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Hazard from Himalayan glacier lake outburst floods
Edited by Andrea Rinaldo, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland, and approved November 27, 2019 (received for review August 27, 2019)

Significance
Glacier lake outburst floods (GLOFs) have become emblematic of a changing mountain cryosphere. The Himalayas suffered the highest losses from these sudden pulses of meltwater but lack a quantitative appraisal of GLOF hazard. We express the hazard from Himalayan glacier lakes by the peak discharge for a given return period. The 100-y GLOF has a mean discharge of ∼15,600 m3⋅s−1, comparable to monsoonal river discharges hundreds of kilometers downstream. The Eastern Himalayas are a hotspot of GLOF hazard that is 3 times higher than in any other Himalayan region. The size of growing glacier lakes and the frequency of lake outbursts determine GLOF hazard, which needs to be acknowledged better in flood hazard studies.
Abstract
Sustained glacier melt in the Himalayas has gradually spawned more than 5,000 glacier lakes that are dammed by potentially unstable moraines. When such dams break, glacier lake outburst floods (GLOFs) can cause catastrophic societal and geomorphic impacts. We present a robust probabilistic estimate of average GLOFs return periods in the Himalayan region, drawing on 5.4 billion simulations. We find that the 100-y outburst flood has an average volume of 33.5+3.7/−3.7 × 106 m3 (posterior mean and 95% highest density interval [HDI]) with a peak discharge of 15,600+2,000/−1,800 m3⋅s−1. Our estimated GLOF hazard is tied to the rate of historic lake outbursts and the number of present lakes, which both are highest in the Eastern Himalayas. There, the estimated 100-y GLOF discharge (∼14,500 m3⋅s−1) is more than 3 times that of the adjacent Nyainqentanglha Mountains, and at least an order of magnitude higher than in the Hindu Kush, Karakoram, and Western Himalayas. The GLOF hazard may increase in these regions that currently have large glaciers, but few lakes, if future projected ice loss generates more unstable moraine-dammed lakes than we recognize today. Flood peaks from GLOFs mostly attenuate within Himalayan headwaters, but can rival monsoon-fed discharges in major rivers hundreds to thousands of kilometers downstream. Projections of future hazard from meteorological floods need to account for the extreme runoffs during lake outbursts, given the increasing trends in population, infrastructure, and hydropower projects in Himalayan headwaters.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email: georg.veh{at}uni-potsdam.de.
Author contributions: G.V. and O.K. designed research; G.V. and O.K. performed research; G.V. and O.K. analyzed data; and G.V., O.K., and A.W. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no competing interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
Data deposition: All input data are available at Zenodo (http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3523213), and model codes are available at GitHub (https://github.com/geveh/GLOFhazard).
This article contains supporting information online at https://www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1914898117/-/DCSupplemental.
Published under the PNAS license.
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