Back to news

Waste management, sustainable tourism, and the quest to become India’s cleanest village

A remote Himalayan destination in Singalila National Park has started on the ambitious journey of becoming India’s cleanest village.

Gorkhey, a panoramic village in West Bengal, situated along its borders with Nepal and Sikkim, is a popular destination for tourists visiting Singalila National Park. However, without urgent action, rising levels of solid waste – plastic in particular – threaten to spoil the pristine environment that many tourists seek to experience.

Anu Kumari Lama, Nakul Chettri & Kailash Gaira

1 min Read

70% Complete
The panoramic forested area of Singalila National Park, as seen from Ribdi, Sikkim.

With support from the Kangchenjunga Landscape Conservation and Development Initiative (KLCDI) at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), homestay and lodge operators, women’s groups, and Park officials came together in Gorkhey in early June 2018 to launch a campaign to keep the landscape clean. The event raised awareness about the need for better waste management practices to continue developing the area as a sustainable ecotourism destination. Bijoy Tamang, Range Officer of Singalila National Park said, “The process has begun where it is needed the most”.

People from the initiative’s other pilot sites in West Bengal (Samanden and Bandapani) and Sikkim, India (Ribdi and Dzongu), and Panchthar district, Nepal (Phalelung), also joined the event. More than 45 participants discussed their current waste management practices, which generally include burning and burying waste, and explored ways to beat rising levels of plastic pollution.

2
1. Participants of a solid waste management training organized on World Environment Day with the slogan ‘Beat Plastic Pollution’. 2. Participants watch a documentary on the environmental impacts of plastic waste during a training programme on solid waste management in Gorkhey, Singalila National Park, India.

Tshering Uden Bhutia , resource person from the Khangchendzonga Conservation Committee (KCC), shared the story of communities along the trekking route from Yuksam to Khangchendzonga National Park adopting ‘zero waste’ management practices, and how this shift has contributed to the growth of ecotourism in the area.

Participants vowed to rethink their plastic usage, and local homestay operators, retail shop owners, and park officials committed to taking this zero waste landscape campaign forward. Chandrakala Sherpa of Paradise Homestay said, “The training helped raise awareness and showed everyone that we have the potential to make our village the cleanest in India.”

Keshari Gurung, a participant from Nepal, said, “The training was encouraging for women and a good opportunity to learn about what people in our landscape are doing to address this issue”.

The GB Pant National Institute of Himalayan Environment and Sustainable Development organized the event in collaboration with other KSLCDI partners. The Kangchenjunga Iinitiative is supported by the governments of Austria and Germany.

The event coincided with World Environment Day 2018 – themed ‘beat plastic pollution’. The efforts of stakeholders in the Kangchenjunga region to transform it into a zero waste landscape contribute to the Clean India Mission (Swachh Bharat Abhiyan) that was launched by the Government of India as it hosted global activities on 5 June.

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

related content

Continue exploring this topic

12 Oct 2015 News
Water management training in Myanmar

ICIMOD held a five-day training session on integrated water management 25-29 August 2015 in Nyaung Shwe, Myanmar. Participants were instructed in ...

4 Mar 2015 News
Humla landslide update

According to the Department of Hydrology and Meteorology (DHM), Dadeldhura received 67 mm of ...

25 May 2017 Himalica
High-level Bangladeshi Delegates visit Dabur Nepal’s Ashok Medicinal and Aromatic Plants Centre in Banepa

The Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh hold great promise for the production and commercialization of non-timber forest products such as ...

Best Practices to Counter Climate Change Shared in Gilgit-Baltistan

A policy roundtable, Building Climate Resiliency in Gilgit-Baltistan, held at the Karakorum International University on 26 June 2018, emphasized the ...

25 May 2016 News
Developing Nepal’s Hydropower Potential

Significant contributions in drafting and presenting ‘Hydropower Environmental Impact Assessment Guidelines (HP-EIA) of Nepal’ to the Government of Nepal (GoN) ...

14 Aug 2015 News
EU and ICIMOD intensify collaboration

A joint meeting of delegations from the EU and ICIMOD expressed satisfaction on the progress made by the EU-funded programme ...

9 Nov 2016 News
REDD+ Initiative and Partners Conduct Ecotourism Trail Mapping in and around Ludhi Khola Watershed of Gorkha, Nepal

Ecotourism has the potential to compliment Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) finance for landscape level conservation and ...

River Basins in the Age of Federalism

Effective management of river basins for multiple benefits, such as the availability of water for domestic use, agriculture, and energy, ...