raises water pressure.

  7. 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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