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Ice towers to turn lake into water bank in India

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Athar Parvaiz -


The government of Sikkim in India’s northeast is lowering the risk of a devastating flood by draining water from a dangerously overfull glacial lake — with plans to turn excess water into towers of ice for farmers to use in warmer months.


The water level in the South Lhonak glacial lake is expected to lower by two metres from its previous depth of 20 metres by the end of the winter, thanks to a process of siphoning that began last September, experts and Sikkim government officials said.


A sensor that monitors sudden fluctuations in the water level also has been installed near the lake, which lies at an altitude of over 17,500 feet.


But perhaps the most innovative part of the operation is that, some of the water drainage pipelines will have their final sections raised vertically. As pressure forces water out of the raised tip into sub-zero air, the flow will form ice cones.


Over the past three winters, a similar project in Ladakh, designed by environmental engineer Sonam Wangchuk, has created an ice cone 65 feet high, and five smaller ones of four metres.


Wangchuk, who is now working on the Sikkim project, said that in late spring meltwater from the cones can be collected in tanks and fed onto planted land using a drip-irrigation system. The largest ice cone in Ladakh supplied about one million litres of water, he said.


The cones resemble stupas, or towers used in Buddhist worship, that are found across Ladakh and also in Sikkim.


“Creating the ice stupas is an effort to help farmers get water when they need it the most. We are also exploring ice climbing, ice skating, ice hockey and ice sculpture of the stupas in order to develop a new form of winter tourism in Ladakh,” Wangchuk said.


The potential danger posed by the Sikkim lake was first assessed in 2013 by scientists from the National Remote Sensing Centre (NRSC) in Hyderabad. They reported that by 2008 the surface area of the lake had increased to more than five times its size in 1977, from about 17 hectares to nearly 100 hectares.


According to the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), a regional intergovernmental organisation, rapid increases in the volume of glacial lakes are usually the result of faster glacial melt associated with climate change.


The risk such lakes present is that the rocky moraines at their feet could give way suddenly under the pressure of the water, triggering a massive outburst flood that would drain most of the lake at once.


The NRSC scientists estimated that the South Lhonak lake had a 42 per cent probability of causing devastating floods downstream in populated areas.


They estimated its volume to be nearly 20 billion litres, although measurements in 2014 by the team that installed the monitoring system, from the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing, a national government body, suggested the lake could contain as much as 53 billion litres of water.


The South Lhonak lake is one of 203 glacial lakes in the Hindu Kush Himalayan region — out of a total of more than 8,700 — identified as potentially dangerous by ICIMOD in a 2010 report.


To help deal with the threat, Sikkim’s Department of Science and Technology and Climate Change has begun working with Wangchuk to drain the water from the glacial lake, said Dhirren Shrestha, a department official.


Wangchuk said that three sets of high-density polyethylene pipes are being used to carry away water, enabling a total discharge of 150-180 litres of water per second.


A second stage of the operation is scheduled for May and June this year, when engineers plan to install up to 16 pipelines to lower the water level in the lake by a further three metres.


Eventually, some of the water will be captured rather than simply flow away, as Wangchuk works to recreate an innovation he experimented with in Ladakh in Kashmir, turning some of the siphoned water into massive towers of ice.


He will begin work on the project in November with experts from Sikkim.


— Thomson Reuters Foundation


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