OP-ED: As glaciers melt, the world’s hidden water banks are at risk

The world’s glaciers, often described as nature’s frozen water banks, serve as critical lifelines for nearly two billion people globally. These immense ice formations sustain some of Earth’s most vital river systems—including the Indus, Nile, Ganges, and Colorado—which provide essential irrigation for agriculture, drinking water for communities, and power for electricity generation. However, accelerating climate change is triggering an unprecedented glacial retreat that threatens water, food, and livelihood security on a planetary scale.

Scientific observations reveal that five of the past six years have witnessed the most rapid glacier melting ever recorded. Mountainous regions, which cover over a quarter of the world’s land surface and host 1.2 billion inhabitants, are warming at rates exceeding the global average. This thermal increase is producing immediate environmental hazards including flash floods, glacial lake outbursts, avalanches, and landslides. More concerning still is the long-term prospect of permanent glacial disappearance, which would fundamentally alter hydrological cycles that have persisted for millennia.

The phenomenon of ‘peak water’—the point at which glacial meltwater reaches maximum output before declining—is already occurring or expected within coming decades for many glaciers. From the Andes to the Himalayas, communities report shortened snow seasons, erratic water flows, and diminished agricultural yields. In Peru, shrinking glaciers have directly reduced crop production, while Pakistan faces disruptions to traditional planting cycles due to unreliable snowmelt.

Beyond practical survival concerns, glacial loss carries profound cultural implications. For Indigenous communities across Asia, Latin America, Africa, and the Pacific, glaciers represent sacred elements of their heritage. Their disappearance erodes centuries-old traditions, rituals, and cultural identities tied to mountain landscapes.

In response to this crisis, the United Nations has designated 2025 as the International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), mandated to lead related observances, emphasizes that effective solutions require integrated approaches combining emission reduction, improved water management, and adaptive agricultural practices. Traditional techniques such as terrace farming, agroecology, and crop diversification—perfected by mountain communities over generations—offer valuable models for sustainable adaptation.

Innovative preservation initiatives are already demonstrating promise. In Kyrgyzstan, FAO-supported projects construct artificial glaciers that store over 1.5 million cubic meters of ice for summer irrigation. India’s Ladakh region employs automated ice reservoirs to capture and preserve winter water, while Peruvian communities implement natural filtration systems to address water quality issues caused by mineral exposure from retreating glaciers.

Despite these efforts, experts warn that current global responses remain fragmented and insufficient. Addressing the glacier-water-agriculture nexus demands coordinated policy alignment, increased climate financing, cross-border cooperation, and enhanced monitoring systems. As population growth escalates water demand while glacial supplies diminish, the preservation of these frozen ecosystems becomes increasingly synonymous with safeguarding humanity’s future.