Control the temperature!

Five thousand years ago, nomadic people settled in the Indus basin and developed one of the earliest Bronze Age civilisations on Earth, centred on the cities of Harappa and Mohenjodaro. By 1700 BC, the civilisation had descended into oblivion as desertification devoured the landscape. The fall of the Indus Valley Civilisation is ascribed by many scientists to climate change – though only marginally, perhaps, contributed to by the humans of the day. Today, however, the entire blue planet faces the crisis of climate change, and this time we are all to blame.

Back in 1991, Himal's wry cartoons of a gushing 'Khumbu Waterfall' in place of the stupendous icefall that comes off Mount Everest, and a submerged Maldives, were perceived as good albeit farfetched jokes. But in 2009, with global warming looming as one of the greatest threats to humankind, a prediction of Himalayan atolls, perched atop a submerged Subcontinent, represent not necessarily fantasy, but only the extreme extension of what is already being forecast in terms of sea-level rise. Undoubtedly, dire predictions are no longer droll. When over 10,000 heads of state, scientists, policy pushers and climate-change wallahs gather in Copenhagen this December (in the process generating more than 16,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide at a meet that will cost upwards of USD 65 million), it will be crucial to separate the hot air from the rhetoric.

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Himal Southasian
www.himalmag.com