Indonesia, home to a third of the world's rainforest after
Brazil and Congo, expects the dry season could run until October
as El Nino increases the risk of forest fires and threatens
supplies of clean water.
While the agency has warned that the Pacific weather phenomenon
could make this year's dry season the most severe since 2019,
one of its climate researchers said it could also imperil
Indonesia's 12,000-year-old tropical glaciers.
"The glaciers might vanish before 2026, or even faster, and El
Nino could accelerate the melting process," said Donaldi Permana,
referring to the so-called 'Eternity Glaciers'.
The glaciers, which he said were among the few left in the
tropics, are the 4,884-m (16,000-ft) -high Carstensz Pyramid and
the East Northwall Firn, which is 4,700 m (15,420 ft) high, in
the Jayawijaya mountains in the easternmost region of Papua.
The glaciers have thinned significantly in the past few years,
Donaldi said, going to 8 metres (26 ft) in 2021 from 32 m (105
ft) in 2010, while their total width fell to 0.23 km (755 ft) in
2022, from 2.4 km (1.5 miles) in 2000.
But little can be done to prevent the shrinking, he said, adding
that the event could disrupt the regional ecosystem and trigger
a rise in the global sea level within a decade.
"We are now in a position to document the glaciers' extinction,"
added Donaldi, a coordinator of the climate research division of
the agency, known as BMKG. "At least we can tell future
generations that we used to have glaciers."
In addition to Papua, tropical glaciers may be found in the
Andes of South America and the mountains of Kilimanjaro, Mount
Kenya, and Rwenzory in Africa.
Indonesia is the world's top exporter of coal, and aims to reach
net zero emissions by 2060. Coal-fired power makes up more than
half its energy supply.
Last year it set an ambitious deadline of 2030 to cut emissions
by 31.89% on its own, or by 43.2% with international support.
(Reporting by Ananda Teresia; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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