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Pema Gyamtsho
3 mins Read
This year, we celebrate the 18th International Mountain Day, with the theme ‘sustainable mountain tourism’. In the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH), mountain tourism is linked with the health of landscapes, ecosystems, communities, and the economy. Mountain tourism supports industries, businesses, and communities, and contributes to a wide range of jobs for a skilled and semi-skilled workforce, especially women. But above all, it supports the growth of small businesses, in particular the micro-small-medium enterprises (MSMEs) that are a lifeline for mountain communities.
Mountain tourism operates in a complex landscape and is vulnerable to external shocks, particularly those brought on by the climate crisis and, as we have experienced recently, the COVID-19 pandemic. Within a span of six months, our Regional Member Countries (RMCs) witnessed extreme climate events of biblical scale and impacts. We are witnessing a new climate regime, where extremes have become the new normal – record and monsoon like rainfall in Delhi India in May, deadly flash floods in Melamchi; Nepal in June; heavy rainfall and flash flood in Henan Province, China and in Maharashtra India in July; typhoon In-Fa in Zhejiang Province, China in late July; and the unusual extreme rainfall in Nepal and heavy rainfall and deadly floods in South India, in October. Our flagship report, the Hindu Kush Himalaya Assessment suggests that we are heading to a warming world. For our region, even 1.5°C will be too hot since elevation dependent warming will mean higher temperatures for the higher elevations. In the HKH, the cost of adapting to climate shocks is huge and could range between USD 3.2-4.6 billion per year by 2030 and USD 5.5-7.8 billion by 2050.
The pandemic further exposed how dependent mountain economies are on tourism. The nation-wide lockdowns and restrictions on travel resulted in plummeted tourist numbers and disrupted supply chains, economies, and businesses, especially in our mountain regions. The combined shocks of climate change and the pandemic have shaken mountain tourism. Not only must the tourism stakeholders now protect the health of employees and customers, but they must also navigate the disruptions to their operations, plan for revival and recovery, and prepare to reimagine businesses and services for the next normal. Given this, safeguarding mountain tourism, particularly the MSMEs and tourism-dependent communities, becomes critically important.
At ICIMOD, we view the climate crisis and the pandemic as opportunities for mountain tourism stakeholders to place climate resilience and green recovery at the heart of building back. We have learned that climate-resilient green recovery of mountain tourism should focus on three important areas: innovation, entrepreneurship, and investment. As part of the revival and green recovery process, the stakeholders – government, industry, businesses, financial institutions, research and academic entities, and the local community – must come together to reimagine post-pandemic mountain tourism into one that promotes green, resilient, and inclusive development and conservation.
Furthermore, through the development of bankable business models, tourism entrepreneurs can redefine business resilience and sustainability fit for a low-carbon tourism economy and guide mountain tourism to greener pathways through green job creation. Policy innovation, especially the development of return-on-investment frameworks (informed by environment, social and governance factors) can help leverage financial investment and improve transparency and accountability of finance to enterprises promoting green, resilient, and inclusive economy.
The key to the sustainable future of mountain tourism in the region therefore lies in a low-carbon tourism economy. MSMEs are critical stakeholders in the regional and local mountain tourism economy of the region, and clean energy can assist them in building resilience against climate change and contribute to more sustainable mountain tourism. The goal of a net zero carbon world in 2050 is expected to shift the entire nature of the economy. Given this, a low-carbon tourism economy provides our RMCs with the opportunity to achieve their targets while ensuring a green, resilient, and inclusive mountain tourism. Our priorities under green recovery of mountain tourism must include: i) reducing GHG emissions, ii) reaching the targets set under the Paris Agreement, iii) maximizing sustainability outcomes and achieving HKH specific SDGs, iv) prioritizing climate actions, and v) promoting carbon neutrality
As we celebrate the 18th International Mountain Day, I would like to reiterate ICIMOD’s commitment to promoting a climate-resilient, sustainable mountain tourism agenda for a low-carbon tourism economy. We cannot predict when and where the next climate disaster or pandemic outbreak will strike, but our experience tells us that these extreme events and shocks are likely to be the new normal. Hence, we need to focus on building a green, resilient, and inclusive economy as a part of the recovery process for sustainable mountain tourism in the region.
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山地被广泛认为是生物多样性的发源地,其陡峭的斜坡孕育了各种繁复的生命形式。这些地区作为自然的庇护所变得愈发重要:虽然它们只占据了地球总面积的四分之一,却容纳了地球上85%的两栖动物、鸟类和哺乳动物。这种丰富的自然资源在联合国教科文组织的738个全球生物圈保护区中得到体现,其中明显超过一半位于山区。 然而,令人担忧的是,这些自然资源的非凡丰富正面临威胁。过去,由于偏远或地形困难,山地得以免受人类干扰,但如今这种状况逐渐减少。曾经被视为大自然摇篮和避难所的山地正在逐渐转变成墓地。在兴都库什-喜马拉雅地区,上个世纪就已经失去了70%的生物多样性。这些损失,包括物种的灭绝,如今正以加速度增长,正如ICIMOD的重要评估报告《兴都库什喜马拉雅的水、冰、社会和生态系统》(简称《HIWISE报告》)所指出的那样。 在公众、政治和外交层面,人们越来越认识到自然是我们当前危机中最重要的解决方案之一。联合国已宣布2021-2030年为生态系统恢复十年,去年,《昆明-蒙特利尔全球生物多样性框架》的指导下,全球100多个政府承诺在2030年之前将30%的陆地和海洋保留给自然,其中包括兴都库什-喜马拉雅地区。今年,在联合国全球气候大会COP28上,自然首次成为讨论的核心议题。 这些努力,以及今年国际山岳日的“生态系统恢复”主题,为恢复和保护山区景观提供了迫切需要的推动力。那么,我们的八个成员国离实现“30x30”目标有多近呢?到目前为止,不丹是唯一一个实际超额达标的国家,其51.4%的土地面积已经属于各种保护区类别。 尼泊尔只有不到24%的土地受到保护;中国仅为16%,略高于目标的一半;巴基斯坦占12%;印度为8%;缅甸为7%;孟加拉国为5%,阿富汗为4%。 令人担忧的是,在整个兴都库什-喜马拉雅地区,自然资源仍然丰富的关键区域仍处在保护之外:67%的生态区、39%的生物多样性热点、69%的关键生物多样性区域以及76%的重要鸟类和生物多样性区都没有得到保护。 现有的保护区域犹如在人类改变过的景观中的“孤岛”,缺乏与其他保护区域的连通走廊,无法满足广泛分布的物种需求,并且面临非法捕猎、侵占和资源开采的压力。现有的保护区域不足以确保成功保护我们地区的象征性物种,包括亚洲象、独角犀牛和孟加拉虎。 一个尚未尝试的解决方案是建立跨界生物圈保护区,这将允许在景观层面进行综合保护。实现这一目标需要跨越国家边界的共同政治承诺,并在共享生态系统的管理方面展开合作。ICIMOD将积极推动我们区域成员国接受这一解决方案。 然而,底线是,要扭转自然的损失,我们必须对其进行估值并提供相应的资金支持。只要经济学家继续将其价值定为零,就不会引起足够的重视。在进行估值之前,拥有大量自然资本但经济欠发达的国家将因为缺乏3A信用评级而难以以较低贷款利率借款。必须为该地区的国家提供更便宜的资本来促使自然的恢复:这是ICIMOD将与我们的成员、多边开发银行和其他机构紧急合作推进的事项。为了防止地球系统完全崩溃,我们必须为大自然提供一个适宜的生存环境,这一观点从未像现在这样显而易见。