Kathmandu, Dec. 3
The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has launched a new
initiative to help assess and manage climate and disaster risks in the Hindu
Kush Himalaya region, a critical water tower supporting the livelihoods of more
than a billion of people across Asia.
"Through technical assistance, ADB will undertake deep
analysis of multi-hazard risks which include landslides, earthquakes, and
floods—including from glacier lake outbursts—and vulnerabilities in Bhutan and
Nepal," the ADB informed in a statement on Sunday.
According to the multilateral bank, this will help to
strengthen the two governments’ capacities to conduct risk assessments in
priority river basins. These assessments will be used to develop early warning
systems and risk management options for future infrastructure development.
Home to the largest ice reserves outside of the polar
regions, the Hindu Kush Himalayas feed 10 major rivers which sustain the
livelihoods of 240 million people in the mountains and more than 1.6 billion
people downstream.
The region is warming faster than the global average and if
global temperature rises hit 3°C, about 75 per cent of glaciers in Bhutan and
Nepal could melt by the end of this century. That would place unprecedented
stress on access to water, threaten food and energy security, and result in
significant biodiversity loss.
“The roof of the world is melting,” said ADB President
Masatsugu Asakawa. “The Hindu Kush Himalayas region is critical to the
well-being and economic security of more than a billion people across our
region. This initiative will help equip Bhutan and Nepal with essential
information and enable them to invest in effective climate adaptation—which is
now critical to managing climate risk.”
From 1985 to 2014, economic losses resulting from disasters
in the Hindu Kush Himalayas region totaled $45 billion, much higher than those
of any other mountain region. Since then, the increasing frequency and
intensity of disaster events have pushed up economic losses and the number of
people killed or displaced by such events.
As Asia and the Pacific’s climate bank, ADB aims to provide US$100
billion in climate financing from its own resources from 2019 to 2030,
including $34 billion for adaptation. In 2022, ADB committed $7.1 billion of
climate finance, including $4.3 billion for mitigation and $2.8 billion for
adaptation. The bank mobilized an additional $548 million in climate finance
from the private sector last year.
Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 4 December 2023.
No comments:
Post a Comment