Back to news
4 Oct 2024 | Press releases

Experts gather to build momentum towards transformation of food systems in mountains of Asia

100 experts and policymakers set out huge win-win for food security, climate, and nature through the transformation of food systems at Kathmandu conference. 

2 mins Read

70% Complete

Kathmandu, 04 October 2024 – Academics, researchers, and policymakers from Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, and Pakistan set out the urgent need to transform food systems in the Hindu Kush Himalaya to meet the triple threat of climate change, nature loss, and acute food insecurity.

Food and farming are responsible for one quarter of global greenhouse emissions, second only to energy use. But with alternative models of farming capable of actually locking away carbon in the soil, global experts increasingly emphasise the sector as a solution to the climate crisis.

“It is urgent, in the teeth of the climate crisis, that we reshape agriculture in the Hindu Kush Himalaya,” said Abid Hussain, who leads the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD)’s Economies work.

“This is a region that is warming at double the global a verage, and where changes in water supply from loss of mountain snow and ice, and much more extreme rainfall, are putting extraordinary pressure on food and farming.

“It’s increasingly clear that industrial farming methods – including the use of chemical fertilisers and deforestation – have been a calamity for the biosphere, for human health, and for the climate, and have failed to deliver prosperity for farmers.

“Switching to alternative methods of agriculture has the power to improve livelihoods, human health, the health of our rivers, the quality of the air we breathe and, with soil being such a potent tool for carbon sequestration, offers a huge opportunity for us to hold onto a habitable planet.”

Given the population sizes here, and acute food insecurity needs, it’s crucial this be a priority zone for investment in this transition to agroecological methods, argue experts at ICIMOD.

The international conference, which also featured remarks from Honourable Minister, Ramnath Adhikari, Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development, Shahiya Ali Manik, Director, SAARC Secretariat; Benjamin Seidel, Deputy Head of Mission, Head of Cooperation and Economic Affairs, Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany, Kathmandu marked the conclusion of a two-year action-research project, Green Resilient Agricultural Productive Ecosystems (GRAPE) which prototyped climate-resilient agricultural practices in seven districts of two provinces of Nepal: Karnali and Sudurpashchim.

“Our work in these provinces, working closely with smallholders, shows how low-cost, scalable agricultural solutions can really quite quickly result in better soil health on farms, which translates to better quality yield, while reducing farmers’ reliance on costly externalities,” said Kamal Prasad Aryal, who led the action research component of the GRAPE project. “We’re already seeing these organic and natural methods of production contributing to an uptick in farmers’ incomes and food security. With two thirds of populations in Nepal engaged in agricultural work, we really hope more policymakers, farmers, donors, businesses, and publics from across this region embrace the huge opportunity that these climate-resilient agricultural practices underpin.”

The gathering, ‘Climate resilient agriculture for sustainable food systems in the Hindu Kush Himalaya’ was held October 1 – 3, with delegates learning about methods that might be scaled up, including climate-resilient agricultural practices, community learning centres, digital solutions and renewable energy technologies in agriculture.


For media inquiries, please contact:

Neraz Tuladhar (Raz), Media Officer
Email: media@icimod.org

31 Oct 2015 Press releases
New report outlines framework for sustainable development in the Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh

[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="560"] Report on "A Strategic Framework for Sustainable Development in ...

21 Apr 2025 Press releases
Risk of water shortages builds-up as Hindu Kush Himalaya faces 23-year-record-low snow persistence in the third consecutive year of below-normal seasonal snow

According to the latest Snow Update Report, the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) region experienced its third consecutive below-normal snow ...

29 Oct 2025 Press releases
The Hindu Kush Himalaya-Arctic Youth Leadership Forum launched in Iceland

REYKJAVÍK, ICELAND, 29 October 2025 – Climate and environmental change are having disproportionate negative effects on the world’s young people, ...

25 Apr 2016 Press releases
Young minds collaborate to solve global challenges

[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="570"] Winners of the International Space Apps Challenge - Kathmandu ...

11 Dec 2014 Press releases
Raising the voice of the mountains at UNFCCC COP 20

Representatives from LDC mountain nations call for greater investment in the mountains for a sustainable global future (11 December ...

13 Sep 2024 Press releases
Dialogue on Cyrosphere, Climate and Policy Action concludes emphasinging urgent need to bridge the policy-implementation gap

Islamabad – Wednesday, 13 September 2024 - The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), in collaboration with the Ministry ...

16 May 2023 Media Advisory
特强气旋风暴“摩卡” 将在数小时后毁灭性登陆缅甸和孟加拉

Read in english   特强气旋风暴“摩卡”距孟加拉和缅甸海岸登陆还有数小时的路程。对世界上最大的难民营 科克斯巴扎尔(Cox’s Bazar)以及 缅甸若开邦 (Rakhine)国内流离失所者营地的潜在影响尤其令人担忧,在那里估计有 600 ...

14 Dec 2015 Press releases
Glaciers reveal mountain precipitation is twice as high-Himalayan snowfall underestimated

The amount of snow and rain in the Himalaya is about twice as high as commonly assumed. Research in the ...