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South Asian black carbon is threatening the water sustainability of the Asian Water Tower

Earth Sciences

South Asian black carbon is threatening the water sustainability of the Asian Water Tower

J. Yang, S. Kang, et al.

Discover how black carbon from South Asia accelerates glacier melt on the Tibetan plateau, impacting water supply and contributing to mass loss over the 'Asian Water Tower.' This groundbreaking research by Junhua Yang, Shichang Kang, Deliang Chen, and other esteemed authors unveils the dual effects of black carbon on glaciers.

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Playback language: English
Abstract
Long-range transport of black carbon from South Asia to the Tibetan plateau and its deposition on glaciers directly enhances glacier melt. This study finds that South Asian black carbon also indirectly affects the plateau's glaciers shrinkage by reducing the water supply over the southern Tibetan plateau. Black carbon enhances vertical convection and cloud condensation, resulting in water vapor depletion over the Indian subcontinent, the main moisture flux source for the southern Tibetan plateau. Increasing black carbon concentrations cause a decrease in summer precipitation over the southern Tibetan plateau, resulting in an average 11.0% glacier deficit mass balance from 2007 to 2016; this loss rises to 22.1% in the Himalayas. The direct (accelerated melt) and indirect (mass supply decrease) effects of black carbon are driving the glacial mass decline of the so-called "Asian Water Tower".
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Nov 30, 2022
Authors
Junhua Yang, Shichang Kang, Deliang Chen, Lin Zhao, Zhenming Ji, Keqin Duan, Haijun Deng, Lekhendra Tripathee, Wentao Du, Mukesh Rai, Fangping Yan, Yuan Li, Robert R. Gillies
Tags
black carbon
Tibetan plateau
glacier melt
climate change
South Asia
precipitation reduction
Asian Water Tower
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