Today is an important day. Waking up at 3:30am for what will be a long day. Starting climbing at night (4am) with headlamps.
A complex mix of rock climbing, technical glacier progression and crossing with ice axe and crampons, fixed rope, rappelling, crevasses crossing, etc.
We do frequent stops for GPS measurements and videos/photos.
David, our Chamonix-based mountain guide, photographer and friend is proud of us (for those interested, my max heart beat during the day: 163 - average of 115 - that is how data driven we are!).
We finally reach summit at 10am, all tired and excited. The weather has been mostly sunny and beautiful since sunrise. We take a few pictures for sponsors and partners (SOPRA Group, La Française, Green Cross, etc.).
We get a good view from Congo from up there. Actually we could have gone down the summit to the Congo side if we had planned for it and if that region was not full of rebels and other risks! On the way back we do more measurements: crevasses (we go under the snout of the glacier to film), and Richard takes more soil samples just at the border of the glacier’s snout (to see what soil composition and vegetation exists as this particular glacier recesses. David is surprised that at this altitude the glacier’s ice seemed old and hard. This type of ice is harder to progress on as it requires good balance and self confidence. On the way down, we try to measure via GPS the exact line of the glacier’s snout. We do part of it, but at David’s instruction, we take some distance from the exact line as there are huge rocks inserted in ice right at the top of the glacier’s end (this can be very dangerous, as they can fall at any time being heated by the sun during the day and making surrounding ice less stable - we decide not to take life-threatening risks to collect data from this glacier).
We go through a thunderstorm on the way down as we cross the nearby Alexandra glacier. And finally, after 11hr 01mn, we are back at Margherita’s base camp, exhausted, proud and happy!
[some data here: 11hr 01mn of intense physical effort. 6km ground distance, 855m of cumulative ascents from our Margherita base camp at 4785m].
Photos © Luc Hardy - Pax Arctica
Monday, January 27, 2014
Friday, January 24, 2014
Pax Arctica Rwenzori Expedition Day 5 – in route for Margherita peak. Wed. Jan. 22, 2014 6pm local time
Yesterday we reached a path at 4450 m. We encountered both rain and hail; the weather changes rapidly in the Rwenzori Mountains. I shot some short videos to explain what has been going on locally (climate change & fires) with the help of our student Richard Atugonza. The videos will be posted on the paxarctica.org website next week. Sheila is feeling sick this morning: cold and headache. Probably altitude sickness, we are monitoring the situation carefully. Health first!
When we arrive at the Margherita camp, we will go to the snout of the glacier to take soil samples with Richard. These samples will be further analyzed at Makerere University in Kampala.
When we arrive at the Margherita camp, we will go to the snout of the glacier to take soil samples with Richard. These samples will be further analyzed at Makerere University in Kampala.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Pax Arctica Rwenzori Expedition day 3 posting from Bugata Camp at 4062m Monday January 20 2014 5.15 pm local time
We have been trekking for 3 days. David, Richard, Sheyla and I are all ok. We arrived today at a permanent camp. The weather is quite humid but fortunately not too windy. Today we tested the drone that we brought along for the expedition. Our goal is to get photos and video footage from above the Margherita glacier that we are hoping to reach in a few days. We've been told that using a drone at this altitude and above these glaciers will be a world's first, apparently no one has tempted to do this before.Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Rwenzori Mountains Expedition leaving soon !
Press release: Uganda expedition being launched to profile the “Doomed Glaciers of Africa”
16 January, 2014 | Entebbe, Uganda: A two-week expedition of western Uganda’s Rwenzori Mountains, conducted by Pax Arctica, Makerere University’s Mountain Resource Centre and Green Cross International, is being launched tomorrow to raise awareness on the Africa’s vanishing glaciers and the global water crisis. The expedition is being led by explorer Luc Hardy, founder of Pax Arctica, an organization that promotes awareness of the impact of climate change on arctic regions. Mr. Hardy is also Vice President of Green Cross France et Territoires, which is part of the Green Cross International (GCI) global network, founded in 1993 by Mikhail Gorbachev to respond to the inter-related challenges of environmental degradation, security and poverty. Scientists have predicted the glaciers located in the Rwenzori Mountains, or Mountains of the Moon, may cease to exist in two decades, possibly as early as the mid-2020s (Taylor, 2006).
Studies have shown that from 1906 to 2003, the area covered by glaciers has reduced from 7.5 km2 to less than 1km2. Research efforts to discover the impact of the disappearance of these glaciers are now critical.
The findings of the Uganda expedition will provide valuable information about the effects of climate change on Africa’s fast disappearing glaciers, and the consequence it may have on water shortages and water ecosystems in this region. Other objectives are to investigate the composition of plant species in the region, and develop the Mountain Research Centre’s glacial monitoring capacities.
“What is happening in the Rwenzori Mountains sheds light on the challenges we are facing globally from climate change and the world water crisis,” said Mr. Hardy. “Human-kind’s inability to contain climate change, and its negative consequences, can be visibly seen in this part of Uganda. The shrinking of this unique African glacier, along with the obvious loss on sustainable water supplies, pose major threats to local communities.”
Joining the expedition will be Sheila Ruyondo, a Ugandan environmental advocate and Uganda’s youth representative to the World Youth Parliament for Water, which aims to raise awareness among young people around the world on the global water crisis. Ms. Ruyondo was raised at the foot of the Rwenzori Mountains, and is dedicated to promoting the right to access clean, safe water as well as initiating conservation efforts in this region of Uganda. Mountain guide David Rastouil and Ugandan university student Richard Atugonza will also participate in the expedition.
In an article by Pulitzer Prize winning writer, Tom Knudson, people familiar with the Rwenzori Mountains have noticed a disturbing shift in decreasing precipitation patterns in recent years. The lack of rainfall has caused many trees to die, diminishing the regions’ ability to soak up and store water, leaving downstream villages at risk for water shortages.
For updates in the coming days about the Doomed Glaciers of Africa expedition, please refer to Green Cross International’s blog and Pax Arctica for movies, reports and photos.
Contacts for interviews:
Pax Arctica:
- Pierre Deyries: info@sagax.com tel: +1 (203) 6250237
- Paul Garwood: paul.garwood@gci.ch, tel: +41 (0) 797760454
About PaxArctica
The Pax Arctica Initiative was created to promote awareness of the threats facing the Arctic regions, to convey a global message of peace and to support the introduction of new ecological regulations for the Arctic region. Luc Hardy is the leader of the Initiative, he is and adventurer, author, and member of the Explorers Club. He is president of Sagax, a US-based investment and management advisory firm.
More information: http://www.paxarctica.org/
About Makerere University’s Mountain Resource Centre
The Makerere University Mountain Research Centre collects information on mountain issues and brings together researchers that do work in mountain areas especially in Uganda but on global issues. It is the focal point for mountain research involved in organising workshops, conferences, trainings on mountain issues and documenting mountain research.
More information: http://scothee.mak.ac.ug/index.php?q=geography
About Green Cross International
GCI was founded in 1993 by Nobel Peace Laureate Mikhail Gorbachev and is an independent non-profit and nongovernmental organization advocating and working globally to address the inter-connected global challenges of security, poverty eradication and environmental degradation through advocacy and local projects. GCI is headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, has offices in some 30 countries and local projects around the world.
More information: http://www.gcint.org/water-for-life-and-peace
About the World Youth Parliament for Water
The World Youth Parliament for Water is a network of young people acting for water. It is active in 71 countries, with a mission to advocate for youth participation in the water sector, and to implement concrete actions for water. It acts at all levels: from local communities, where it implements concrete actions and lays the foundations for universal access to water and sanitation, to the United Nations General Assembly, where it advocates for youth participation in the water sector.
More information: http://www.pmje-wypw.org/
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
West Papua Expedition First Look !
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Deep in Korowai territory, in West Papua, the
family which hosted us last night. They own virtually nothing, move from
a tree house to a new one they build every two years or so. |
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Bobosun, a young Korowai. They don't know their age. He is probably 10. What is he dreaming about? What is future will be like? |
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Hunting wild pig with Oni, a Korowai elder in West Papua. Later, building a basket to catch fish in river (with ant nest bait) http://ow.ly/i/3y0rE http://ow.ly/i/3y0rQ http://ow.ly/i/3y0sh |
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Spending a relaxing evening and night in a Korowai tree house with our new friends... |
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A balanced meal for our Korowai expedition: bananas, grilled bananas and fried bananas... but no banana split :( |
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Security check at Wamena airport, West Papua... ;) |
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Where the Korowai of West Papua live. 'Civilization' is approaching fast and will change their lifestyle. For better or worse? |
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My bathtub last week... really... |
Monday, October 21, 2013
Hello from West Papua.
We are still making progress through the deep jungle. The weather is very hot and humid and there are a lot of insects but the good news is we are spending time with the friendly Korowai tribes. Last night we slept in a tree house with a Korowai family.
More news, videos and photos will be posted later on http://www.paxarctica.org/
We are still making progress through the deep jungle. The weather is very hot and humid and there are a lot of insects but the good news is we are spending time with the friendly Korowai tribes. Last night we slept in a tree house with a Korowai family.
More news, videos and photos will be posted later on http://www.paxarctica.org/
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Climate change hits Upper Mustang
http://www.ekantipur.com/2013/09/28/headlines/Climate-change-hits-Upper-Mustang/378614/
KATHMANDU, SEP 28 -
The ever increasing scarcity of water for irrigation and for people to drink has forced a historically and culturally rich community of Upper Mustang to migrate to a new place, residents of the region have claimed.
While there has not been any official study into what is being seen as a ‘climate refugee’ issue, people leaving the area and individual foreign researchers point out to the rising temperatures in the mountains, causing snow to disappear, as the main reason for the area to dry up.
A total of 18 households representing the entire Samzong village in Tsosher VDC, located at an altitude of around 4000 meters above sea level, were finding it hard to live in their ancestral home as the Samzong stream, fed by the snow during winters started drying up three years ago. As the water eventually stopped flowing in the stream, the community is being relocated in Namshung, a small village on the banks of the Kali Gandaki river and a glacier catchment area in Mustang district.
Recent findings of ancient caves in the area suggest that the place had been hosting human civilisation dating back to 3,000 years. Samzong, a very remote village is the only place in Mustang, the district also known as ‘Himal pariko Jilla,’ where local inhabitants speak the Tibetan language only.
“For decades now, locals in Samzong and nearby villages in Upper Mustang have been facing a water crisis due to less rainfall and inadequate snowline,” said Lama Ngawang Kung Bista, a local from Mustang and the founder director of Lo Mustang Foundation, an organisation facilitating the relocation plan for the affected villagers.
“However, it was only in recent years that the high retreat of the glaciers left the villagers staring at a severe water crisis, threatening the existence of the entire village,” Bista added. According to him, the proposed land for resettlement belongs to the royal family of Mustang, the district that has also earned the sobriquet of ‘the forbidden kingdom.’
The royal family has agreed to part with the land for the villagers’ relocation.
Two other villages, Yara and Dheye, in the same region are also facing various environmental and economic challenges, leading them to abandon their settlements for a better life elsewhere. “The main challenge for the villagers who depend on subsistence farming and livestocks for livelihoods is water for irrigation, which is inadequate or almost nil,” Bista said.
Generally, Mustang is considered a desert with little rainfall activity (few millimeters annually) observed over the decades due to its terrain. It is located in the rain shadow of mountains along the Tibetan plateau. The glaciers in the mountain ranges are the main source of water for people in the entire region.
In recent years, glaciers melted at an alarming rate and the region experienced extreme weather events such as heavy rain and snowfall during winters, which are linked to the changing weather and rainfall patterns.
Two years ago in July, Lo-manthang in Upper Mustang located at an altitude of 3,705 metres above sea level witnessed incessant rainfall for almost 48 hours, triggering flashfloods and landslides and killing one person. Weather experts had then termed the activity an ‘extreme event’ as the average annual rainfall has decreased from around 250 mm in the late 70s to 115 mm in recent years in Mustang.
According to Giovanni Kappenberger, a glaciologist, meteorologist and climatologist from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETHZ) and a mountaineer, precipitation is likely to increase with more occurrences of extreme events in the region.
“There is a marked rise in the temperatures during all seasons in the mountain regions, with Tibet and Mustang areas expecting to heat more than India,” he said in his research work published in 2011.
He said a general shrinking has been observed in glaciers in the Mustang region. He added that smaller glaciers in the region will disappear ‘within decades’ and big glaciers in centuries and very high altitude glaciers (above 6,500 meters) will survive.
Ghana Shyam Gurung, conservation director at WWF Nepal, one of the I/NGOs working in the Mustang area said communities which are already living under hardships in lack of basic necessities, need to be provided with better adaptation measures to deal with the various environmental challenges.
Posted on: 2013-09-28 08:25
KATHMANDU, SEP 28 -
The ever increasing scarcity of water for irrigation and for people to drink has forced a historically and culturally rich community of Upper Mustang to migrate to a new place, residents of the region have claimed.
While there has not been any official study into what is being seen as a ‘climate refugee’ issue, people leaving the area and individual foreign researchers point out to the rising temperatures in the mountains, causing snow to disappear, as the main reason for the area to dry up.
A total of 18 households representing the entire Samzong village in Tsosher VDC, located at an altitude of around 4000 meters above sea level, were finding it hard to live in their ancestral home as the Samzong stream, fed by the snow during winters started drying up three years ago. As the water eventually stopped flowing in the stream, the community is being relocated in Namshung, a small village on the banks of the Kali Gandaki river and a glacier catchment area in Mustang district.
Recent findings of ancient caves in the area suggest that the place had been hosting human civilisation dating back to 3,000 years. Samzong, a very remote village is the only place in Mustang, the district also known as ‘Himal pariko Jilla,’ where local inhabitants speak the Tibetan language only.
“For decades now, locals in Samzong and nearby villages in Upper Mustang have been facing a water crisis due to less rainfall and inadequate snowline,” said Lama Ngawang Kung Bista, a local from Mustang and the founder director of Lo Mustang Foundation, an organisation facilitating the relocation plan for the affected villagers.
“However, it was only in recent years that the high retreat of the glaciers left the villagers staring at a severe water crisis, threatening the existence of the entire village,” Bista added. According to him, the proposed land for resettlement belongs to the royal family of Mustang, the district that has also earned the sobriquet of ‘the forbidden kingdom.’
The royal family has agreed to part with the land for the villagers’ relocation.
Two other villages, Yara and Dheye, in the same region are also facing various environmental and economic challenges, leading them to abandon their settlements for a better life elsewhere. “The main challenge for the villagers who depend on subsistence farming and livestocks for livelihoods is water for irrigation, which is inadequate or almost nil,” Bista said.
Generally, Mustang is considered a desert with little rainfall activity (few millimeters annually) observed over the decades due to its terrain. It is located in the rain shadow of mountains along the Tibetan plateau. The glaciers in the mountain ranges are the main source of water for people in the entire region.
In recent years, glaciers melted at an alarming rate and the region experienced extreme weather events such as heavy rain and snowfall during winters, which are linked to the changing weather and rainfall patterns.
Two years ago in July, Lo-manthang in Upper Mustang located at an altitude of 3,705 metres above sea level witnessed incessant rainfall for almost 48 hours, triggering flashfloods and landslides and killing one person. Weather experts had then termed the activity an ‘extreme event’ as the average annual rainfall has decreased from around 250 mm in the late 70s to 115 mm in recent years in Mustang.
According to Giovanni Kappenberger, a glaciologist, meteorologist and climatologist from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETHZ) and a mountaineer, precipitation is likely to increase with more occurrences of extreme events in the region.
“There is a marked rise in the temperatures during all seasons in the mountain regions, with Tibet and Mustang areas expecting to heat more than India,” he said in his research work published in 2011.
He said a general shrinking has been observed in glaciers in the Mustang region. He added that smaller glaciers in the region will disappear ‘within decades’ and big glaciers in centuries and very high altitude glaciers (above 6,500 meters) will survive.
Ghana Shyam Gurung, conservation director at WWF Nepal, one of the I/NGOs working in the Mustang area said communities which are already living under hardships in lack of basic necessities, need to be provided with better adaptation measures to deal with the various environmental challenges.
Posted on: 2013-09-28 08:25
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Gulf of Mexico natural gas rig blew while completing 'sidetrack well'
The blowout that occurred on a natural gas well in the Gulf of Mexico Tuesday morning happened as Walter Oil & Gas Corp., of Houston, was completing work on a "sidetrack well" to prepare that well for new production, according to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement. A sidetrack well uses the same hole as the original well but then spreads to a new location at the same depth.
From: http://www.nola.com/traffic/index.ssf/2013/07/gulf_of_mexico_natural_gas_rig.html#incart_river
Monday, May 20, 2013
Arctic Council Adds 6 Nations as Observer States, Including China
KIRUNA, Sweden — The Arctic Council
agreed on Wednesday to expand to include six new nations, including
China, as observer states, as a changing climate opens the Arctic to
increasing economic and political competition.
The inclusion of observer states to the council came after a spirited
debate at its biennial meeting and reflected the growing prominence of
the issues facing the region. The council is made up of the eight Arctic
nations: Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and
the United States.
With the Arctic ice melting, the region’s abundant supplies of oil, gas
and minerals have become newly accessible, as have shortened shipping
routes and open water for commercial fishing, setting off a global
competition for influence and economic opportunities far beyond the
nations that border the Arctic.
Carbon-dioxide concentrations hit their highest level in 4m years
The measure of global warming
AT NOON on May 4th the carbon-dioxide concentration in the atmosphere
around the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii hit 400 parts per million
(ppm). The average for the day was 399.73 and researchers at the
observatory expect this figure, too, to exceed 400 in the next few days.
The last time such values prevailed on Earth was in the Pliocene epoch,
4m years ago, when jungles covered northern Canada.
There have already been a few readings above 400ppm elsewhere—those
taken over the Arctic Ocean in May 2012, for example—but they were
exceptional. Mauna Loa is the benchmark for CO2 measurement
(and has been since 1958, see chart) because Hawaii is so far from large
concentrations of humanity. The Arctic, by contrast, gets a lot of
polluted air from Europe and North America.
The concentration of CO2 peaks in May, falls until October
as plant growth in the northern hemisphere’s summer absorbs the gas,
and then goes up again during winter and spring. This year the average
reading for the whole month will probably also reach 400ppm, according
to Pieter Tans, who is in charge of monitoring at Mauna Loa, and the
seasonally adjusted annual figure will reach 400ppm in the spring of
2014 or 2015.
Mauna Loa’s readings are one of the world’s longest-running
measurement series. The first, made in March 1958, was 315ppm. That
means they have risen by a quarter in 55 years. In the early 1960s they
were going up by 0.7ppm a year. The rate of increase is now 2.1ppm—three
times as fast—reflecting the relentless rise in greenhouse-gas
emissions.
Monday, May 13, 2013
Does the recent boom in fracking help or hurt the fight against climate change?
EPA methane report further divides fracking camps
Pittsburgh — The Environmental Protection Agency has dramatically lowered its estimate of how much of a potent heat-trapping gas leaks during natural gas production, in a shift with major implications for a debate that has divided environmentalists: Does the recent boom in fracking help or hurt the fight against climate change?Oil and gas drilling companies had pushed for the change, but there have been differing scientific estimates of the amount of methane that leaks from wells, pipelines and other facilities during production and delivery. Methane is the main component of natural gas.
The new EPA data is "kind of an earthquake" in the debate over drilling, said Michael Shellenberger, the president of the Breakthrough Institute, an environmental group based in Oakland, Calif. "This is great news for anybody concerned about the climate and strong proof that existing technologies can be deployed to reduce methane leaks."
From The Detroit News: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130428/NATION/304280353#ixzz2TBgOAV48
We need more green billionaires like Tom Steyer
Tom Steyer: The Wrath of a Green Billionaire
Billionaires get frustrated by Washington ineptitude just
like everybody else. The difference is that they can afford to do
something about it. Tom Steyer, who founded the San Francisco-based
hedge fund Farallon Capital Management and retired last year with an
estimated $1.4 billion fortune, is one such fed-up billionaire. Steyer’s
particular grievance is the lack of government action to combat global
warming. “If you look at the 2012 campaign, climate change was like
incest—something you couldn’t talk about in polite company,” he says.
“With the current Congress, the chance of any significant energy or
climate legislation that would move the ball forward is somewhere around
nil—possibly lower.”
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-04-25/tom-steyer-the-wrath-of-a-green-billionaire
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Some climate scientists, in a shift, link weather to global warming
Drought and intense heat in the last decade leads some to believe there's enough evidence to establish a statistical pattern. It's a break with mainstream scientific thought
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-sci-weather-climate-change-20121013,0,2353619.sto
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Arctic Ice Melt record hasn't just been broken, it has been smashed!
The vast polar ice cap, which regulates the Earth's temperature and
has been a permanent fixture in our understanding of how the world
works, has this year retreated further and faster than anyone expected.
The previous record, set in 2007, was officially broken on 27 August
when satellite images averaged over five days showed the ice then
extended 4.11 million sq km, a reduction of nearly 50% compared to just
40 years ago.
But since 27 August, the ice just kept melting – at nearly 40,000 sq km a day until a few days ago. Satellite pictures this weekend showed the cap covering only 3.49m sq km. This year, 11.7m sq km of ice melted, 22% more than the long-term average of 9.18m sq km. The record minimum extent is now likely to be formally called on Monday by the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre (NSIDC) in Colorado.
The record hasn't just been broken, it's been smashed to smithereens, adding weight to predictions that the Arctic may be ice-free in summer months within 20 years, say British, Italian and American-based scientists on board the Arctic Sunrise. They are shocked at the speed and extent of the ice loss.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/sep/14/decline-sea-ice-arctic
But since 27 August, the ice just kept melting – at nearly 40,000 sq km a day until a few days ago. Satellite pictures this weekend showed the cap covering only 3.49m sq km. This year, 11.7m sq km of ice melted, 22% more than the long-term average of 9.18m sq km. The record minimum extent is now likely to be formally called on Monday by the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre (NSIDC) in Colorado.
The record hasn't just been broken, it's been smashed to smithereens, adding weight to predictions that the Arctic may be ice-free in summer months within 20 years, say British, Italian and American-based scientists on board the Arctic Sunrise. They are shocked at the speed and extent of the ice loss.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/sep/14/decline-sea-ice-arctic
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