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The pandemic must bring us together

David James Molden

5 mins Read

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It is clear that the impacts of the COVID-19 crisis are very high for the people of the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH). As this crisis unfolds, it might seem difficult to imagine how we can move towards prosperity in the mountains. But that is just what we need to do amidst the suffering; we need to imagine together, and work towards building a more resilient and prosperous HKH. Most countries in the region have imposed some kind of lockdown, and vast numbers of people are staying at home at the time of this writing. Even while it is fortunate that most of the HKH mountain areas have so far escaped the huge toll of sickness and death seen in other parts of the world, suffering has taken on different forms as a result of mountain specificities. This crisis has opened our eyes to the many vulnerabilities of mountain people and underlined the importance of our work in amplifying the voices of mountain people and in working towards a prosperous future for the HKH.

ICIMOD staff are working from home, many from their respective countries. It is quite remarkable how well this is going, and I’m very proud of the work that our staff have been able to do remotely. Our internal COVID Task Force monitors the situation daily, and provides information and support to staff to ensure their safety and wellbeing.

Despite the distancing, we remain connected to communities in the HKH to get updates and understand the challenges they are facing. While we look forward to getting back to the field among mountain communities and our partners as soon as possible, we are making adjustments to our planned work and are preparing analyses and recommendations focusing on the crisis in the HKH mountains, the impacts, and how to respond.

Even before COVID-19, there was a crisis of sustainable development – with 1/3 of people living in poverty and 50% facing some form of malnutrition – in mountain areas. This crisis also includes the impacts of climate change and our HKH mountains are particularly vulnerable to climate change, with temperatures rising faster than the global average and glaciers receding. Now the COVID-19 crisis presents new challenges: many migrant workers are now stuck trying to reach their families and safe places; remittance flows, important for poverty reduction, are curtailed for many families; water availability – whether for basic needs or to maintain personal hygiene – is not keeping pace with rising demand, and basic hand washing can be a challenge; and food security is a real issue for many now, and a looming question for millions of mountain dwellers.

We need short-, medium-, and long-term responses, and we need to seize the opportunities present in this situation to bounce back more sustainably. There will be significant government investment into economies and jobs to overcome the crisis, and it is important that these investments also target long-term sustainability. While investments need to target immediate needs, they also need to target resilience-building measures such as entrepreneurial skills and nature-based solutions for mountains, and they need to include measures to address climate change such as clean energy and energy efficiency.

We know that disasters like this have the potential to compound gender inequalities in societies. Women once again are on the frontline of another crisis, playing important roles in health care and social services, and in their own homes and families, where women and girls are the ones largely tasked with providing care to the sick, children, and elderly; managing food stocks and household chores; and provisioning water for domestic use. In the hills and mountains, 80% of households do not have clean energy for cooking, and the smoke from biomass burning puts women at additional risk as people with respiratory problems are at more risk of severe consequences of COVID-19. Unfortunately, gender-based violence is increasing as people huddle together in close quarters during lockdown. Our continued focus on gender transformative action underpins all of our work in response to this crisis. We believe that creating a more prosperous post-pandemic HKH is possible and part of getting there requires making visible gender roles and concerns and giving long overdue value to the roles of women.

With food production and marketing links hit hard, we worry whether a hunger crisis in the mountain will follow the COVID-19 crisis. To avoid this, urgent and smart action is needed in agriculture and to provide food and nutritional security. In the HKH, we see migrant workers returning home, remittances drying up, and a heavy reliance on food imports from the plains. An alarming trend we had noticed before the crisis was mountain people giving up growing nutritious crops for reliance on food transported from the plains. There is an immediate need to focus on food production and marketing, and to anticipate food shortages in many regions so that timely relief can be provided. In the long term, the crisis may open doors for more resilient and nutritious food systems. There is a need to refocus on local food systems, and growing diverse and nutritious foods, and expanding the value chains for mountain products. This could be an opportunity to revitalize mountain farming to support livelihoods.

Cooperation between HKH countries will be important in the immediate future and in the long run and we do appreciate the efforts by the governments and many stakeholders of our Regional Member Countries in containing the spread of the disease. However, the region is now facing a serious crisis of livelihoods. Given the spread of the disease across borders, but also the flow of human labour and food, there is a need for greater cooperation between countries. And we have seen important signs that this is happening, for example with SAARC countries working together to address the crisis.

The work ICIMOD has done to focus global attention on mountain areas and to bring countries together to cooperate for mountains and people is paying off now, and will have huge payoffs in the future. Let us work together across boundaries in the HKH and as a global community to respond to the shocks from this and other crises and to make possible a resilient and prosperous HKH.

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2023年国际山岳日:恢复山地生态系统

山地被广泛认为是生物多样性的发源地,其陡峭的斜坡孕育了各种繁复的生命形式。这些地区作为自然的庇护所变得愈发重要:虽然它们只占据了地球总面积的四分之一,却容纳了地球上85%的两栖动物、鸟类和哺乳动物。这种丰富的自然资源在联合国教科文组织的738个全球生物圈保护区中得到体现,其中明显超过一半位于山区。 然而,令人担忧的是,这些自然资源的非凡丰富正面临威胁。过去,由于偏远或地形困难,山地得以免受人类干扰,但如今这种状况逐渐减少。曾经被视为大自然摇篮和避难所的山地正在逐渐转变成墓地。在兴都库什-喜马拉雅地区,上个世纪就已经失去了70%的生物多样性。这些损失,包括物种的灭绝,如今正以加速度增长,正如ICIMOD的重要评估报告《兴都库什喜马拉雅的水、冰、社会和生态系统》(简称《HIWISE报告》)所指出的那样。 在公众、政治和外交层面,人们越来越认识到自然是我们当前危机中最重要的解决方案之一。联合国已宣布2021-2030年为生态系统恢复十年,去年,《昆明-蒙特利尔全球生物多样性框架》的指导下,全球100多个政府承诺在2030年之前将30%的陆地和海洋保留给自然,其中包括兴都库什-喜马拉雅地区。今年,在联合国全球气候大会COP28上,自然首次成为讨论的核心议题。 这些努力,以及今年国际山岳日的“生态系统恢复”主题,为恢复和保护山区景观提供了迫切需要的推动力。那么,我们的八个成员国离实现“30x30”目标有多近呢?到目前为止,不丹是唯一一个实际超额达标的国家,其51.4%的土地面积已经属于各种保护区类别。 尼泊尔只有不到24%的土地受到保护;中国仅为16%,略高于目标的一半;巴基斯坦占12%;印度为8%;缅甸为7%;孟加拉国为5%,阿富汗为4%。 令人担忧的是,在整个兴都库什-喜马拉雅地区,自然资源仍然丰富的关键区域仍处在保护之外:67%的生态区、39%的生物多样性热点、69%的关键生物多样性区域以及76%的重要鸟类和生物多样性区都没有得到保护。 现有的保护区域犹如在人类改变过的景观中的“孤岛”,缺乏与其他保护区域的连通走廊,无法满足广泛分布的物种需求,并且面临非法捕猎、侵占和资源开采的压力。现有的保护区域不足以确保成功保护我们地区的象征性物种,包括亚洲象、独角犀牛和孟加拉虎。 一个尚未尝试的解决方案是建立跨界生物圈保护区,这将允许在景观层面进行综合保护。实现这一目标需要跨越国家边界的共同政治承诺,并在共享生态系统的管理方面展开合作。ICIMOD将积极推动我们区域成员国接受这一解决方案。 然而,底线是,要扭转自然的损失,我们必须对其进行估值并提供相应的资金支持。只要经济学家继续将其价值定为零,就不会引起足够的重视。在进行估值之前,拥有大量自然资本但经济欠发达的国家将因为缺乏3A信用评级而难以以较低贷款利率借款。必须为该地区的国家提供更便宜的资本来促使自然的恢复:这是ICIMOD将与我们的成员、多边开发银行和其他机构紧急合作推进的事项。为了防止地球系统完全崩溃,我们必须为大自然提供一个适宜的生存环境,这一观点从未像现在这样显而易见。

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