Back to news
26 Mar 2018 | Blog

Transborder trade in the Kailash Sacred Landscape

Krittika Uniyal

3 mins Read

70% Complete
Suspension bridge over the Kali river at Jhulaghat marking the international boundary between India and Nepal.

Before I started working with the Kailash Sacred Landscape Conservation and Development Initiative (KSLCDI), whenever I thought of transborder international trade, my mind would conjure images of giant cargo trucks speeding through huge, six-lane highways. After all, economic avenues cannot be sustained in isolation, and symbiotic economic relationships are the international norm.

KSLCDI is a collaborative transboundary programme being implemented across the borders of China, India, and Nepal. The programme aims to achieve lasting protection of ecosystems, habitats, and biodiversity while encouraging sustainable development, enhancing the resilience of communities in the landscape, and safeguarding cultural linkages among local populations.

Working for KSLCDI as a research assistant at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), I got acquainted with the history of cross-border trade in the Hindu Kush Himalayan (HKH) region. As I participated in a study about cross-border trade in the Kailash Sacred Landscape, I realized the uniqueness of the context.

As I engaged further in the study, I realized the image in my head—of cargo trucks and six-lane highways—hardly applied to transborder trade in the KSL. Cargo is often still ferried on the backs of pack animals in many parts of the region along trade routes of the ancient Silk Road. This reality hit me hard as I had expected that these landscapes—shared between three countries, two of which are among the world’s fastest growing economies—would have road access at the very least.  Two months into the study, I found myself at the tri-juncture of India, Nepal, and China, at the district headquarters in Pithoragarh, India. I was accompanied by Clemens Kunze, senior political specialist at ICIMOD. I was thrilled to be there, surrounded by the same mountain peaks that had witnessed the incredible flourishing of the Silk Road.

These ancient routes were closed completely after the Sino-India War of 1962, and it was only in 1992 that trans-Himalayan trade was revived. In these decades of complete socio-economic blockade, many Bhotia people, who have historically depended entirely on transborder trade, lost their means of livelihood. Over the years, many of them took up other professions and a lot of first-hand information pertaining to historical trade in the area was lost. On our research trip, we visited and interviewed local people and government representatives attempting to understand the various dimensions of contemporary trade and other socio-economic practices in the landscape in order to inform the proposed second phase of the Kailash project.

We visited Jhulaghat and Dharchula in India, two of the most important cross-border trading points on the Indo-Nepal border. The people in these towns are afraid of what is going to happen with the construction of the Pancheshwar dam on the Kali River. It has been reported that the Pancheshwar hydropower project, if implemented in its present form, will submerge Jhulaghat, Dharchula and surrounding towns, and displace many people. The hanging bridges that connect India’s Pithoragarh district to Nepal’s Baitadi district represent historic ties between India and Nepal, and locals are hopeful that the two governments, who are collaborating on the Pancheshwar project, will make necessary revisions to its plans to save their towns from eventual submergence.

People in these towns see livelihood opportunities in cross-border trade. However, major trade is done through tedious sea routes. Developing a study that looks into reviving ancient trade routes and strengthening them to meet the needs of the present can help tackle issues of transboundary functionality related to trade, create new livelihood opportunities for people in these regions, and ensure sustainable, low-impact trade through travel routes across the Himalayan range. These efforts will ultimately increase transboundary cooperation in the region and strengthen economies throughout the landscape.

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

22 May 2019 Blog
International Day for Biological Diversity 2019 “Our Biodiversity, Our Food, Our Health”

Freshwater fish and fishing communities of the Hindu Kush Himalaya: looking at an oft-neglected ecological and livelihood challenge It would not ...

28 Mar 2017 Blog
Scholarship helps girls get an education

“Nearly 75% of our students are from poor and marginalized families. Some of these families migrated to Kathmandu after the ...

6 May 2016 Cryosphere
The longest glacier in Nepal – Ngozumpa

I’m placing my foot carefully on a stable rock. This is definitely a terrain to break your ankle. Or, I ...

23 Feb 2017 Blog
Management of local crop diversity: a concern

The Kailash Sacred Landscape Conservation and Development Initiative (KSLCDI), with support from the District Agriculture Development Office, organized a local ...

8 Mar 2018 Gender in Koshi
Women and Fieldwork: Reclaiming public spaces and transgressing curfews

Women’s Day brings into focus women situated at various intersections of class, age, caste, race, education, culture, and geographical location. ...

12 Jul 2016 Blog
Field Visit For Micro Hydropower Study In The Upper Gandak River Basin

ICIMOD’s Himalayan Adaptation, Water, and Resilience (HI-AWARE) initiative is implementing three work packages – knowledge generation, research into use, and ...

16 Apr 2019 Blog
Women: the hidden face of effective emissions mitigation?

Women as researchers as well as the vital subject Household-level combustion accounts for a significant percentage of air pollution ...

7 Sep 2018 Blog
Diversity in the markets of the Eastern Himalaya

From April to May early this year, I was in Myanmar supporting our partners as they conducted an ethnobotancial survey ...