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LADAKH: A CLIMATE WARNING FROM THE ROOF OF THE WORLD

The Sunday Guardian

|

October 12, 2025

Ladakh's unrest reveals deeper ecological collapse threatening the Himalayas and India's survival.

- ACHARYA PRASHANT

LADAKH: A CLIMATE WARNING FROM THE ROOF OF THE WORLD

The mountains have again started to talk in the quiet, high air of Ladakh, but it seems the country isn't listening.

What happened in Leh this September wasn’t just another protest; it was a sign of something bigger. Curfews were put in place, people died, and Sonam Wangchuk, who had long been calling for a balance between the environment and development, was arrested under the National Security Act. Soon, protests spread to Delhi, Chandigarh, and Dehradun, but the true tremor is still not heard.

Ladakh is warning of something that can’t be stopped by borders or police orders. It isn’t a problem with the government or a fight between regions. It is the slow destruction of the Himalayas, and with it, the destruction of everything that comes from its melting heart.

People have traditionally talked about the Himalayas as a wall that protects India from the north and never moves. But walls are supposed to stay motionless; this one is falling apart as it moves. Geologists claim that the Himalayas are not old since they are always expanding and changing as the earth’s crust moves. It is weak because it is young, and its scars are now clear.

The signals along the Himalayan arc are like lines giving the same core warning: cloudbursts tearing across Himachal's mountains, landslides swallowing Uttarakhand's communities, and glacier lakes bursting in Sikkim's valleys. This sad rhythm has also reached Ladakh.

The glaciers that used to feed Ladakh's rivers are slowly fading away. It took hundreds of years for the ice to build, but it is now disappearing in just a few decades. According to studies by the Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology and the Indian Institute of Science, Ladakh's glaciers have lost over 14 percent of their total mass since 2000, with some retreating by nearly 20 metres each year.

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