Technical Training Events

Training on GLOF modelling with RAMMS

In the last week of July 2022, 25 participants from four Central Asian countries attended a training workshop on numerical modeling of Glacier Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs). This workshop, preceded by two preparatory online sessions, was organized by Alessandro Cicoira (University of Zurich), the Snow and Avalanche Research Centre SLF in Davos (Perry Barlet, Jessica Munch, Olga Gorynina), and the UNESCO Almaty Office, with support from the State Institute Kazselezashita. Participants were carefully selected from national authorities, research centers, and universities engaged in GLOF risk mitigation.

The training focused on the RAMMS software. On the first day, lectures on flow dynamics, GLOF breaching, and open-access data provided a foundation for practical applications. By the second day, participants could independently acquire data and run numerical simulations. That afternoon, a field visit to Talgar, led by Mr. Murat Kassenov, offered insights into GLOF dynamics, mitigation measures, and software limitations, guided by experts from Kazselezashita and the University of Zurich.

Over the next two days, participants conducted multiple simulations, including those for the four pilot sites of the GLOFCA Project, as well as additional case studies relevant to their work. The workshop concluded with presentations from each country on their study cases, successes, and challenges, followed by the distribution of learning certificates. Institutions now have four-year RAMMS licenses and ongoing support under GLOFCA.

The workshop provided essential training in numerical GLOF simulations while fostering international networking and collaboration. Several partnerships were initiated, contributing to capacity building, development, and cooperation within the GLOFCA framework.

RAMMS modelling of a GLOF within the Ala-Alarcha GLOFCA pilot region, Kyrgyzstan
Participants of the 2022 RAMMS training workshop during the field visit.

Webinar Series on RAMMS Training

Webinar series on EWS with regional and international experts.

In April 2023, the University of Zurich conducted a series of webinars on Early Warning Systems for Glacier Lake Outburst Floods, aiming to integrate local knowledge with international best practices. Under a formal invitation from UNESCO Almaty, partner countries selected national speakers, while four international experts shared insights from successful hazard management projects in China, Peru, and Switzerland.

The webinars attracted broad participation, with 92 attendees, 6 panellists, and 5 technical support staff. Gender representation included 38 females and 65 males. By country: Kazakhstan – 35 (F-19, M-16), Kyrgyzstan – 21 (F-6, M-15), Tajikistan – 7 (M-7), Uzbekistan – 15 (F-4, M-11), and others (Turkmenistan, Austria, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Netherlands, Norway) – 25 (F-8, M-17).

The series served as a platform to recap project progress, foster regional exchange on GLOF-related topics, and launch activities for the summer and subsequent project phases.

Selected panels from the Webinar series. Current national activities, project goals and next tasks for year 2023.

As part of the project, UZH developed an EWS concept note outlining quality standards for EWS implementation: reliability, accuracy, efficiency, durability, and scalability. These standards, defined in the project document, will guide future discussions with local partners and the planning of EWS at pilot sites.

Additionally, a checklist for EWS design is being developed. This document translates the concept note into actionable steps, outlining tasks and responsibilities for the planning, design, installation, testing, and operation of an effective EWS. It is intended to serve as a foundation for all subsequent phases of the project.

Summary of quality standards of the EWS set for the project as presented during the EWS webinar in April 2023.

en_GB