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Data for Melting Mountain Glaciers Will Shrink Grain Harvests in China and India

Major Asian River Basins Vulnerable to Glacial Melt (table)

Top Ten Producers of Corn, Wheat, Rice, and Total Grains, 2007 (table)

Snow and Ice Melt Around the World Affecting Food and Water Security (table)

 

Major Asian River Basins Vulnerable to Glacial Melt
River
Population
Basin Area
Cropland
Dependence on Glacial Meltwater
Million
Thousand Square Kilometers
Percent
Tarim
8
1,152
2
Very high
Syr Darya
20
763
22
Very high
Amu Darya
21
535
22
Very high
Indus
178
1,082
30
Very high
Ganges
407
1,016
72
High
Brahmaputra
118
651
29
High
Yangtze
368
1,722
48
High
Yellow
147
945
30
High
Salween
6
272
6
Moderate
Mekong
57
806
38
Moderate
Source: U.N. Environment Programme, Global Outlook for Ice and Snow (Nairobi, Kenya: 2007), p. 131.


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Top Ten Producers of Corn, Wheat, Rice, and Total Grains, 2007 
Corn Wheat Rice Total Grain*
Country 
Quantity
Country 
Quantity
Country 
Quantity
Country 
Quantity
Million Tons
 
Million Tons
 
Million Tons
 
Million Tons
United States
332
China
106
China
130
United States
414
China
145
India
76
India
94
China
389
Brazil
53
United States
56
Indonesia
34
India
206
Mexico
23
Russia
49
Bangladesh
28
Russia
79
Argentina
22
Pakistan
23
Vietnam
23
Brazil
68
India
17
Canada
20
Thailand
19
Canada
48
Canada
12
Kazakhstan
17
Myanmar
11
Argentina
43
South Africa
11
Argentina
16
Philippines
10
Indonesia
41
Ukraine
7
Turkey
16
Brazil
8
Mexico
33
Indonesia
7
Iran
15
Japan
8
Pakistan
30
 
 
 
World Total
770
World Total
605
World Total
423
World Total
2,084
% China and India
21.0
% China and India
30.1
% China and India
52.8
% China and India
28.5
* Total grain includes barley, corn, millet, mixed grain, oats, rice, rye, sorghum, and wheat.
Source: Compiled by Earth Policy Institute from U.S. Department of Agriculture, Production, Supply and Distribution, electronic database at www.fas.usda.gov/psdonline, updated 11 March 2008.

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Snow or Ice Body Location Description
Gangotri Glacier Himalayas The Gangotri Glacier, which provides up to 70 percent of the water in the Ganges, is retreating more than 35 meters per year, nearly twice as fast as 20 years ago. If it disappears, the Ganges will become seasonal, ceasing to flow during the dry season. The Ganges Basin is home to 407 million people and contains 40 percent of India's irrigated cropland.
Tibetan Glaciers Tibet-Qinghai Plateau These glaciers that provide water to the Yangtze, the Yellow, and the Brahmaputra rivers are melting at an accelerating rate and two-thirds could be gone by 2060. This threatens China's massive rice harvest, more than half of which is irrigated by the Yangtze River.
Karakorum, Pamirs and Tien Shan Glaciers Central Asia Glaciers in the mountains of central Asia provide more than 70 percent of the water in the Indus and Amu Darya rivers. Glacial area has dropped by 35-50 percent since the 1930s and hundreds of small glaciers have already vanished. The Indus is critical to Pakistan's food and water security - more than three quarters of Pakistanis live in the Indus basin and its water irrigates 80 percent of the nation's cropland.
Mt. Kilimanjaro and Mt. Kenya Ice Caps East Africa Ice fields on Africa’s highest mountain shrank by 80 percent over the past century, with 33 percent from 1989 to 2000 alone. Mt. Kenya has lost half its glaciers, depleting flow in local rivers that two million people in and around Nairobi depend on for water
Andean Glaciers Peru and Bolivia Glaciers in Peru and Bolivia lost a third of their area between 1970 and 2006, and the Quelccaya glacier in Peru is retreating as fast as two meters a week. 70 percent of Peru's population lives in the coastal zone, where 80 percent of water resources come from snow and ice melt. In Bolivia, the Chacaltaya glacier supplies drinking water to the 1.6 million people in La Paz and El Alto but will disappear within 15 years at the current rate of melt.
Rocky Mountain Snowpack Western United States 85 percent of the flow in the Colorado River, the Southwest's primary source of irrigation water, comes from snowmelt in the Rocky Mountains. This snowpack is decreasing in area and is melting earlier as the climate warms.
Sierra Nevada Snowpack California Snowmelt from the Sierra Nevada provides irrigation water to the Central Valley, the world's fruit and vegetable basket. This snowpack is already melting earlier in the spring and is projected to decrease by 30-70 percent by the end of the century
Source: Compiled by Earth Policy Institute, March 2008, from sources including WWF, IPCC, UNEP, and IWMI and other literature.

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