Climate change is making it tougher, especially for women, to live in this valley in the high Himalayas
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“It does not matter to us women whether it rains or snows at unexpected times,” says this resident of Miyar basin when asked about the effects of climate change. “We have to do most of the work irrespective of the weather conditions.” [All photos by Sucharita Sen]
Located in the North Western tip of Himachal Pradesh, the Miyar valley is part of the dry Tibetan plateau. It’s an oasis in this cold desert, thanks to the Menthosa glacier. But it’s an oasis under threat, as the time of year when the glacier melt is at the maximum has been disturbed by climate change.
A team from the New Delhi-based Jawaharlal Nehru University has been studying the effects of climate change in this remote region, as part of the Inter University Consortium on Cryosphere and Climate Change (IUCCC) for the project Himalayan Cryosphere and Climate Change: Science and Society, funded by the Department of Science and Technology, Government of India.
The author, a part of the team, clicked these photographs during a recent visit in connection with the study.