Sensitivity and response of Bhutanese glaciers to atmospheric warming Rupper Summer author Schaefer Joerg M. author Columbia University. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Columbia University. Earth and Environmental Sciences Koenig Lora S. author Burgener Landon K. author Tsering Karma author Cook Edward R. author Columbia University. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Columbia University. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory originator text Articles 2012 English Glacierized change in the Himalayas affects river-discharge, hydro-energy and agricultural production, and Glacial Lake Outburst Flood potential, but its quantification and extent of impacts remains highly uncertain. Here we present conservative, comprehensive and quantitative predictions for glacier area and meltwater flux changes in Bhutan, monsoonal Himalayas. In particular, we quantify the uncertainties associated with the glacier area and meltwater flux changes due to uncertainty in climate data, a critical problem for much of High Asia. Based on a suite of gridded climate data and a robust glacier melt model, our results show that glacier area and meltwater change projections can vary by an order of magnitude for different climate datasets. However, the most conservative results indicate that, even if climate were to remain at the present-day mean values, almost 10% of Bhutan's glacierized area would vanish and the meltwater flux would drop by as much as 30%. Under the conservative scenario of an additional 1°C regional warming, glacier retreat is going to continue until about 25% of Bhutan's glacierized area will have disappeared and the annual meltwater flux, after an initial spike, would drop by as much as 65%. Atmospheric sciences Environmental science Geophysics Meteorology Geophysical Research Letters 39 L19503 1 6 2012 http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2012GL053010 http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:15274 NNC NNC 2012-11-13 14:03:08 -0500 2012-11-13 14:22:27 -0500 9275 eng