Back to news
17 Apr 2019 | Cryosphere

HKH Science News: Conventional models for glacier melt calculation may not work in High Mountain Asia environments

A recent research undertaken by ICIMOD and partners in central Nepal between 2013 and 2017 provides a guideline for ablation modelling in High Mountain Asia (HMA) environments. Maxime Litt, lead author of the study, said, “We show that the conventional models do not consider a number of important drivers of glacier mass loss at high altitudes and such approaches have to be handled with care.”

1 min Read

70% Complete
An automatic weather station on Mera Glacier, one of two ICIMOD research sites in Nepal. Researchers used data from six automatic weather stations installed on the two glaciers. (Photo: Emmy Stigter/Utrecht University).

The conventional approach of using temperature index models for modelling glacier ablation requires few input variables and relies on simple empirical relations. The approach is assumed to be reliable at lower elevations below 3,500 metres above sea level (masl), where the air temperature relates well to the energy inputs driving glacier melt.

At the high-elevation glaciers in the HMA, the scientists involved in the research observed that incoming shortwave radiation is the dominant energy input and a full surface energy balance model relates only partly to daily mean air temperature.

During monsoon in HMA environments, surface melt dominates ablation processes at lower elevations between 4,950 and 5,380 masl. As net shortwave radiation is the main energy input at the glacier surface, albedo and cloudiness play key roles while being highly variable in space and time. For these cases only, ablation can be calculated with a temperature index model or an enhanced temperature index model that includes a shortwave radiation scheme and site-specific ablation factors. In the ablation zone during other seasons, and during all seasons in the accumulation zone, sublimation and other wind-driven ablation processes are important for mass loss and remain unresolved through the use of temperature index or enhanced temperature index methods.

The research article concludes that empirical models using only one set of parameters for modelling the observed ablation at different sites and periods demonstrate limited performance. The lack of consistency in temperature index or enhanced temperature index parameters between sites and periods is similarly problematic. Furthermore, ablation modeled with a surface energy balance model can diverge from the observations, but since sublimation is important, a suitable value for surface roughness can solve the issue, acting as a tuning parameter.

For details, please see: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-41657-5

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

RELATED CONTENTS

Continue exploring this topic

13 Jan 2023 Cryosphere
Focusing on sediment load monitoring in Nepal

There is increasing interest in developing seasonal reservoirs in new hydropower projects in Nepal because existing hydropower projects generally do ...

15 Apr 2015 News
Observing the Kailash progress

A team of officials from the Department for International Development (DFID) under the United Kingdom government visited the districts of ...

10 Apr 2015 Atmosphere Initiative
NEC Secretary visits ICIMOD

Secretary of the National Environment Commission (NEC) of Bhutan, Dasho Ugyen Tshewang, visited the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) headquarters on ...

23 Aug 2016 News
Assessment Tools Manage Water Resources Better

More than twenty water-resource management practitioners and researchers from China, In-dia and Nepal participated in a five-day training on the ...

8 Mar 2015 News
The Unresolved Equation

As we were schooling and grooming ourselves to become career women, the issues of ...

19 Dec 2016 News
ICIMOD partner receives award for Resilient Mountain Village

The Center for Environment and Agricultural Policy Research, Extension and Development (CEAPRED) received the Adaptation at Scale Prize, Protsahan ...

30 Sep 2016 News
Demystifying Hydrogeology at the 43rd IAH Congress, in Montpellier, France

Water is a primary life-giving resource, and its availability is an essential component in socioeconomic development and poverty reduction .The ...

27 Jul 2018 DFAT Brahmaputra
Hydrogeological Model of Godavari Landscape to Support Spring Revival and Springshed Management

Springs are the source of water for millions of people in the mid-hills of the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH), but ...