Back to success stories

Immense outstanding universal value within the HKH

Leveraging the World Heritage Convention for conservation and recognition

70% Complete

Visionary leaders in 1972 established the World Heritage Convention through a General Conference of UNESCO where parties to the convention agreed that certain places on Earth are of outstanding universal value and should therefore form part of the common heritage of humankind. Fifty years later, we are still leveraging this unique and powerful global mechanism for conservation in the HKH. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) is a technical advisor to the World Heritage Committee on natural world heritage and with IUCN and our partner Wild Heritage, we researched and wrote a report that brings a focus to the HKH, supporting identification of potentials for new natural World Heritage sites in the region and for extending already-listed World Heritage sites to adjacent areas that belong together ecologically.

The HKH stands out globally for its exception natural values and diversity. Today, 17 World Heritage sites are listed in the region, including 10 for their natural values. Natural World Heritage sites are globally recognised for their ‘Outstanding Universal Value’, such as the scale of natural habitats, intactness of ecological processes, viability of populations of rare species, as well as exceptional natural beauty. Only a few sites gain this status following a long and rigorous process that does not guarantee inscription. The World Heritage Convention remains under-leveraged in the HKH region. Through this report, we have fostered international cooperation and promoted greater recognition of the region’s global significance under the World Heritage Convention.

Visionary leaders in 1972 established the World Heritage Convention through a General Conference of UNESCO where parties to the convention agreed that certain places on Earth are of outstanding universal value and should therefore form part of the common heritage of humankind. Fifty years later, we are still leveraging this unique and powerful global mechanism for conservation in the HKH.

Other stories

Transboundary tourism across the Kangchenjunga landscape

Homestays are a unique community-based tourism product spread across the Kangchenjunga Landscape (KL) which have improved ...

3 Dec 2019 KSL
Improving farmers’ access to information

Since 2012 ICIMOD, in collaboration with the Central Himalayan Environment Association (CHEA), has implemented the Kailash Sacred Landscape Conservation and ...

2 Dec 2019 KSL
Local council for protected area management in KSL, Nepal

The Api Nampa Conservation Area (ANCA) is a protected area at the far northwest corner of Nepal, bordering Tibet and ...

Improving livelihoods and conservation through agroforestry

We are leveraging a public–private–community partnership working with the private sector company Dabur Nepal Pvt. Ltd, ...

3 Dec 2019 REDD+
REDD+ for green communities

Global uptake of a community-based REDD+ approach Recognizing the importance of reducing emission from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD), there was ...

South–south learning in participatory forest management

Nepal’s experiences with community forestry could help Myanmar address deforestation and forest degradation

Tourism planning at the local level

As Nepal’s gateway to Mount Kailash in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, Namkha Rural Municipality ...

Yak as a landscape connector

Regional cooperation on yak conservation benefits forged through events and networks in the Kanchenjunga Landscape