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ROUNDTABLE CONSULTATION
SG2 & AAC
Kathmandu, Nepal
17 January 2025
Organisers: ICIMOD, UNDP, IGES
To inform further collaboration and strengthen a shared understanding of climate risks and intersectionalities in the HKH region, ICIMOD in collaboration with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES) are driving a regional scoping assessment that can inform all stakeholders of the climate-induced challenges to human wellbeing and socio-ecological resilience of mountain communities, and the areas of programming to address the risks. The focus is on four dimensions: human mobility, food security, energy security and economic/livelihood security, and on 5 HKH countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan).
The consultation will involve climate change experts, researchers, development practitioners, business and industry representatives, local authorities, and CSOs.
As climate change accelerates, impacting every region and sector, there is growing apprehension about its potential to exacerbate many of the current social, economic, and environmental challenges and threats already being faced. Climate change can contribute to instability, lead to displacement and migration, worsen food production and access, and affect energy supply and the livelihoods of entire communities and regions. In many regions, the increasing intensity and frequency of extreme weather events, sea-level rise, and droughts are already contributing to greater food and water insecurity, economic disruption, large-scale human displacement, and social unrest and national insecurity.
In the Hindu Kush Himalayan (HKH) region, climate-related risks to food, water, and livelihoods are already affecting mountain communities, and in many cases forcing people to migrate. The women, children and the elderly are often disproportionately impacted by climate security risks. Beyond the mountainous region, glacier melting, in the long run, could cause an enormous negative impact on the food security of the two billion population downstream who depend on the himalayan river water resources. Cascading natural hazards from climate impacts are likely to drive out-migration further and threaten urban settlements in the hills as well as plains.
Focusing on four dimensions: human mobility, food security, energy security and economic/livelihood security, the study team will be conducting Country Consultation Workshops in each of these 5 countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan) as part of a bottom-up methodology to harvest the multiple narratives around climate risks and intersectionalities from diverse stakeholders.
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