Back to news
4 Feb 2016 | Climate change

Myanmar Journalists Learn Climate Change Communication

2 mins Read

70% Complete

A five-day training for 20 Myanmar journalists on reporting climate change adaptation was organised by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) in Nyaung Shwe, Shan State, in collaboration with the Myanmar Institute for Integrated Development. The training was organised as part of the EU-funded Rural Livelihoods and Climate Change Adaptation in the Himalayas (Himalica) programme, and included field visits.

Journalists cover news related to climate change adaptation on a daily basis, and yet they often lack the basic conceptual understanding of the subject they write about. The training focused on understanding the role of journalists as communicators in translating information related to climate change to a wider audience in everyday language.

Twenty journalists attended the training in Nyaung Shwe

Training climate change adaptation communicators is seen as a major milestone under Knowledge Management and Communication component of Himalica, and the training was designed to respond to the local context of Myanmar. Twenty media practitioners (reporters, editors, and freelancers) from both broadcast and print media attended the training from 25 to 29 January 2016.

Training sessions were held in a participatory and interactive style, where technical experts made presentations on the science of climate change, including Myanmar’s specific context. These covered drivers of change, global scenarios on climate change, impacts of change, adaptation planning, the need for adaptation strategies, and importantly, the role of journalists in effectively capturing and communicating issues related to climate change adaptation. A senior media trainer conducted sessions on how to identify and write good climate change-related stories.

After some indoor sessions, the participants visited the Himalica pilot site in Heho and the Inlay Lake area, where they interacted with farmers to understand local issues related to climate change. They then wrote reports for their newspapers and made visual news clips.  A number of role plays were also staged by the journalists.

The participating journalists, many of them young and unfamiliar with the subject, said this kind of training is timely and relevant to their day to day work. They said the science of climate change is difficult to understand, and relating climate change adaptation to local issues is often confusing.

As a demand-driven Initiative designed to respond to the needs of the member countries, training journalists and other media personnel is seen as a major step toward fulfilling the mandate of building the capacity of climate change adaptation communicators. A similar training was organised for Bhutanese journalists in 2014.

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

24 Aug 2018 SANDEE
Nurturing Evidence-based Solutions for a Sustainable Future in South Asia

Twice a year, SANDEE requests research concept notes in any area of environmental and resource economics with implications for poverty ...

2 Jan 2015 Climate change
Good science a must to address climate change in the HKH region

He issued a call for enhanced transboundary cooperation to address climate change in the HKH region. “Green house gas emissions, and ...

30 Mar 2018 REDD+
Myanmar works towards linking REDD+ with SDGs and NDCs

Although Myanmar has the highest forest cover in Southeast Asia, the country is facing rapid deforestation and has lost around ...

Kidney Beans Improve Income and Nutrition in Kailash Sacred Landscape

  ICIMOD’s Kailash Sacred Landscape Conservation and Development Initiative (KSLCDI), in partnership with the Central Himalayan Environment Association (CHEA), has identified ...

24 Jul 2018 CBFEWS
Communities in Four Countries Gear Up to Fight Floods

At least four communities across the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) are better prepared to fight floods this year. Floods and ...

Third UIBN–AC Meeting discusses data gaps in Upper Indus basin research

The UIBN–AC Meeting was primarily held to recap previous meetings, discuss the progress made by the country chapter’s Technical Working ...

22 Sep 2017 Solar Pumps
Nepali Engineers Explore New Irrigation Systems

Thirty irrigation engineers—10 of them women—from DOI participated in the training. Titled Energy Efficient Irrigation Systems using Solar Pumps, the ...