Dr Aeyaz Ahmad Bhat
Kashmir has always been shaped by snow. From sustaining rivers and springs to regulating agriculture, tourism, and ecological balance, snowfall has functioned as the Valley’s natural lifeline. For generations, winter meant thick white blankets on rooftops, slow melting in spring, steady river flow in summer, and predictable farming cycles. In recent years, however, this familiar pattern has begun to weaken alarmingly. Many winters now pass with minimal snowfall and irregular rainfall, raising serious concerns about the long-term stability of Kashmir’s climate and water security.The primary driver behind this change is global warming. The Himalayan region is warming faster than the global average, and even slight increases in winter temperature profoundly influence precipitation behavior in mountainous terrain. When air temperatures hover just above freezing, atmospheric moisture fails to crystallize into snow and instead falls as weak rain or disperses without precipitation. This subtle thermal shift disrupts the slow-release water system upon which Kashmir’s rivers, springs, and aquifers depend.
Equally significant is the growing instability of western disturbances the large-scale weather systems that traditionally deliver winter rain and snowfall to the Valley. Changes in global atmospheric circulation, driven by warming oceans and shifting pressure systems, have altered the timing, strength, and trajectory of these disturbances. Many now pass rapidly or deviate from their usual paths, resulting in shorter precipitation windows and prolonged dry spells during what was once the peak snow season.Warmer air holds more moisture but releases it unpredictably, increasing the frequency of short, intense rainfall events rather than sustained snowfall. Such rainfall generates rapid surface runoff without sufficient groundwater recharge, intensifying flood risks while weakening long-term water availability. Snow, by contrast, functions as a natural reservoir, releasing meltwater gradually across spring and early summer. The decline of this buffering mechanism is already visible in shrinking spring discharge and fluctuating river flows across the Valley.
“To safeguard Kashmir’s future, urgent policy action and collective stewardship are required to restore ecosystems and address the critical loss of snow, the region’s primary climate regulator.”
Local environmental pressures further amplify the effects of global warming. Rapid urban expansion, excessive concretization, deforestation, shrinking wetlands, vehicular emissions, and unregulated construction reduce natural cooling capacity and disrupt moisture retention. Forest loss weakens slope stability and soil moisture regulation, while degraded wetlands diminish flood buffering and groundwater recharge, making the region increasingly vulnerable to climatic extremes.The consequences are evident across multiple sectors. Drinking water shortages are becoming frequent in both rural and urban settlements as springs weaken. Apple orchards face reduced chilling hours, affecting flowering cycles and fruit quality. Paddy cultivation struggles with irregular irrigation availability, while saffron farming faces moisture stress. Livestock grazing patterns are shifting as alpine pastures dry earlier in the season. Winter tourism and snow-dependent livelihoods face growing uncertainty as snow reliability declines.Ecological systems are also under mounting stress. Reduced snow insulation accelerates soil drying and erosion, increasing landslide susceptibility in vulnerable terrain. Wetlands and high-altitude ecosystems experience declining water input, affecting migratory birds, fisheries, and biodiversity.
Wildlife increasingly encroaches into human settlements in search of food and water, heightening conflict and ecological imbalance.Kashmir’s changing winters are not isolated anomalies but interconnected signals of a warming planet interacting with fragile mountain ecosystems and human pressure. If ignored, these trends will intensify challenges related to water security, food production, disaster risk, and socio-economic stability. Protecting forests, restoring wetlands, regulating construction in ecologically sensitive zones, conserving water resources, and strengthening climate awareness must become immediate policy priorities.Snow has always been Kashmir’s silent protector and natural regulator. Its gradual disappearance is not merely a seasonal concern but a warning that demands informed action, responsible governance, and collective environmental stewardship to safeguard the Valley’s future.
(The author a a researcher in Chemistry is a freelancer. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)





