Dr Yen Le’s time amongst the picturesque mountains and glaciers in Ladakh highlighted the health risks of climate change.
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When Dr Yen Le first set foot in Ladakh, India, she was captivated by its picturesque landscapes – majestic peaks, crystalline lakes and sublime glaciers. The book that inspired her journey hadn’t exaggerated.
Little did she know she would later return to the region as a researcher, uncovering the complexity and fragility beneath Ladakh’s breathtaking vistas.
“Change was something that every local person brought up without me asking,” says Yen, a medical anthropologist and lecturer at the ANU School of Culture, History and Language.
“Climate change is a current and future threat to life and livelihood in Ladakh.”
Ladakh lies in the high-altitude Hindu Kush Himalaya, often called the “Third Pole” for its vast glaciers containing the largest amount of frozen water outside the Arctic and Antarctica.
These glaciers feed ten major river systems in Asia, shaping the lives of over 1.5 billion people. In Ladakh’s cold desert, agriculture depends heavily on glacier melt.
But as the Third Pole is warming nearly twice as fast as the global average due to climate change, Ladakh is among the first to feel the brunt. Households are now dealing with severe water shortages.
While staying with a host family, Yen once witnessed her host leave home late at night to search for water for farming.
“Because it’s so difficult to compete for water during the day, they had to farm in the dark and cold,” Yen recalls.
“The next morning, my host mum collapsed on the carpet from exhaustion. It was really striking to me.”
Disasters caused by extreme weather event have now become an annual occurrence in Ladakh.
With farming incomes dwindling as a result, many young people are leaving for jobs in towns like Leh, leaving rural areas populated mostly by the elderly and children.
“The climate has led to profound demographic changes in rural Ladakh,” says Yen.
Urban areas haven’t been spared either. Tourism, now a key income source, has brought rapid urban growth – but also new challenges.
The influx of tourists and migrant workers has increased plastic waste, water consumption and strain on limited resources. Water quality has declined, compounding the health risks already exacerbated by environmental changes.
“The remarkable shift into a sedentary lifestyle has also contributed to a sharp rise in rates of diabetes, hypertension and other lifestyle related diseases in Ladakh,” Yen notes.
Those transitioning to urban life are found struggling with diseases from contaminated water, substance abuse, and rising rates of mental issues such as depression and anxiety.
These challenges keep drawing Yen back to Ladakh.
“I want to understand the social and cultural factors around illness, as well as the wider picture of environmental, social and cultural consequences on public health,” she says.
Over the past two years, Yen has conducted three seasons of ethnographic fieldwork in Ladakh, documenting the impact of climate change on health. Her efforts have earned her the McMichael Award, which supports researchers addressing the health challenges of climate change.
Based on her interactions with Ladakhi elders, Yen notes their philosophical outlook on life and nature.
“Everything is a process in Ladakh,” she explains. “When they see water, they see glaciers – they see how last year’s snow became today’s meltwater that flows into their fields. They understand the time, effort and the tenacity nature requires.”
Adapting to climate change is no exception.
While elders express deep concern about climate change and a number of young people have actively taken part in sustainability initiatives, many others seem indifferent.
“Young people will be key to coping with climate change in Ladakh,” Yen notes.
Yen believes that understanding the mindset disconnect, improving education about sustainability and public health, raising awareness and encouraging sustainable practices are vital steps for preparing Ladakh’s youth to navigate a changing climate.
She hopes to use the platform of the McMichael Award to conduct community engagement activities with local NGOs and NPOs.
Ladakh’s experience is a microcosm of the challenges humanity faces in adapting to climate change.
Amid the changes, local NGOs like the Students’ Educational and Cultural Movement of Ladakh are already innovating solutions, such as creating artificial glaciers to store winter water for springtime use.
Yen sees parallels between Ladakh and her home country, Vietnam, where young people in the Mekong Delta are engaging in initiatives to combat rising sea levels and flooding.
In wealthy countries like Australia, reflection, research and education are also valuable for understanding the roles they have played and can play in the future.
“What I experienced in Ladakh made me realise how spoiled we are and how much we take for granted,” she reflects.
To Yen, this realisation is the beginning of another process – a journey toward helping build a sustainable and healthy future – while we still have time and hope.
Top image: Dr Yen Le. Photo: Calo Huang/ANU
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