NPJ Natural Hazards, 8 May 2026
Rapid warming increases permafrost thaw and the risk of dangerous floods, landslides, and collapsing mountain slopes in the western Himalaya, placing downstream communities and infrastructure at growing risk. The study found that rising temperatures are destabilizing high mountain terrain in India’s Kinnaur district and creating conditions that could trigger chains of disasters, including avalanches or landslides that spill into glacier lakes and produce destructive flooding downstream. Researchers identified seven glacier lakes located in areas where frozen ground is likely thawing, with Kashang Lake highlighted as one of the most dangerous because of nearby towns, roads, and hydropower facilities. Major flooding from the lake could reach downstream infrastructure in as little as 16 minutes, leaving very limited time for emergency warning or evacuation. The lake has expanded dramatically since the 1970s, while heavy rainfall and extreme weather events in the region have also become more common, further increasing the likelihood of future disaster.
Nature Communications, 15 May 2026 Glaciers and snowpack currently help reduce water shortages for many…
Communications Earth & Environment, 14 May 2026 River floods in the upper Indus basin are…
Scientific Reports, 29 April 2026 Extreme weather events increasingly shape how Himalayan glaciers gain and…
Science, 6 May 2026 An August 2025 landslide in Tracy Arm fjord, Alaska, generated one…
Environmental Research, 30 April 2026 Central Asia’s glaciers experienced their most severe mass loss year…
Science Advances, 8 May 2026 Antarctic sea ice has remained at historically low levels since…