Sunday, June 1, 2014

Climate Change: Experience from Mountains of Nepal

Climate Change: Experience from Mountains of Nepal.
Phurba Sherpa, Flinders University


Globally climate change has been one of the biggest issues and challenges. Its global effects are sea level rise, drought, water scarcity, crop failure, forest fire, biodiversity loss etc. The impact of climate change has started showing its impact in the mountainous countries like Nepal though the impact is not clearly visible in many parts of the world. In the Everest region, fast melting glaciers, drying up of water springs, vegetation shifts, forest fire, unseasonal rainfall, crop failure, early flowering, drought and disasters like landslides and floods are the major impacts I have experienced, seen or heard from the local people. The people in the high mountains are very uneducated about climate change and the impacts of climate change but these local people are the ones that are most affected by it.

Major source of income residing in the rural belts of Nepal are agriculture, tourism (which are seasonal) and dependence on the natural resources (Timber for fuel wood and livelihood; spring water for domestic purpose; NTFPs for livelihood and other forest resources as construction material and fodder). Due to very low adaptive capacity to cope the effects of climate changes the communities in Nepal are highly vulnerable to climate change. Low adaptive capacity is mainly because of direct exposure and sensitivity of the local communities to the impact of changing climate. Exposure of the community to the disasters such as flood, forest fires, Landslide, GLOF, and drought are usually direct as majority of communities reside along the sloppy terrain on the bank of the river and depend on seasonal rainfall for agriculture. Sensitivity is usually due to weak infrastructure which are built unscientifically and due to the lack of knowledge about climate change. Local communities still can be seen doing cultural rituals such as preying god in hope to get rain on time or hoping rate of natural disasters will be less. I have found all these in the Everest region.
Nepal’s approximately more than 55% population are literate but not well educated. In universities of Nepal, students are taught on climate change but the lessons taught are not practical enough and sufficient to develop the human resource that can actually contribute in climate change adaptation. In comparison to the urban areas, numbers of educated people living in the rural areas like in Solukhumbu district are very low. Hence, most of the people living in this rural part have no or very little knowledge about climate change although they have their own experience about the impacts of climate change. Educating people on climate change is one of the major challenges in rural areas of Nepal.

In the Everest region, major threat to local communities has been Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF). What I saw in this region is that local people are very much upset with those people/organizations that only do research and let them know about the threats. They are in the hope that they could get knowledge on climate change and organizations/individuals not only do research but also would bring real solution to make the community resilient. Recently, several glaciers have been reported to be retreating and forming big lakes. One of the examples is the lake Imja. The glacier which now is a huge lake with 65 million cubic metre of water used to be mass of glacier until 1970s. The high annual retreating rate of IMJA has made the communities residing in the downstream of Dudhkoshi River to be in the threat of potential GLOF. Evidence of erratic rain and snowfall has been observed by local people in recent decade which never happened in the past. The rate of forest fire in Sagarmatha National Park and buffer zone which occurred in this decade is the largest until now.

I found that many of the glaciers have now been lost or are forming big lakes like Ngozumpa glacier, Khumbu glacier and Imja glacier. While interviewing local people and in several community consultations (including porters, herders, mountain climbers, trekkers, farmers, hotel owners, monks, teachers, students etc.) what they have seen and experienced are: erratic rain and snowfall events, decreased water in their springs, floods, landslides, forest fire, avalanche, snow melting, crop failure, crop disease, rainfall instead of snowfall etc. are now clearly visible in the Everest region. According to local people these changes have severe impacts in their livelihoods. The increased avalanche have killed many mountaineers during a decade, crop failure and disease has reduced the agricultural productivity, biodiversity shifts is impacting herders and have threated the survival of high altitude cow “Yaks” and other alpine species, water scarcity has increased social disputes, landslide and floods have damaged trails that have caused huge impact on tourism, changing weather pattern such as cloudy condition even in October impacted the air flights which is only the means to get to Everest region and has impacted tourists and tourism very seriously, forest fires have damaged the water pipelines and reduced the fuel wood and fodder, many species such as rhododendron are shifting up and glaciers are melting glaciers are forming huge lakes in the altitudes above 5000 metres which have threatened the communities residing downstream. I have seen that vegetation is shifting upward and many of the vegetation which are anchoring the hills but can’t shift further up. Although the major threat as local people said was the threat of GLOFs, there are several other impacts of climate change that local people are unaware of. Imja already has been seen as the biggest threat to the local people but there are a lot of other glaciers which are increasing their size and could pose severe threat in the future.

While working with the local communities what I have realized is that they are keen interested to know about the changes that is happening around them because of climate change. They were interested to know about what they can do from their own side and what other national/international organizations can do to help them adapt. In many parts of Nepal there have been significant changes in forest cover. Particularly local people managed “community forest” and in the “buffer zone” of National parks forest cover change has been very significant. Local people have now understood the meaning of conservation and importance of sustainable natural resource management. Many of the local communities already have solar panels, improved cooking stove and hydroelectricity which are all climate friendly. But none of these were done to either adapt for climate change or mitigate the carbon sequestration. This shows that if educated to the greater extent, they can develop adaptation measures themselves and can also contribute mitigating climate change globally.

Some interventions have been put in order to adapt climate change. Currently, Local adaptation plan of actions (LAPA) are being made for several districts in support from international organizations and Government of Nepal. The Mountain Institute (TMI) where I worked has made first local adaptation plan of action for Everest region. I was involved in this program for more than 2 years to educate local people, conduct meetings with district based organizations and to develop the adaptation plan. USAID, UNDP, Department of Hydrology and Meteorology are some of the stakeholders of the program where USAID funded TMI for developing LAPA and UNDP has started their work to lower the volume of the lake IMJA. From the different community consultations what I observed is that local people have idea about the changes that are happening around them but don’t know why actually these are happening. They were seen keen interested to know about how actually climate change happens, what are the information sources from where they can get information on future climate change projections, how can it affect their livelihoods (basically agriculture, tourism and water supply), who is the core body to deal with it, how can they adapt against the changes, what are the real risk etc.

As many people in rural mountains usually struggle for their subsistence livelihood, they lack adequate sources from which they can get this information. People in this region are very busy in their own work such as agriculture, trekking, hotels, mountaineering or fishing. I have seen that many of people can’t understand all these information in academic terms or how they get it through radio. Hence in order to aware them effectively, participatory tools and visual information in the language and level they can understand is seen very necessary.

In overall, what I learned while working with the communities in rural areas is that they already are under the high impact of climate change. They are prone to be under the huge impact of climate change in near future. For this there should be effective collaboration to develop effective adaptation plans and most important is that they get implemented. Hence communities should be taught about climate change, its vulnerabilities/risks and adaptation measures. Unless they have adequate knowledge about climate change, sustainability of livelihood of rural communities under climate change can’t be achieved despite of the efforts form government or international communities.

It’s not only the Everest region nor only the communities in the Nepal, but most of the people residing in the mountains are under high impact of climate change already and are very less educated about climate change. The political instability, nation’s economic condition, bureaucratic systems etc. have made the national approach for climate change insignificant in this point of time. Hence it shall be a great initiative to educate them on climate change. Although many others are already working on it, but these efforts still do not seem enough to make these people to think and act to mitigate and adapt against climate change. So a big question is that “HOW CAN WE HELP MOUNTAIN COMMUNITIES SUCH AS NEPAL TO ADAPT AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE?”

Monday, July 11, 2011

CAMOD established


With very few members an organisation aiming to work with non profit motive as Civil Alliance for Mountain Development (CAMOD) has been established. Mr. Manoj Bhatta is the current president of the organisation with other members like Mr. Sandeep Pradhan as vice president, Mr. Phurba Sherpa as Secretery and other members are Ms. Sabina Maharjan, Mr. Sujan Bastola, Ms. Binita Maharjan (Treasurer) and Mr. Kishor Chaudhary. The members of the organisation represents the diversified backgrounds and ethnic communities. Academic backgrounds such as environmental science, Management, Microbiology and Physics will be merged together to generate effective and efficient ideas in different sectors. The organisation aims to work in the sector of the environment management, researches and different other sectors that supports livelihood and deals the environmental issues. This is Kathmandu based organisation and will be working solely or in conjugation with other district based organisations. The organisation too will be playing the role of providing administrative and technical assistance to the district based organisations. To the simplest, organisation also will be conducting school, collage and university based training, workshops, and several other programs that has concerns towards the environment and livelihood.