"Roof of the world" glaciers melting fast   (Reuters)  Updated: 2006-05-03 09:00  
BEIJING, May 2 - Glaciers covering China's Qinghai-Tibet plateau are 
shrinking by 7 percent a year due to global warming and the environmental 
consequences may be dire, Xinhua news agency reported on Tuesday. 
 
 
 
 
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 A 
 train runs across the pass of Tanglha Mountain on the 
 Qinghai-Tibet Plateau on April 2, 2006. 
[Xinhua] |    Rising temperatures that have 
accelerated the melting of glaciers across the "roof of the world" will 
eventually turn tundra that spans Tibet and surrounding high country into 
desert, the agency quoted Professor Dong Guangrong with the Chinese Academy of 
Sciences as saying. 
Dong warned the deterioration of the plateau may trigger more droughts and 
increase sandstorms that lash western and northern China. He reached his 
conclusions after analysing four decades of data from China's 681 weather 
stations. 
 Han Yongxiang of China's National Meteorological Bureau said average 
temperatures in Tibet had risen 0.9 centigrade since the 1980s, accelerating the 
melting of glaciers and frozen tundra across the plateau. 
 The Qinghai-Tibet plateau covers 2.5 million square km (0.96 million square 
miles) -- about a quarter of China's land surface -- at an average altitude of 
4,000 metres (13,000 ft) above sea level. 
 Dust and sandstorms are a growing problem, particularly in North China, due 
to deforestation, drought and the environmental depredations of China's 
breakneck economic growth. 
 A strong sandstorm swept across one eighth of China's territory on April 16 
and 17, dumping 330,000 tonnes of dust on Beijing and reaching as far as Korea 
and Japan. 
 China's weathermen might soon launch a "dust forecast" in their bulletins, 
Xinhua quoted a China Meteorological Administration official as saying. 
  
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