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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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11 Sep 2023 China CN
确保空气洁净蓝天:紧急呼吁全球空气污染公约

近期的空气质量寿命指数(AQLI)报告标题为:“空气污染是地球上人类预期寿命面临的最大外部威胁”。这一严厉警告应该足以激励全球采取行动应对这一最严重且无处不在的威胁。然而,目前还没有专门针对这一“沉默杀手”的全球合作框架或公约。据世界卫生组织称,每年有 700 万人过早死亡与空气污染有关,这比迄今为止死于 Covid-19 的人数还多,而且根据该报告,空气污染对普通人的健康危害比吸烟或酗酒还大。为纪念今年国际清洁空气蓝天日,我紧急呼吁全球和地区领导人建立应对空气污染的全球合作框架。该框架应与解决“三重地球危机”的其中两个要素——气候变化和生物多样性丧失——的框架保持一致。 兴都库什-喜马拉雅地区受到的空气污染的严重影响,根源有很多,包括:机动车辆、工业、焚烧固体生物燃料、农作物秸秆和家庭废物。重要的是,这类受污染的空气并不是某个城市、地区或国家特有的,而是整个印度河-恒河平原和喜马拉雅山麓——横跨北印度次大陆和山脉的数十万平方公里的区域——所共有的。该地区空气中的悬浮颗粒经常超过安全水平,影响着居住在这里的大约十亿人。 正如联合国空气污染倡议所解释的,颗粒物是微小的污染颗粒,这些微小、肉眼看不见的颗粒污染物会深入我们的肺部、血液和身体。约三分之一的中风、慢性呼吸道疾病和肺癌死亡病例以及四分之一的心脏病死亡病例都因这些污染物造成。阳光下许多不同污染物相互作用产生的地面臭氧也是哮喘和慢性呼吸道疾病的原因之一。 美国芝加哥大学能源政策研究所发布的空气质量寿命指数报告显示:“如果污染水平将持续,孟加拉国、印度、尼泊尔和巴基斯坦的居民预计平均寿命会缩短约 5 年。” 报告继续指出,“亚洲和非洲负担最重,但缺乏关键基础设施”。尽管如此,我们还是有理由希望在我们的地区找到可能的解决方案,因为中国在空气污染防治的努力仍然取得了显着成功,而且工作仍在进行中。正如该报告所述,“自 2013 年(即中国开始“反污染之战”的前一年)以来,中国的污染已下降了 42.3%。由于这些改善,如果减排持续,中国公民的平均寿命预计会延长 2.2 年。”

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