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Workshop
SG1, AAA
ICIMOD Headquarters, Khumaltar, Lalitpur
13 December 2023
Organisers: Water and Energy Commission Secretariat (WECS), Government of Nepal, and International Center for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD)
Concept note + Agenda
Supporting sustainable energy development in the Hindu Kush Himalaya remains a challenge. Considering the increasing trend of extreme events and climate variability, hydropower infrastructure development is extremely vulnerable to these changes and has significant impacts on its economy and livelihood. This is especially pertinent in Nepal’s case where hydropower contributes to 96% of installed capacity for electricity.
The hydropower sector in Nepal is facing several climatic environmental challenges. The changes in cryosphere, water availability and climate induced hazards pose a significant risk mainly in context of climate and environmental changes to the infrastructure in the river basins. In recent years, there has been an increase in extreme events resulting in major infrastructure and economic losses. The changes in glaciers, precipitation patterns and snow will also affect hydropower production due to changes in the seasonality of river flows to increased variability of flows. Hazards such as permafrost thaw, Glacier Lake Outburst Floods, Potentially Dangerous Glacier Lakes, landslides, floods, and sedimentation pose a significant risk to livelihoods, including to the energy sector and other dependent sectors.
These hazards are changing and increasing due to climate change. The number of potentially dangerous glacier lakes is rising, which has increased the risks for hydropower plants and other critical infrastructure. The damaging impact of these hazards has already been felt with the 2016 GLOF destroying the Bhote Koshi hydropower plant near the Nepal–China border. Similary, a landslide in 2014 affected hydropower projects in the Jure area of central Nepal . This year in June, floods in the eastern districts of Taplejung, Panchthar, Sankhuwasabha, and Bhojpur districts also damaged 30 hydropower projects of 463 MW in total capacity.
Hence, designing and implementing hydropower projects that consider changing cryosphere and associated hazards ensures long-term resilience and sustainability in the face of climate change impacts. The findings of climate change impacts on cryosphere changes in water availability and climate related hazards can be transformed into climate-resilient guidelines to effectively mitigate hazards and enhance the safety and adaptability of hydropower projects.
ICIMOD’s Action Area A – Managing cryosphere and water risks under the Strategic Group 1 – Reducing Climate and Environment Risks is implementing the project “Generation of evidence and knowledge on the basin scale climate and environmental risks to the hydropower sector in Nepal (GEM-Nepal), supported by the Government of Norway. In collaboration with the Water and Energy Secretariat(WECS), this project aims to understand the risks associated with changes in the cryosphere, water availability, and climate-related natural hazards on hydropower. With this understanding, the project intends to develop a Climate Resilient Hydropower Guideline for Nepal.
The goal is to generate and disseminate evidence and knowledge to support effective decision-making, policy formulation, and adoption of solutions to strengthen the management of the hydropower energy sector and inclusive mountain economies in Nepal. The project will also enhance the capacity of key national and local government institutions on climate and environmental risk assessment, specifically pertaining to renewable energy infrastructure, mainly hydropower.
In this regard, the Water and Energy Commission Secretariat (WECS), Government of Nepal and ICIMOD is organizing a one-day inception workshop of the project on “Green Energy Management for Mountain Economies in Nepal – GEM-NEPAL”
The workshop will bring together key stakeholders to discuss the project activity and objectives as well as to identify existing knowledge gaps and the capacity needs to incorporate risks into the development of climate resilient hydropower in Nepal.
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