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2002 International Year of the Mountains for This Threatened ResourceJan. 29, 2002 by Christopher Doering, Reuters WASHINGTON — Environmental damage to mountain ranges around the world could trigger more floods, landslides and fires, and bring famine to people living on their slopes, the United Nations University said on Sunday. In a study, the Tokyo-based university said mountains were threatened by pollution, war, deforestation, agriculture, mining and too many tourists - all of which could lead to a slew of serious natural disasters. Mountains, which play a crucial role in world water supplies, cover about 20 percent of the world’s landmass and are home to about 10 percent of all humans. “We can think of them (mountain regions) as the water towers of the world,” said Jack Ives, senior adviser to the university and an expert in mountain ecology. “More than 50 percent of the water we use and need comes from mountains.” Among the most threatened mountain ranges are the European Alps, which feed four major rivers, and the Himalaya-Karakorum-Hindu Kush chain, which rises from monsoon-washed, subtropical South Asia and stretches 3,000 miles to arid peaks in landlocked Afghanistan. The Alps have been hurt by growing tourism and a migration of people from lower levels into more mountainous terrain. The Himalayas are being harmed by war, deforestation, drought, logging and overgrazing. The researchers said more data was needed to design an effective policy to protect mountains. Eight other mountain ranges in Europe, Asia and North America were also cited as under great stress. 2002 has been designated the International Year of the Mountains. Each of those ranges had problems that may not be as severe as in other parts of the world, or on only a small portion of the mountain, the study said. The problems, however, increased the risk that natural disasters could occur and affect people living in the shadow of the mountains. Other ranges under stress were:
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