
-
Man Utd held late in Lyon after Onana errors
-
Wall Street rally fizzles as tariff fears resurface
-
MLS to open 'second phase' of major season overhaul study
-
Argentina braves 24-hour strike as it awaits word on IMF loan
-
Spain's Ballester finds relief in Masters water hazard
-
Porro rescues Postecoglou as Spurs held by Frankfurt
-
Grieving Dominicans start burying 200+ victims of nightclub disaster
-
CONMEBOL proposes one-off 64-team World Cup in 2030
-
Rybakina on form for Kazakhstan in BJK Cup
-
Former Real Madrid coach Leo Beenhakker dies aged 82
-
Rose rockets to top of Masters leaderboard, Scheffler one back
-
Langer fades after fiery start in Masters farewell
-
Iran, US raise stakes ahead of key talks in Oman
-
US-China confrontation overshadows Trump's 'beautiful' trade war
-
RFK, MLK assassination files to be released in 'next few days'
-
Relevent settle anti-trust lawsuit with US Soccer
-
Orcas, dolphins stuck in closed French marine park
-
Rahul shines as Delhi bag fourth straight win in IPL
-
Family bid farewell to merengue singer, killed in Dominican nightclub disaster
-
Mbappe ups stakes in bid to recoup 55mn euros from PSG
-
Scheffler grabs share of early lead in quest for Masters repeat
-
Why did a Dominican nightclub roof cave in?
-
Tanzanian opposition leader Lissu charged with treason
-
TikTok fuels ByteDance revenue as US ban looms: report
-
Iran hands directors suspended jail terms over acclaimed film
-
Ferrari duo counting on change of fortune in Bahrain
-
Dominican Republic starts burying 200+ victims of nightclub disaster
-
Policeman's killer to be executed by firing squad in South Carolina
-
Census shows high number of brown bears in Romania
-
Prada to buy Versace for 1.25 bn euros to create new force in Italian fashion
-
US-China trade war surges, overshadowing Trump climbdown
-
Slippery business: France jails men over eel smuggling
-
Sudan tells top court UAE 'driving force' behind 'genocide'
-
When Kimi met Kimi: Antonelli's first meeting with F1's 'Iceman'
-
Charles and Camilla visit Dante's tomb, Byzantine mosaics
-
Mbappe moves closer to recouping 55mn euros from PSG
-
OpenAI countersues Musk as feud deepens
-
Global plastic recycling rates 'stagnant' at under 10%: study
-
Mumbai attacks suspect extradited from US lands in India
-
Scheffler launches quest for Masters repeat
-
Nicklaus, Player and Watson pick McIlroy to win Masters
-
Lebanon's civil war fighters working for reconciliation, 50 years on
-
Miuccia Prada's path from activist to top designer
-
Pope in surprise St Peter's visit a day after meeting King Charles
-
Forest will ignore top five cushion: Nuno
-
Wall Street rally fizzles as tariff worries resurface
-
Cantona claims Ratcliffe is destroying Man Utd
-
FIA deputy president resigns, attacks Ben Sulayem
-
Russia, US swap prisoners in push for closer ties
-
Alcaraz eases into Monte Carlo quarter-finals, Draper out
RBGPF | -12.83% | 60.27 | $ | |
CMSD | -2.48% | 22.2 | $ | |
CMSC | -2.03% | 22.15 | $ | |
BCC | -3.97% | 94.68 | $ | |
RYCEF | -3.84% | 8.86 | $ | |
BCE | -0.1% | 20.98 | $ | |
SCS | -3.92% | 10.21 | $ | |
NGG | 0.58% | 65.59 | $ | |
RIO | -1.35% | 54.87 | $ | |
GSK | -2.62% | 33.6 | $ | |
RELX | 0.98% | 49.02 | $ | |
AZN | -2.91% | 64.87 | $ | |
JRI | -1.91% | 11.765 | $ | |
BTI | 0.84% | 40.55 | $ | |
BP | -6.37% | 26.23 | $ | |
VOD | -1.54% | 8.45 | $ |

Artificial glaciers boost water supply in northern Pakistan
At the foot of Pakistan's impossibly high mountains whitened by frost all year round, farmers grappling with a lack of water have created their own ice towers.
Warmer winters as a result of climate change has reduced the snow fall and subsequent seasonal snowmelt that feeds the valleys of Gilgit-Baltistan, a remote region home to K2, the world's second-highest peak.
Farmers in the Skardu valley, at an altitude of up to 2,600 metres (8,200 feet) in the shadow of the Karakoram mountain range, searched online for help in how to irrigate their apple and apricot orchards.
"We discovered artificial glaciers on YouTube," Ghulam Haider Hashmi told AFP.
They watched the videos of Sonam Wangchuk, an environmental activist and engineer in the Indian region of Ladakh, less than 200 kilometres away across a heavily patrolled border, who developed the technique about 10 years ago.
Water is piped from streams into the village, and sprayed into the air during the freezing winter temperatures.
"The water must be propelled so that it freezes in the air when temperatures drop below zero, creating ice towers," said Zakir Hussain Zakir, a professor at the University of Baltistan.
The ice forms in the shape of cones that resemble Buddhist stupas, and act as a storage system -- steadily melting throughout spring when temperatures rise.
- 'Ice stupas' -
Gilgit-Baltistan has 13,000 glaciers -- more than any other country on Earth outside the polar regions.
Their beauty has made the region one of the country's top tourist destinations -- towering peaks loom over the Old Silk Road, still visible from a highway transporting tourists between cherry orchards, glaciers and ice-blue lakes.
Sher Muhammad, a specialist in the Hindu Kush-Himalayan mountain range that stretches from Afghanistan to Myanmar, however said most of the region's water supply comes from snow melt in spring, with a fraction from annual glacial melt in summers.
"From late October until early April, we were receiving heavy snowfall. But in the past few years, it's quite dry," Muhammad, a researcher at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), told AFP.
The first "ice stupas" in Gilgit-Baltistan were created in 2018.
Now, more than 20 villages make them every winter, and "more than 16,000 residents have access to water without having to build reservoirs or tanks", said Rashid-ud-Din, provincial head of GLOF-2, a UN-Pakistan plan to adapt to the effects of climate change.
Farmer Muhammad Raza told AFP that eight stupas were built in his village of Hussainabad this winter, trapping approximately 20 million litres of water in the ice.
"We no longer have water shortages during planting," he said, since the open-air reservoirs appeared on the slopes of the valley.
"Before, we had to wait for the glaciers to melt in June to get water, but the stupas saved our fields," said Ali Kazim, also a farmer in the valley.
- Harvest seasons multiply -
Before the stupas, "we planted our crops in May", said 26-year-old Bashir Ahmed who grows potatoes, wheat and barley in nearby Pari village which has also adopted the method.
And "we only had one growing season, whereas now we can plant two or three times" a year.
Temperatures in Pakistan rose twice as fast between 1981 and 2005 compared to the global average, putting the country on the front line of climate change impacts, including water scarcity.
Its 240 million inhabitants live in a territory that is 80 percent arid or semi-arid and depends on rivers and streams originating in neighbouring countries for more than three-quarters of its water.
Glaciers are melting rapidly in Pakistan and across the world, with a few exceptions including the Karakoram mountain range, increasing the risk of flooding and reducing water supply over the long term.
"Faced with climate change, there are neither rich nor poor, neither urban nor rural; the whole world has become vulnerable," said 24-year-old Yasir Parvi.
"In our village, with the ice stupas, we decided to take a chance."
G.Schulte--BTB