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Environmentalists, villagers protest against proposed Ski resort in Himachal
Malaysia Sun Tuesday 19th June, 2007 (ANI)
Kullu (Himachal Pradesh), June 19 : Environmental activist Sunderlal Bahuguna on Monday joined a protest led by villages against the proposed international Ski resort here.
The 250-million dollars Ski resort is being set up by Alfred Brush Ford, the great-grandson of US automobile pioneer Henry Ford. The project site overlooks the scenic Kullu, about 280 kilometers from the state capital Shimla.
The villagers say that it is unfair on the government's part to give away land to a foreign company in the name of development.
Bahuguna, who spearheaded campaign -- "Chipko Movement" to save trees in the Himalayan region in Uttarakhand in the 70s and 80s -- said although people are conscious of their environment, they need to do some planning now to protect it.
He said: "My experience tells me that the public should question what is happening, just as we did during the 'Chipko Movement'. It succeeded after eight years of struggle. It is heartening to see awareness among the people, but now they should come up with a concrete plan".
The project, touted as the largest foreign investment in the tourism sector in In
dia, is being built in three stages. Besides slopes, the planned project would have gondola lifts, a 600-room five-star hotel, 300 chalets and a convention center.
The first phase of the project was completed in 2006 and the resort is expected to be ready by 2009.
The company says the eco-friendly project aims to boost tourism, which is the backbone of the region's economy.
Ajay Dabra, Director of the Himalayan Ski Village, said: "Against what are these people protesting? The 3500 jobs we have promised or the proposed development of the State? They have not even tried to know about the project".
Once the project becomes operational, it would provide revenue to the tune of 300 million rupees annually to the Government, in the form of luxury and royalty tax.
Himachal Pradesh boasts of some of India's best ski slopes. Nearly four million tourists visit the State every year and the figure has been increasing by about 15 percent annually.
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| By Neilji, 06-27-08, 10:35 AM |
Environmentalists, villagers protest against proposed Ski resort in HimachalWhen the Glaciers are finished and all many of the meicinal plants stop growing, will the people of this so amazingly beautiful valley, regret ever selling their souls to Mr. Pseudo Hindu himself, Alford Brush-(off)Ford. The Legislators of H.P. are acting like the British did. |
| By waltky, 08-10-08, 01:55 AM |
| Listening to the glaciers melt...
:eek:
The Sound of Melting Glaciers Stirs Alarm
August 08, 2008 - In the Indian Himalayas, You Can Hear Climate Change Before You Can See It; Glaciers of the Indian Himalayas Have Never Melted So Quickly
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In the Indian Himalayas, you can literally hear the glaciers melting. The river that rushes through the Lahaul-Spiti Valley is fed almost entirely by melt from the surrounding glaciers. The sound of the river’s rapids has never been this loud. The level of the water has never been this high. In other words, the glaciers have never receded this quickly. “I’ve never seen such a high water level in this river," says Syed Hasnain, a senior glaciologist at the Energy Resources Institute who has been visiting the Chhota Shigri glacier for 23 years.
“This is 100 percent glacial melt," he adds, standing at the base of the glacier, yelling over the sound of the river. “After 40 years or 50 years, there won’t be any flow in this river, and the entire valley will be dried up." The 15,000 Himalayan glaciers that create the “Water Tower of Asia” — the largest block of fresh water outside the Polar Ice Caps — have been melting forever. But they are suddenly melting so fast that they are drying up. It will take decades, but at the rate the earth is warming, they may simply disappear.
“Glaciers in the Himalaya are receding faster than in any other part of the world," the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned last year. “If the present rate continues, the likelihood of them disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high if the Earth keeps warming at the current rate." The consequences of that would be enormous. More than a billion people need the rivers supported by the Himalayan glaciers to survive. Across Pakistan, India, Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh, rivers that flow from the glaciers give people their water for drinking, irrigation and hydropower. “We are going to be doomed in the future," Hasnain says. The “entire global community will be affected. It’s not only the region will be affected."
And, in India, climate change could imperil the world’s oldest religion. More than 400 million people live off the Ganges River, and the world’s billion Hindus consider its water sacred. One drop of Ganges water, they believe, can cure a lifetime of sin. The glacier that feeds the Ganges, the Gangotri, is melting three times as fast as it was last century. “Global warming, I think, will finish the globe, will finish Ganga, will finish all of us," says Veer Bhadra Mishra, former chairman of civil engineering at Banaras Hindu University, referring to the Ganges by its commonly used name, Mother Ganga. “We are an endangered species of human beings, and we need your attention, and we need your support, so that our life is saved, and our culture is saved."
[url=http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=5540526&page=1: Why the Glaciers Are Melting[/url]
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| By waltky, 06-08-09, 05:28 AM |
| Like they say, a picture is worth a 1,000 words...
Photographs reveal demise of glaciers in the Himalayas
Monday, Jun 08, 2009, When Fritz Muller and Erwin Schneider battled ice storms, altitude sickness and snow blindness in the 1950s to map, measure and photograph the Imja glacier in the Himalayas, they could never have foreseen that the gigantic tongue of millennia-old glacial ice would be reduced to a lake within 50 years.
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More than half a century later, US mountain geographer Alton Byers returned to the precise locations of the original pictures and replicated 40 panoramas taken by Muller and Schneider. The juxtaposed images have been united for the first time in an exhibition, âThe Himalaya: Changing Landscapes,â which opened in Bonn, Germany, during the latest round of UN talks on reaching a global deal to tackle global warming.
The series of pictures reveal the dramatic reductions in glacial ice in the Himalayas and the effects of climate change on the people who live there. âOnly five decades have passed between the old and the new photographs and the changes are dramatic,â Byers said. âMany small glaciers at low altitudes have disappeared entirely and many larger ones have lost around half of their volume. Some have formed huge glacial lakes at the foot of the glacier, threatening downstream communities.â
His scientific results were published in the Himalayan Journal of Sciences. The 1956 photograph of the Imja glacier, then one of the largest glaciers in the region at an altitude of around 5,000m, shows a layer of thick ice with small meltwater ponds. But by the time Byers took his shot in 2007, much of the glacier had melted into a vast blue lake.
Today, the Imja glacier, which is less than 6km from Mount Everest, continues to recede at a rate of 74m a year, the fastest rate of all the Himayalan glaciers. Nepalâs average temperature has increased by 1.5ºC since 1975, and if the moraines that dam Imjaâs lake are breached, thousands of lives are at risk. Himalayan glaciers also feed into major river systems including the Ganges, Indus, Mekong and Yangtze. If glacial meltwaters turn to a trickle, droughts will threaten 1.3 billion people.
[url: http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2009/06/08/2003445608[/url]
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