Drivers and origins of high-altitude precipitation on the Third Pole

DROP aims to enhance understanding of high-altitude precipitation in Asia's mountain ranges through field observations and atmospheric modeling, improving water security and disaster risk management.

Subsidie
€ 2.500.000
2024

Projectdetails

Introduction

Asia’s mountain ranges are the world’s most important water towers, often referred to as the planet’s Third Pole. Precipitation in these mountains feeds glaciers and snow fields and generates river flow, which sustains millions of people downstream.

Importance of Precipitation

Precipitation also triggers natural hazards such as floods, landslides, and avalanches, which cause enormous human and economic losses. Despite the importance of high-altitude precipitation, we lack a fundamental understanding of the mechanisms that control its distribution and how it changes. We need this to elucidate the water cycle at the Third Pole.

Project Overview

DROP will close this knowledge gap by showing how the mountains, feedback from land surfaces, and large-scale circulation control the magnitude and spatiotemporal distribution of high-altitude snow and rain. New field observations at extreme altitudes and state-of-the-art atmospheric modeling will provide a comprehensive picture for the entire Third Pole at a wide range of scales.

Research Scales

  1. Smallest Scale: A high-altitude ice core and meteorological observations will provide key insights into past accumulation trends.

  2. Valley Scale: I will combine dense observations of precipitation and high-altitude snow accumulation with atmospheric simulations to gain insight into snow and rainfall patterns.

  3. Third Pole Scale: I will conduct state-of-the-art atmospheric model experiments, combined with in-situ observations in regional transects and remote sensing to understand how the extreme topography, land surface feedback, and moisture recycling control snow and rain patterns.

Conclusion

DROP will provide a long-awaited scientific step forward in understanding mountain precipitation in a region where this is of vital importance for water security and disaster risk reduction for millions of people.

Financiële details & Tijdlijn

Financiële details

Subsidiebedrag€ 2.500.000
Totale projectbegroting€ 2.500.000

Tijdlijn

Startdatum1-10-2024
Einddatum30-9-2029
Subsidiejaar2024

Partners & Locaties

Projectpartners

  • UNIVERSITEIT UTRECHTpenvoerder

Land(en)

Netherlands

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