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REGIONAL WORKSHOP ON
Atmosphere
Virtual
31 January 2022 to 03 February 2022
Organizer: ICIMOD, U.S. State Department
REGISTRATION
Air pollution is a severe problem across South Asia, especially in the region around the Indo- Gangetic Plain. The Greater Punjab, located in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent, spanning across the borders of India and Pakistan, experiences high levels of pollution with similar sources, cycles, and impacts. This shared issue demands a transboundary collaborative approach, including a regional network of specialists working on various aspects of air pollution and knowledge sharing for optimal and broad scale results that benefit all. To address this gap, we are organizing this regional workshop in collaboration with the U.S. State Department to help develop pathways for dialogue and knowledge sharing for effective air pollution mitigation in the Greater Punjab region.
This workshop aims to bring together researchers, practitioners and experts from diverse sectors and disciplines – air quality monitoring, health, gender equality and social inclusion, livelihoods, knowledge management and communication, as well as those working on brick kilns, open burning and transport sectors, and regional pollution issues like smog and fog – to share their knowledge and experience on air pollution, mainly in the Greater Punjab. The workshop will support the establishment of a network of specialists to assist in the development of a regional perspective that has the potential to influence decision makers across the Greater Punjab.
South Asia, especially the region around the Indo Gangetic Plains, is a global air pollution hotspot. Air pollution is the biggest risk factor in mortality and morbidity in India and second biggest risk factor in Pakistan. The Punjab region – shared between India and Pakistan – faces similar air quality issues with emission sources such as residential biomass burning, transportation, industrial activity, power generation, open waste burning, agricultural practice (including open residue burning). Furthermore, crop residue burning is one of the most prominent air pollution emission sources across the region. Meteorological parameters drive dispersion and transport of pollutants across the region as well as inflow and outflow across the Punjab. Transport and transformation of emitted and then mixed pollutant plumes, in conjunction with stagnation caused by regional orography and wider atmospheric conditions at receptor sites causes severe air pollution episodes or haze events.
ICIMOD is a regional intergovernmental learning and knowledge sharing centre serving the eight regional member countries of the Hindu Kush Himalayan (HKH) region – Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Myanmar, Nepal, and Pakistan – and is based in Kathmandu, Nepal. Our Regional Programme on Atmosphere aims to improve understanding of air pollutant emissions, atmospheric processes and change, and impacts and promote mitigation and policy solutions while building awareness, capacity, and collaboration in the HKH and upwind regions. The programme aims to promote the adoption of effective measures and policies to reduce air pollution and its impacts within the HKH through improved knowledge and enhanced capacity of our regional partners. We are also involved in identifying, testing, and piloting mitigation solutions; capacity building and outreach; fostering regional collaboration and cross-border network building; and contributing to policy at local, national, regional, and global levels.
Master of ceremony: Maxim Shrestha
Moderator: Bhupesh Adhikary, Senior Air Quality Specialist, Water and Air, ICIMOD Siva Praveen Puppala, Programme Coordinator, Atmospheric Watch Initiative, ICIMOD
Gufran-Ullah Beig, Founder Project Director-SAFAR, Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Pune
Farzana Altaf Shah, Director General, Pakistan Environmental Protection Agency
Eri Saikawa, Associate Professor, Department of Environmental Sciences, Emory University
Poornima Prabhakaran, Head-Environmental Health & Additional Professor, and Deputy Director, Centre for Environmental Health Public Health Foundation of India
Moderator: Omair Ahmad, Managing Editor – South Asia, Third Pole
Irfan Younas, CEO and Project Director, Kadam Communications & Consultants Private Ltd
Debajit Palit, Director, Rural Energy and Livelihoods, The Energy & Resources Institute (TERI)
Fiona Lambe, Research Fellow, Stockholm Environment Institute
Anumita Roy Chowdhury, Executive Director Research And Advocacy, Centre for Science and Environment
Moderator: Bidya Banmali Pradhan, Programme Manager, Atmosphere, ICIMOD
Bhushan Tuladhar, Chief of Party, USAID Swachchha Hawa, FHI 360, Nepal
Asad Mahmood, Head of Technical Services & Company Secretary, National Energy Efficiency & Conservation Authority (NEECA)
Sandeep Roy Choudhury, Director and co-founder at VNV Advisory Services
Mehar Abdul Haq, Senior Vice Chairman, Brick Kilns Owners’ Association Pakistan and Founding Member, Federation of Asian Brick Kiln Associations (FABKA)
Ihsanullah Marwat, Research Fellow (Energy Efficiency), SAARC Energy Center
Moderator: Philippus Wester, Programme Manager, Mountain Knowledge & Action Networks, ICIMOD
Falguni Patadia, Scientist, Science and Technology Institute (STI), Universities Space Research Application (USRA), NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, and SERVIR AST Portfolio Manager
Prakash Bhave, Research Scientist, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Duke University
Pratima Singh, Research Scientist, Center for Study of Science, Technology and Policy (CSTEP)
Nazifa Butt, Senior Manager, Climate and Energy Programme, WWF-Pakistan
Nand Kishor Agrawal, Programme Manager, Adaptation and Resilience Building, ICIMOD
Monica Medina, Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs, U.S. Department of State
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