Showing posts with label Himalaya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Himalaya. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Temperature rise could melt half of HKH glaciers: ICIMOD


Kathmandu, Feb. 4
The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) has warned that a two-degree temperature rise could melt half of glaciers in the Hindu-Kush Himalaya (HKH) region and destabilise Asia’s rivers.

A comprehensive new study of the HKH region- the Third Pole and home to Mt. Everest, K2 and other world’s highest peaks-- has found that even the most ambitious Paris Agreement goal of global warming to 1.5 degrees by the end of the century would lead to a 2.1 degree spike in temperature and melting of one-third of the region’s glaciers.

The glaciers are critical water source to some 250 million mountain dwellers and 1.65 billion others living in the river valleys below.

The study warned that if global climate efforts fail, current emissions would lead to five degrees in warming and a loss of two-thirds of region’s glaciers by 2100.
“This is the climate crisis you haven’t heard of,” said Philippus Wester, lead author of the report.

“Global warming is on track to transform the frigid, glacier-covered mountain peaks of the HKH cutting across eight countries to bare rocks in a little less than a century. Impacts on people in the region, already one of the most fragile and hazard-prone mountain regions of the world, will range from worsened air pollution to an increase in extreme weather events.”

But it’s the projected reductions in pre-monsoon river flows and changes in the monsoon that will hit the hardest, throwing urban water systems and food and energy production off kilter, he said.   

Styled after the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports, the ICIMOD claimed that the Hindu Kush Himalaya Assessment is the first and most authoritative study of its kind to provide an assessment of one of the world’s most significant, yet often overlooked mountain regions.

According to the ICIMOD, developed over five years, the report includes insight by more than 350 researchers and policy experts from 22 countries and 185 organisations. With 210 authors, 20 review editors and 125 external reviewers, it provides an unprecedented insight into the region’s distinct environment, people and wildlife.

“The massive size and global significance of the HKH region is indisputable, yet this is the first report to lay down in definitive detail the region’s critical importance to the well-being of billions and its alarming vulnerability, especially in the face of climate change,” said David Molden, Director General of ICIMOD.

The HKH region covers 3,500 kilometers across Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Myanmar, Nepal and Pakistan.

Nestled in its record-breaking peaks, glaciers feed 10 of the world’s most important river systems, including the Ganges, Indus, Yellow, Mekong and Irrawaddy, and directly or indirectly supply billions of people with food, energy, clean air and incomes.

Additionally, the HKH has a huge hydropower potential of 500 gigawatts, enough to power half a billion homes in the region.

“We need to start thinking of mountain regions as climate hotspots worthy of urgent attention, investments and solutions,” Dasho Rinzin Dorji, ICIMOD board member from Bhutan, said. 


Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 5 February 2019. 

Thursday, December 7, 2017

Himali food products get no bidders



Kathmandu, Dec. 6: Organic Himali food products, such as rye, buckwheat and beans have failed to take the fancy of urban consumers and suppliers due to lack of their promotion and availability in the markets.
As a result, the Nepal Food Corporation (NFC) is unable to sell 76.56 tons of beans and 30 tons of buckwheat, and a small amount of rye it bought from the people of the high-Himalayan region.
The government-owned NFC has been buying buckwheat, beans and rye to support agro entrepreneurship by creating a demand for these products and employment.
Just as it was preparing to procure fresh beans and buckwheat, it published a tender notice on November 10 to clear its old stock.
According to the NFC, the 21-day tender notice couldn’t attract a single bidder for the food items.
“No one bid to buy the food items. We are, thus, preparing to publish another notice for the same purpose,” said Shreemani Raj Khanal, officiating Director General of the NFC.
He said that the promotional activities for the new products added to the NFC list were insufficient although it occasionally published advertisements, launched mobile shops and sold food items from multiple outlets during the major festival season.
The state-owned corporation has set the price of beans at Rs. 150 per kg, buckwheat at Rs. 90 per kg and rye at Rs. 110 per kg, which is cheaper by almost one-third their retail price in Kathmandu.
There should be more promotional activities and better packaging as well as delivery mechanism to create a demand and market for the Himalayan products that are organic and very good for health, said Khanal.
The NFC is in the process of procuring 35 tons of beans and 14 tons of buckwheat during the current fiscal year 2017/18.
It had planned to procure 20 tons of rye last year but couldn’t collect any.
According to the 2015 data, Nepal produces about 10,870 tons of buckwheat and 37,354 tons of barley annually.
Food experts say that buckwheat contains iron and anti-oxidants, which are good for human health.
Food item
FY 2016/17
(Planned)
FY 2016/17
(Pocured)
FY 2017/18 (Planned)
Beans
80 tons
76.56 tons
35 tons
Buckwheat
33 tons
30 tons
14 tons
Rye
20 tons
  -
  -
 Source: NFC

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