International Mountain Day (IMD) 2025 comes at a defining moment for the planet. With glaciers melting at unprecedented rates and mountain ecosystems under severe pressure, this observance encourages the world to recognize the deep connection between glaciers, water, agriculture, food security, and livelihoods.
The United Nations has also declared 2025 as the International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation, giving this year’s Mountain Day even greater global relevance. As mountain communities suffer the earliest and most severe climate impacts, IMD 2025 serves as a collective call to protect the icy reservoirs that sustain life far beyond the mountains.
International Mountain Day 2025 Theme
Theme: “Glaciers matter for water, food and livelihoods in mountains and beyond”
This proposed theme for IMD 2025 emphasizes:
- The life-sustaining role of glaciers for freshwater supply
- Their importance in agriculture, hydropower, and ecosystem balance
- The growing threats climate change poses to mountain communities, Indigenous Peoples, and downstream populations
- The interconnectedness of glaciers and global water cycles
Although this is the suggested theme, countries and communities may choose alternate themes that reflect their unique regional challenges.
Why Glaciers Matter: A Lifeline for the World
Glaciers are often seen as remote, frozen landscapes, but they are actually critical freshwater banks for billions of people. Their meltwater feeds rivers, supports agriculture, powers hydropower stations, and sustains ecosystems.
Key Facts:
- Glaciers and ice sheets store around 70% of Earth’s freshwater.
- Over 2 billion people depend on glacier and snowmelt for daily water needs.
- Rapid glacial retreat is a visible warning sign of the escalating climate crisis.
When glaciers melt too quickly, the consequences are far-reaching and severe:
- Water scarcity in major river basins
- Increased risks of glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs)
- Landslides and soil erosion, damaging infrastructure and farmland
- Reduced hydropower output, affecting clean energy systems
- Threats to food security, especially in mountain agriculture
- Loss of habitats and biodiversity depending on cold-water streams
For many Indigenous communities, glaciers are not only resources but sacred entities, making their disappearance a cultural and spiritual loss.
International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation 2025
In recognition of urgent climate threats, the UN General Assembly declared 2025 the International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation. The goal is to:
- Raise awareness on the cryosphere’s role in the Earth’s climate
- Strengthen global scientific research and data monitoring
- Promote national and international policies to reduce glacier-related risks
- Support resilience in vulnerable mountain and downstream communities
- Encourage cooperation and resource-sharing among nations
This year-long global focus reinforces the importance of IMD 2025.
How to Build Awareness and Action in 2025
1. Strengthen Climate Action
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions is essential for stabilizing global temperatures and slowing glacier loss.
2. Enhance Glacier Monitoring
Scientific observation helps forecast risks like floods, water shortages, and infrastructure threats.
3. Empower Indigenous Peoples and Youth
Local knowledge, cultural practices, and youth leadership can accelerate sustainable solutions.
4. Improve National Policies
Governments must focus on:
- Integrated water resource management
- Early warning systems for cryospheric hazards
- Protected areas for fragile mountain ecosystems
5. Foster Global Collaboration
International partnerships are vital to mobilize resources, share technology, and build long-term resilience for communities dependent on glaciers.
Significance of International Mountain Day 2025
This year’s IMD carries a deeper urgency as the planet experiences:
- Faster glacier melt than ever recorded
- Greater climate-related disasters in mountain regions
- Water shortages in major river basins
- Rising threats to agriculture, hydropower, and tourism
- Cultural loss among Indigenous and mountain societies
IMD 2025 reminds the global community that mountains are the world’s water towers, and losing glaciers means losing security for future generations.


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