The identification of five glacial lakes in the Kashmir Himalaya with “very high susceptibility” to Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs) is a chilling reminder that climate change is not a distant abstraction but a present danger, etched into the landscape we inhabit. Bramsar, Chirsar, Nundkol, Gangabal, and Bhagsar are now not just geographical features but potential sources of catastrophic flooding that could engulf over 2,700 buildings, critical bridges, roads, and even a hydropower project. The government’s acknowledgement of this threat, while welcome, must now translate into action that matches the magnitude of the risk. The study’s findings are a double-edged sword. On one hand, the classification of these lakes as “very high susceptibility” provides a crucial baseline for prioritising vulnerable areas. On the other hand, the minister’s clarification that such classification does not indicate “immediate danger” risks being misinterpreted as reassurance that no action is needed. The truth lies in the uncertainty: these lakes are not yet breaching, but under certain triggering conditions—an earthquake, a sudden surge in water pressure, sustained heavy rainfall—they could unleash devastation without warning. The government’s preparedness measures are a step in the right direction, but remain alarmingly preliminary. The procurement of a robotic echo-sounding boat for bathymetric surveys is essential, but field surveys scheduled to begin “in 2026” move at a pace that does not reflect the urgency of the threat. Each year of delay is a year of risk for the thousands living downstream. What is required is a comprehensive, time-bound action plan with clear accountability. First, continuous satellite monitoring must be institutionalised, with regular updates on lake expansion rates shared with disaster management authorities. Second, field-based bathymetric surveys must be expedited, with resources allocated to complete them within the current year, not stretched across multiple years. Third, early-warning systems tailored to mountainous environments cannot remain research projects; they must be deployed at the most vulnerable lakes, integrating satellite data, sensor networks, and community-level alert mechanisms. Fourth, downstream communities must be prepared—with evacuation drills, hazard zonation maps, and clear protocols for rapid response. The government’s commitment to “strengthening scientific research and institutional coordination” is essential but insufficient. Scientific research must be translated into actionable policy. Institutional coordination must produce drills, not just meetings. The Himalayas are warming, glaciers are retreating, and glacial lakes are expanding. Every monsoon season brings new precipitation, new pressure, and new risk. The question is not whether a GLOF will occur, but when. The answer to that question lies in how urgently we act today.
After the holy month of Ramadan, the believer is presented with an extraordinary opportunity: six days of fasting that carry the reward of a full year. The Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon...
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