Tuesday, November 22, 2011

ICIMOD at COP 17 in Durban, South Africa



The participants of this workshop are expected to actively engage in discussions during the meetings and to contribute by own interventions from their professional experience and institutional embeddedness. The group that has been selected is representing the five regions that are covered by the GIZ-sponsored mountain programme, i.e., Pamirs of Tajikistan, Hindu-Kush and Karakoram in Pakistan, West Kun Lun Shan and Tien Shan in Xinjiang, the Tibetan Plateau and the Himalayas in Tibet and Nepal. The aim of the meeting is to share experiences from the regions and to develop policies and practices that could contribute in packages and schemes for the respective Asian mountain region.

The challenges and constraints affiliated to global and climate change severely impact Asian mountain regions and lead to a wide spectrum of adaptations. The aim of our meeting of minds is to learn from national experiences and to identify replicable role models. The sharing of knowledge is a necessary precondition for formulating areas, sectors and instances for regional cooperation. Due to the nature of the mountain programme special emphasis will be put on capacity development and knowledge management for the benefit of mountain communities.

Venue: Cathedral Peak Hotel in Drakensberg (http://www.cathedralpeak.co.za/) and Selborne Resort (close to Durban) (http://www.selborne.com/)

For further information: Dr. Madhav Karki and Dr. Bhaskar Karky


2.   Mountain Day (4 Dec 2011)

Mountain Day will assemble a high-level panel of global personalities, ministers, and scientists to advocate the value and critical role of mountains and share scientific evidence and examples of challenges and opportunities. The day-long programme will also include plenary presentations and discussions, working groups, and panel discussions. The organisers hope that Mountain Day will conclude with the adoption of the Durban Declaration on Mountains and Climate Change.

Mountain Day will call to the COP17 delegates and global development partners for more concerted and long-term actions at the national, regional, and global levels to save vital mountain ecosystems. It is hoped that the knowledge shared and the evidence presented will provide a powerful and convincing message to ensure that UNFCCC deliberations include provisions for protecting mountain systems’ integrity for the survival of current and future generations. The Mountain Day will also features Photo Exhibition and an Information on the Knowledge Market Place for selected partners to exhibit their works.

Highlights of Mountain Day
·         Keynote Speech by Dr Rajendra K Pachauri, Chair, IPCC and Director General, TERI, India
·         Mountain Ministers’ Panel – Bhutan, Chile, Italy, Nepal, Slovenia, and Tajikistan
·         Working Sessions
·         Information Knowledge Market Place
·         Photo Exhibition: ‘Himalaya – Changing Landscapes’
·         Book launches

Venue: The Breakers Resort, 88 Lagoon Drive, Umhlanga Rocks, KwaZulu Natal, 4321, Durban, Time: 9:00- 18:00


For further information: Dr. Madhav Karki, Ms. Naina Shakya and Mr. Tek Jung Mahat (tmahat@icimod.org)


The Himalaya Climate Change Adaptation Programme (HICAP) is the first south-south-north collaborative, policy relevant project focused on knowledge from and for local communities and for on the ground impact. HICAP is an example of integrated research across the sciences dedicated to identifying credible, legitimate, and salient adaptation challenges and opportunities in the Hindu-Kush-Himalaya region. This side event presents the background of the collaboration, design principles, and main research areas. Through a combination of approaches, methods and scientific tools, HICAP is aimed at developing solutions by producing new climatological and hydrological scenarios, assessment of ecosystem services and food insecurity, a large amount of new household and community survey data about socio-ecological changes, macroeconomic and socio-economic modeling, methodological and theoretical innovation, and ethnographic, gendered knowledge. Women and gender aspects are a fundamental crosscutting issue.  HICAP is funded by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The side event will be structured as a roundtable discussion

Participants:
·         Chair: Norwegian Journalist (TBC)
·         Representative from the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, TBC
·         Mr Krishna Gyawali, Secretary, Ministry of Environment, Government of Nepal
·         David Molden, Director General, International  Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD)
·         Pål Prestrud, Director, Centre for International Climate and Environmental Research in Oslo (CICERO)
·         Lawrence Hislop, HICAP Leader, UNEP-GRID Arendal
·         Eklabaya Sharma, Director Program Operations, ICIMOD
·         Representative from a partner institution from the region
·         Ritu Verma,   Division Head, Gender and Governance, ICIMOD
·         Asuncion Lera St.Clair, HICAP Leader, CICERO

Date/Venue: 6 December 2011, Time: 11:30 to 13:00, Venue: Room 5 

For further information: Dr. Eklabya Sharma

4.   Launch of 2 reports on Glacier Studies in the Hindu Kush Himalayan Region

ICIMOD is leading glacier studies in the Himalayan region for over a decade and have brought out some of the most cited comprehensive publications, helping the researchers, planers, policy makers, development agencies and mountain communities to better understand the glacial environment and subsequent impacts downstream in the Himalayas. The two special reports aimed to be released at Durban are seen as state-of-art in glacier research in the region.

For further information: Mr. Basanta Shrestha, Mr. Samjwal Ratna Bajracharya and Mr. Deo Raj Gurung



The IPCC 4AR was characterized by an absence of data on the Hindu Kush Himalayan (HKH) System and the region remained largely underreported. In the meantime, a lot of research has been initiated and it is likely that the next report will give another picture. However the new IPCC 5AR will only be available in 2013. The aim of this report would be to bridge the knowledge gap for the HKH region and disseminate science–based information in a readable and easily understandable way which will be useful to the UNFCCC meetings. Such report will also be important to support the discussion on the Rio+ 20 conference and Multi–lateral Environment Agreements as the reports will capture the leading knowledge from the region and on the region with a specific focus on the mountain situation.

For further information: Dr. Bhaskar Karky

6.   Information Booth

ICIMOD will also have an information booth at the COP 17 venue, from where the visitors can collect relevant publications, get information about relevant events and meet ICIMOD experts and associated partners.

Venue: International Convention Centre (ICC), & Durban Exhibition Centre (DEC)

For further information: Mr. Tek Jung Mahat (tmahat@icimod.org) and Dr. Bhaskar Karky

7.   Virtual platforms

A microsite is developed as http://www.icimod.org/cop17, where we aim to put further details as developed and agreed with the partners. We are also working with our global partners – members of the Mountain Partnership Consortium (MPC) to ensure there is coordination at higher level to advocate mountain issues. MPC/Mountain Forum has also developed a separate microsite with global scope.


For further information: Mr. Tek Jung Mahat (tmahat@icimod.org)

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Asia-Pacific stakeholders call for including Mountain issues in Rio+20 agenda

Asia-Pacific stakeholders call for including Mountain issues in Rio+20 agenda

26 Aug 2011. A three-day workshop on Regional Sharing of Experiences, Challenges, and Opportunities in promoting sustainable mountain development in the context of the upcoming Rio+20 conference concluded today at ICIMOD Headquarters in Kathmandu. The meeting brought together more than 40 experts from the Hindu Kush-Himalayan (HKH) countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, China, India, Myanmar, Nepal, and Pakistan) as well as from the Southeast Asian and Pacific countries (Indonesia, the Philippines, and Papua New Guinea) to share the progress made since the Rio Earth Summit in 1992 and deliberate on the environmental, economic, and social challenges that people living in fragile hilly and mountain ecosystems face in meeting the goals of sustainable development.


Based on the 15 case studies presented and discussions conducted in various sessions, the workshop came up with key messages and recommendations that are expected to contribute to a Regional Assessment Report on the Challenges and Opportunities for Rio+20 in the HKH as well as the Asia Pacific Region. The report will be presented at a global conference on sustainable mountain development in Lucerne, Switzerland in October 2011. The Lucerne conference is expected to prepare a global report on the same theme to feed into the preparatory process for the Rio+20 conference to be held by the United Nations in June 2012. 

Dr Dinesh Devkota, Vice Chair of the National Planning Commission, Government of Nepal, in his inaugural speech emphasised the increased need for integration of environment and development issues in the mountain context and called for greater collaboration and synergy among different national, regional, and global initiatives. He noted that Nepal will lobby in favour of the global mountain agenda at Rio+20. 
Mr UK Sangma, Secretary of the North-East Council, Government of India, in his closing remarks highlighted the significance of the knowledge and learning gained in the workshop. 

Dr Madhav Karki, Acting Director General of ICIMOD, shared the major conclusions of the workshop which will be communicated to policy makers and stakeholders through various channels. Highlights include the following. 

  • The audience for the regional assessment should be not only global, but regional and national as well, since actions will be needed at all levels.
  • The report should have concrete and actionable proposals for the mountains.
  • Cross learning between countries and regions has generated new ideas, insights, and strategies for promoting sustainable mountain development which should be well reflected in drafting an inclusive and forward looking report.
  • The two agenda items proposed for Rio+20 are somewhat top-down and unclear and therefore need contextualisation to match the mountain specificities.
  • The report should have scope beyond Rio+20, for the policy changes and implementation work that has to follow. 

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Day 1 reflection - Regional Sharing Workshop on Assessment of Challenges and Opportunities in the Asia Pacific region for Rio+20

Dear Colleagues,

As you are aware we are hosting the ‘Regional Sharing Workshop on Assessment of Challenges and Opportunities in the Asia Pacific region for Rio+20, 23-25 August 2011’ at ICIMOD headquarters with the objective of collecting, validating, synthesizing, distilling and packaging attractively HKH and AP regional input on sustainable mountain development in the context of Rio +20 preparatory works coordinated by the Mountain Partnership Consortium (MPC), of whose we act as the HKH and AP focal point.

Please find below highlights of the ‘DAY 1’ of the event, prepared with generous contribution from our Rapporteurs Ujol Sherchan and Aneeta Gauchan. We are trying to keep you updated as things evolve on social networks. Pls check http://twitter.com/#!/apmnicimod (#APRIOPLUS20), https://www.facebook.com/APY.Rioplus20 and http://mountainasia.blogspot.com/ for more information.

Best,
Tek
On behalf of the Rio +20 core team

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 Tek Jung Mahat
APMN Node Manager, Knowledge Management
International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development
GPO Box 3226, Kathmandu, Nepal
Tel +977-1-5003222 Ext 104 Fax +977-1-5003277
Web www.icimod.org
Connect to ICIMOD/APMN: facebook16x16  twitter16x16  youtube16x16 

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Regional Sharing Workshop on Assessment of Challenges and Opportunities in the Asia Pacific region for Rio+20
23-25 August 2011, ICIMOD Headquarters, Kathmandu, Nepal



 Day 1 reflection

A three- day Regional Sharing Workshop on Assessment of Challenges and Opportunities in the Asia Pacific region got underway yesterday 23 August 2011 at ICIMOD Headquarters in Kathmandu, Nepal.

About 40 plus participants from South East Asia, Hindu Kush-Himalayan (HKH) region, and the island nation of Papua New Guinea representing primarily governments, I/NGO sector, and multilateral organisations gathered at ICIMOD to:

      discuss 15 commissioned case studies - 10 from HKH and 4 from SE Asia and the Pacific  as well as identify good practices;
      locate “missing links” for prioritizing regional issues; and
      consolidate specific suggestions on status, challenges, progress and opportunities for sustainable mountain development in the context of Rio+20

Chief Guest, Honorable Dr Dinesh Devkota, Vice Chair, National Planning Commission, Government of Nepal delivered an inaugural speech. He said that the integration of environment and development – and the hoped for synergy - envisioned in Agenda 21 (which came out of the 1992 Rio Earth Summit and later revisited by the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg) has by and large failed to materialize, owing to lack of political and financial commitments by the various state and non-state actors. However, in the lead up to Rio+20 and beyond, he called for ramping up public private partnership at national level and North-South and South-South cooperation at regional and international levels. He also said that Nepal, through a Mountain Alliance of mountainous Least Developed Countries, will lobby in favor of the Global Mountain Agenda and action on climate change at Rio+20.


In his keynote speech, Special Guest Dr RS Tolia, Chair, Central Himalayan Environment Association (CHEA), Nainital, India shared some learning points from his decade long experience with Uttrakhand’s new statehood. He said that once Uttrakhand gained a legal mandate to make its own decisions as a new state, things improved. Political autonomy is important, without it mountain development is just a “pipe dream”. Mountain regions must strive to become “masters of their own destiny”. Political autonomy is a necessary but not sufficient condition for sustainable mountain development. Other things also matter, such as good governance, institution building, financing, and resource mobilization.

Dr. Madhav Karki, Acting Director General of ICIMOD, flagged the need to develop a Green Economy roadmap for the mountains in the lead up to Rio+20 in order to address challenges associated with climate change and globalization as well as to seize emerging opportunities such as those presented by growing mountain tourism potential, payments for ecosystem services (PES), REDD+, and clean development mechanism (CDM) to reward mountain communities for their stewardship of ecosystems. This calls for new global policies, institutional framework and financing tailored to the mountain context to be taken up at Rio+20.

At a South East Asia and Pacific session on Case studies and Discussions chaired by Dr. Ramon Razal, the following presentations were made, each followed by a question and answer session:

·         Indonesia: “Improving the welfare of the local community and FOREST CONSERVATION through forest honey BEE”, presenter Hermanto,   Indonesia Forest Honey Network (JMHI)
·         Philippines: “Community Management of Resources: the Ikalahan Experience”, presenter Delbert Rice, the Kalahan Education Foundation, Inc.
·         Papua New Guinea: “The Managalas Plateau Conservation Area Project, Oro Province, PNG” , presenter Rufus Mahuru, Programme Manager
·         Vietnam: “Collaborative Forest Management in Bidoup Nui Ba National Park, Lam Dong Province” , presenter Tek Jung Mahat on behalf of the Vietnamese case study writers

Co-chair Amulya Tuladhar summarized the session. He underscored the need to scale up good initiatives from SE Asia and Pacific to sub-national and national levels and beyond.  Since the legal regime of the Phillippines allows for the Ikahalan experience through granting of Ancestral Domain Title, this has the potential for expansion. Intermediary organisaitons can contribute to that expansion. In the case of Papua New Guinea, mining companies are already eyeing tribal property such as the Managalas Plateau.

Networking with national and international legal scholars working on indigenous rights and conservation can allow the tribes to develop at their own calibrated pace and counter external threats. That South East Asia and the Pacific are rich in tropical areas and rainforests bespeaks of their ecological resilience. Unlike North and South Americas, this region has witnessed a shorter period of outside interference. With globalization and technologies, outside actors will come in.  That is a trend. How to work in partnership with outside actors or coexist with them will be a challenge for tribes practicising their traditional way of life in the coming years.

Likewise at a Hindu Kush Himalayan Session I on Case Studies and Discussions chaired by Jay Raj, the following presentations were made, each followed by a question and answer session:

§  India: “Mountain Biodiversity and Livelihoods at Rio+20: A Case Study of Herbal Sector in Uttarakhand” , presenter G. S. Rawat
§  India: “Organic Uttarakhand: Subsistence to Sustainability”, presenter Binita Shah
§  India: Van Panchayats of Uttarakhand: An Institutional Framework for  Sustainable Development  , presenter Dr. Rajendra Singh , Conservator of  Forests, Western Circle, Nainital, Uttarakhand (India)
§  India: “Securing Livelihoods and Natural Resource Management through empowerment of communities: A case study of NERCORMP from North East India”, presenter Dhrupad Chaudhury
§  India: “Money grows on trees” Presenter Sudhirendar Sharma

Co-chair Sudhirendar Sharma summarized the Hindu Kush Himalayan Session I by saying that it is not clear how to convince policy and decision makers with isolated case studies. As there is a big ndisconnect between micro and macro views, big picture is still missing.  It is not sure how projected gains and impacts of documented projects and programmes have translated into gains for individual households.  The case study on CDM in Uttarakhand offers potential, there is a need for advocacy and action to realize gains from CDM. While “Organisc Uttarakhand” fits into three pillars of SMD – social, economic and environmental - there is some paradox at play here: how do you recoincile subsidization of chemical-fertilizers with the push toward “organic”?  Creating organic zones with tax rebates and tax holidays can really accelerate the move toward organic. It is not clear how to deal with the feminization of mountain agriculture,  what this will mean in terms of policies, in terms of programmes. “Elite capture” and “male capture” continue to be challenges for gender equity and pro poor and inclusive development and participatory approaches.  Over the next two days we need to come up with recommendations to address these problems that we can take to Rio+20.

The workshop is expected to result in:
      Collation of diverse perspectives  to improve 15 commissioned case studies – 10 from HKH and 5 from SE Asia and Papua New Guinea - from policy perspectives as well as validate identified good practices; and
      Framing of key messages and recommendations from the Asia Pacific Region in the Regional Assessment for feeding into the Rio+20 preparatory process.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Regional Sharing Workshop on Assessment of Challenges and Opportunities in the Asia Pacific region for Rio +20, 23-25 August 2011

Vision for Rio+20: Revisiting the Sustainable Mountain Development Agenda from Asia Pacific Mountain Perspectives


Bringing local, national, and regional perspectives to the table

Background
Twenty years after the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in 1992, also popularly known as the Rio Conference or Earth Summit, the world community is convening another important meeting, the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD), also to be held in Rio, from 4-6 June 2012. The conference, dubbed ‘Rio+20’, is expected to do serious stocktaking of the progress made, experiences gained, and unfulfilled commitments in implementing various programmes and initiatives since the 1992 conference. It will focus on lessons learned and emerging opportunities, which will help in developing a roadmap for the future to ensure that human civilisation is preserved and human beings learn to live in harmony with nature and with each other.

Although the earlier Rio meeting formally recognised the significance of sustainable mountain development (SMD) in the environment and sustainability debate, through the inclusion of Chapter 13 in its Agenda 21, it is increasingly realised that little has been achieved in this area. Accordingly the members of the Mountain Partnership Consortium (MPC), the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), and the Swiss Federal Office for Spatial Development (ARE) are together developing a state-of-art review report on SMD challenges and opportunities in mountains and global policy briefs which will be shared with the participants at Rio+20. Selected MPC members working in different regions are tasked with developing regional assessment reports as the basis for developing these global reports and briefs; these regional reports will be presented at the Global Conference on Sustainable Mountain Development: Challenges and Opportunities for Rio+20, to be held in Lucerne, Switzerland in October 2011.

Rio+20 preparations in the Hindu Kush-Himalayas and the Asia Pacific region
The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), as a member of the Mountain Partnership Consortium (MPC), has been assigned the task of preparing a regional assessment report on SMD in the Hindu Kush-Himalayas (HKH) and the Asia Pacific region, with the following objectives:

  • to take stock of what has, and what has not, been achieved in promoting sustainable mountain development since 1992 in different parts of the region;
  • to learn what has worked and what has not – and why;
  • to identify current and future challenges in the HKH mountain context and to explore pathways and opportunities for addressing these; and
  • to identify the role of different stakeholders and propose a plan of work for preparing a draft regional report by September 2011.

Process and progress
Started in early 2011 in the Asia Pacific region, this preparatory process is managed by ICIMOD together with partner organisations and individual experts contributing to SMD process in the region. An MPC meeting in February 2011 outlined the structure of the global as well as regional assessment reports, identified lead partners, and defined the process. Following guiding documents and inputs received from MPC, ICIMOD together with the partners organised three virtual debates (email and web based), focused on the HKH (April 2011, 200 contributions, 296 participants), on South and Central Asia (May 2011, 550 participants, 400 contributions), and on Southeast Asia (June 2011, more than 160 participants), which were warmly welcomed by SMD communities across the region with an exceptionally high number of participants and extremely valuable contributions.

In addition, a few experts from HKH countries and Southeast Asia have been identified to prepare case studies on relevant themes (such as governance for natural resource management, forestry, biodiversity conservation, biogas, and watershed management), showing the progress made in the past couple of decades and developing the way forward. 

Purpose of the workshop
The information collected through the above process will be further discussed, critically assessed, and refined during the Regional Sharing Workshop on Assessment of Potentials and Opportunities in the Asia Pacific Region for Rio+20, to be held at ICIMOD from 23 to 25 August 2011. The workshop will bring together around 40 experts from the Asia Pacific region, including the case study developers, active contributors to the virtual debates, government authorities, and representatives of major groups, international and UN agencies, and donor communities, to:

  • discuss and refine the case studies, virtual debate syntheses, and draft regional report prepared for the workshop;
  • identify good practices and missing links;
  • prioritise environmental issues in the region, and collect and consolidate issue-specific suggestions;
  • finalise the content and shape of the regional assessment report; and 
  • facilitate sharing of SMD-relevant information and knowledge in the region and promote regional cooperation.

Expected Outputs of the Workshop
  • Wide sharing, extensive discussion and rigorous validation of information and knowledge on SMD in the context of Rio+20, including validation of facts and figures
  • Regional priorities and recommendations to include in the final regional assessment report;
  • Formation of a responsive subgroup of people with good awareness of SMD, Chapter 13, and Rio +20 who are committed to contribute to the process

Venue: ICIMOD Headquarters, Kathmandu Nepal

For further information

Dr Madhav Karki, Deputy Director General, ICIMOD, and 
Team Leader, Regional Assessment for Rio+20 in HKH and Asia Pacific Mountain region (a Mountain Partnership Consortium global initiative)

Mr Tek Jung MahatAPMN Node Manager, ICIMOD

Note: Participation in this workshop is by invitation only.