| Lofty Himalaya Magnify Global Warming Impact 
    
 SWITZERLAND: January 25, 2008
 
 
 DAVOS, Switzerland - The Himalayas are suffering the effects of global 
    warming more acutely because of their height and melting glaciers could 
    flood local settlements, the World Conservation Union (IUCN) said on 
    Thursday.
 
 
 "The Himalaya, that's really moving very fast. They're being hit very hard," 
    IUCN Director General Julia Marton-Lefevre told Reuters at the annual 
    meeting of the World Economic Forum.
 
 Thousands of glaciers in the Himalaya mountains are the source of water for 
    nine major Asian rivers whose basins are home to 1.3 billion people, 
    including Pakistan and parts of India and China.
 
 The melting causes lakes to form at the base of glaciers, which may then 
    break their banks and flood down the valleys. "When the glaciers recede 
    there's a growing danger of glacial dams collapsing," Marton-Lefevre said. 
    "The effect will be very dramatic."
 
 "There's a lot of poor people living at the foot of the Himalaya," she said.
 
 Marton-Lefevre said it could take decades to slow down the process of global 
    warming, but hoped it would be possible.
 
 There is now a greater commitment from businesses and governments to cutting 
    emissions, as scientific studies, extreme weather and climate campaigning 
    have all raised awareness of the problem. About 190 nations agreed in 
    December in Bali, Indonesia, to launch negotiations on a new pact to fight 
    global warming.
 
 "I'm concerned about how difficult this road map is going to be, and then 
    there are some recalcitrant countries, like the United States," 
    Marton-Lefevre said.
 
 For full coverage, blogs and TV from Davos, see:
    
    http://uk.reuters.com/news/globalcoverage/worldeconomicforum2008
 
 
 Story by Sam Cage
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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