By Tempa Gyaltsen Zamlha
The
weeklong climate strike being observed across 150 countries has received a
massive support from one of the most organized refugee communities in the world
– the Tibetans in exile. The Tibetan diaspora, which has a presence in at least
40 countries, is participating in the protests while being worried about the
severe impact of climate change in their homeland, too.
The
climate strike initiated by Greta Thunberg, an inspirational teenage
environmentalist, got strong support from the Dalai Lama of Tibet, one of the
most respected global figures. In a letter to the teenage icon, the Dalai Lama
wrote, “It is encouraging to see how you have opened the eyes of the world to
the urgency to protect our planet, our only home. At the same time, you have
inspired so many young brothers and sisters to join this movement.”
The
Dalai Lama himself is an ardent supporter of environmental protection, whose
efforts to address the issue began as early as the 1950s, when he was a
teenager too. He is probably one of the most consistent environmentalists.
The
Tibetan Plateau, where the Dalai Lama was born in 1935, is a vast mountainous
region with an area of 2.5 million sq. km., which is nearly 2% of the earth’s
land surface. The region was perceived as “one great zoological garden” by
early explorers to the plateau. Some scientists have compared its known
biodiversity to that of Amazon Rainforest.
Unfortunately,
Tibet’s forest, which was one of the oldest reserves in all central Asia until
Chinese occupation in 1949, was reduced to 13.57 million hectares from 25.2
million hectares, about 46% reduction between 1950 and 1985, with an estimate
market value of $54 billion. The alarming scale of logging in some parts of
Tibet led to the 1998 Yangtze flood and the 2010 Drukchu (Zhouqu) flood,
killing thousands and displacing millions in China.
The
once rain-scarce mountainous terrain of Tibet has witness consecutive increased
torrential rainfall for last the 4 years, causing simultaneous floods and
landslides in many parts of Tibet. A twin landslide (October 11 2018 and
November 3, 2018) in Palyul county in Eastern Tibet blocked the Yangtze River –
the longest river in Asia and third longest in the world. Eleven days of
blockage completely inundated the nearby Bolu Township in Tibet and the horror
of a sudden collapse of the artificial barrier caused massive panic in the low
lying regions of China through where the river flows.
The
Tibetan participants at the climate strike have called for the protection of
the “Earth’s Third Pole”, as the Tibetan Plateau is popularly referred to by
scientists. The presence of 46,000 glaciers, covering an area of 105,000 sq.
km., makes the plateau the largest source of accessible fresh water on the
planet and the third largest reservoir of ice, after the North and South Poles.
With
the constant temperature rise in Tibet, the once permanently snowcapped
mountains are quickly receding at an alarming rate. In 2015, Professor Kang at
the Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research found out that there had been no net
accumulation of ice in the region since 1950s, clearly indicating a regular
loss of glaciers. Another scientist, Professor Yao Tandong of Chinese Academy
of Science, even warned that 2/3rd of all glaciers on the plateau could be gone
by 2050 if the current rate of glacier retreat continues.
The
Tibetan Plateau has a global ecological importance. Standing at an average
elevation of more than 4000 meters above sea level, it influences the timing
and intensity of the Indian and the East Asian monsoons. Scientific studies
have even linked the worsening heat waves in Europe and northeast Asia to the
plateau’s receding snow cover.
The
Tibetan participants at the on-going climate strike have also called for
respect for Tibetan cultural way of life and its role in environmental
protection.
The
cultural way of life in Tibet, which was greatly influenced by Bon and Buddhist
traditions, both of which strictly forbid hunting of wild animals. For example,
successive rulers in Tibet issued stringent edicts to ban hunting at several
ecological sites during various periods of its history.
However,
with the Chinese occupation, Tibet witnessed a sudden disruption in its age-old
tradition of causing minimum harm to the natural environment and its wild life
inhabitants. Many elderly Tibetans, who had to flee Tibet during the Chinese
invasion in the 1950s, had seen herds of wild animals slaughtered by the
People’s Liberation Army (PLA) with their machineguns. Such hunting practice
with a horrifying scale of wild animals been killed instantly was utterly alien
to the land and people of Tibet.
The
occupation of Tibet also gave China control over the world’s greatest water
resources. Asia’s largest rivers, i.e. Indus, Brahmaputra, Salween, Mekong,
Yangtze and Yellow river, all come from Tibet. According to the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP), rivers originating from the Tibetan Plateau feed
1.5 billion people in Asia.
Since
the ecological health of the Tibetan Plateau is crucial for a stable social,
economic and environmental well-being of many countries, any further
degradation of the land will exacerbate the dire situation and could bring
catastrophic consequences for Tibet, China and the world.
As
Tibetans have joined hands with the international community at the global
climate strike, the world, too, must support Tibetans in protecting their
plateau from any further degradation.
(The article was originally posted on Tibet.net on September 26, 2019)
(The article was originally posted on Tibet.net on September 26, 2019)
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