|
|
Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’ Athar Parvaiz interviews CHEWANG NORPHEL, India's 'Glacier Man' LADAKH, India, Nov 22, 2009 (IPS) - His is a classic case of a man’s fight against nature in this trans-Himalayan
region of Ladakh, as he battles climate change.
In this region that seldom sees rains, the glaciers—for ages the
fountainheads of water for this arid region—are receding at a rapid rate.
Farmers find it difficult to grow crops in their agricultural lands, with water in
extremely short supply when it is most needed to irrigate the fields.
But 74-year-old Chewang Norphel, a former government civil engineer, has
devised a way to deal with this challenge. No, he does not have the power to
stop the melting of glaciers, but he has pioneered a solution by creating
artificial glaciers, yes glaciers, which help farmers to stave off irrigational
crises right at the onset of crop growing.
In an interview with IPS, Norphel talks about his novel concept, his struggles
and hopes as he pursues his pioneering endeavor that has earned him the
moniker ‘Glacier Man’.
IPS: Your idea of creating artificial glaciers is slowly gaining
wide
acceptance. Tell us about this whole concept.
CHEWANG NORPHEL: The creation of artificial glaciers is a high-altitude water
conservation technique in the wake of climate change. The glaciers are
receding rapidly and winters are getting shorter and warmer. Therefore,
whatever little snowfall is received melts away quickly. The snow and glacier
meltwater drains into the river without any use (to the farmers) for the most
part of the year, and farmers are unable to find any water when it is needed
during the snowing season.
So, construction of artificial glaciers is a means for harvesting glacial
meltwater for the irrigational needs of farmers. Natural glaciers are way up in
the mountains, and they melt slowly in summer and thereby reach the villages
in June whereas artificial glacier starts melting in spring, right when the first
irrigation requirement called ‘Thachus’ which means ‘germinating water’ is
most needed.
IPS: How do you create artificial glaciers?
CN: Artificial glaciers are a simple water-harvesting technique suited for
high-altitude cold deserts that are totally dependent on glaciers. Glacier melt
at different altitudes is diverted to the shaded side of the hill, facing the
north, where the winter sun is blocked by a ridge or a mountain slope. At the
start of winter (November), the diverted water is made to flow onto the
sloping hill face through appropriately designed distribution channels or
outlets.
At regular intervals stone embankments are built, which impede the flow of
water, making shallow pools. In the distributing chambers, 1.5-inch diametre
G pipes are installed after every five feet for proper distribution of water.
Water flows in small quantities and at low velocity through the G pipes, and
freezes instantly. The process of ice formation continues for three to four
winter months and a huge reserve of ice accumulates on the mountain slope,
aptly termed ‘artificial glacier’.
IPS: How many farmers are benefiting from artificial glaciers?
CN: Since artificial glaciers are constructed close to a village, all the families
in the village or hamlet are equally benefited. Eighty percent of the farmers
of Leh [Ladakh’s capital] depend on glacier melt for irrigating their
agricultural land, where they grow vegetables, barley and wheat.
So far, we have created eight glaciers adjacent to many villages, which means
farmers of these villages are benefiting from artificial glaciers. Once this
facility is extended to all the villages, all the farmers will be able to reap the
benefits of artificial glaciers.
IPS: What are the other benefits of simulated glaciers?
CN: Apart from solving the irrigation problem, the artificial glaciers help in
the recharging of ground water and rejuvenation of springs. They enable
farmers to harvest two crops in a year, help in developing pastures for cattle
rearing and reducing water sharing disputes among the farmers. They also
help build the confidence of farmers based in an arid region like Ladakh.
Villagers can earn cash income while remaining as farmers.
IPS: How did the idea of creating artificial glaciers occur to
you?
CN: You know, we in the cold regions leave the tap in our bathrooms half
running during winter nights to keep water in the supply pipe from freezing.
One fine morning, I realised that this water was getting frozen in our nearby
garden. It struck me that small artificial glaciers could be formed in the same
manner.
Since I had travelled to most of the places in the region as a government
engineer until 1986, I was aware of its entire topography; I thought the
shaded areas in the lower ranges could be utilised for this purpose. Thus
emerged the first artificial glacier I created in Phuktse Phu village in 1987 by
using this simple method.
IPS: How much does it cost to create an artificial glacier?
CN: It varies from site to site. Generally, it costs around three to 10 lac Indian
rupees (around five to six thousand U.S. dollars).
IPS: What else is needed to build such a structure?
CN: Villagers are the main stakeholders, so their involvement is crucial to the
sustainability of the project. A community contributes to the construction and
maintenance of the glaciers, and that makes the project sustainable and
beneficial over the long term.
IPS: Where do you get the funding for creating the glaciers?
CN: The funding for artificial glaciers near Stakmo village comes the Indian
Army under its operation Sadbhavna while that for other artificial glaciers has
come to a limited extent from the government’s watershed development
programmes. Recently, the Science and Technology department also started
giving funds toward the rehabilitation of damaged artificial glaciers. The
funding is made to a non-government organisation, Leh Nutrition Project.
IPS: What are the challenges to building artificial glaciers?
CN: The availability of funds is a problem, because it takes a long while to
arrange funds for the creation of artificial glaciers.
On the other hand, people’s interest (in helping build artificial glaciers) has
begun to wane. They used to volunteer themselves for the creation of these
collective resources, but not anymore. They are getting subsidised food
grains from the government, which has made them a bit indolent. Road
inaccessibility and high transportation costs of materials are the other main
problems we face, since we have to work at a high altitude of 4,600 metres
above sea level.
IPS: Can your artificial glacier model be replicated elsewhere?
CN: As I said, the technique for creating artificial glaciers is easy and simple
and can be replicated in similar geo-climatic regions as Ladakh, such as Spiti
in Hamachal Pradesh-India and some central Asian countries like Kazakhstan
and Kyrgyzstan. This technology can be replicated in areas which have the
following features like a 4,666- to 5,333-metre altitude; temperature as low
as -15 to -20 degree Celsius during peak winters; and longer winter periods
of four to five months to ensure longer expansion and formation of glaciers
IPS: World leaders are assembling in Copenhagen in December
for a
climate change summit. As someone who has been helping address this issue
on the adaptation front, what is your message to them?
CN: My humble suggestion to the people of the regions that have already
been hit by climate change or will be in the future would be that they should
act and make things happen. To the world leaders, my humble request to
them is they work hard to evolve an agreement that will safeguard the future
and interests of the people of the entire planet.
(END)
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|