Back to news
17 Mar 2025 | Press releases

CA$15m boost for Indigenous and local peoples’ adaptation in the mountains

The Canadian Government has pledged CA$15M to a project that sets out to reduce the climate vulnerability of women, Indigenous and Local Peoples in Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Nepal, Canada’s International Development Minister announced 9 March. 

1 min Read

70% Complete

Kathmandu – The Canadian Government has pledged CA$15M (US$10.5M) to a project that sets out to reduce the climate vulnerability of women, Indigenous and Local Peoples in Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Nepal, Canada’s International Development Minister announced 9 March.

The project, which will run over five years and be led by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), aims to build the resilience of 40,000 people, both directly and indirectly, in the three mountain countries that are frontline to climate and other escalating changes.

The funding comes as experts warn that temperature rise, biodiversity loss and air pollution are compounding socio-economic vulnerabilities in the mountains to push human populations in the region to the brink of crisis.

“People in the mountains of the Hindu Kush Himalaya are some of the poorest, most food-insecure, and most water-stressed on the planet, in one of the most populous, politically fragile, hazard-prone and biodiverse regions on Earth,” said Abid Hussain, ICIMOD’s Livelihoods lead.

“As the climate and nature crisis escalates, women, girls, and Indigenous communities in this region are being left on the cusp of a crisis.

“We’re delighted to partner with Canada to deploy a range of approaches ICIMOD has developed that blend innovation with traditional knowledge systems to massively increase these communities’ resilience to climate and other shocks.”

The project will support greater uptake of sustainable land and water management practices to revive and protect local water resources, use renewable energy to build food security, and capacity build women’s and Indigenous groups to increase their access to power and resources in the longer-term.

While the projects are designed to align with regional governments’ existing national adaptation plans (NAPs), scientists say that across the region NAPs are “fragmented and insufficient to tackle the imminent challenges posed by climate change” making swift and thorough scaling of adaptation initiatives crucial to address the social, economic and environmental impacts.

11 Oct 2024 Press releases
PAKISTAN SECURES $10M IN CLIMATE FINANCE FOR NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS FOR WOMEN AND YOUTH IN THE INDUS

Women in the Hunza Valley planting sea buckthorn (Photo: Kanwal Waqar) Kathmandu, ...

15 May 2023 Media Advisory
MOCHA hours away from making devastating landfall in Myanmar and Bangladesh

Read in chinese   Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm Mocha is ...

10 Jun 2019 Press releases
The heritage gap

Currently, there are only 17 inscribed World Heritage sites in a region covering eight countries, four Global Biodiversity Hotspots, and ...

26 Nov 2024 Press releases
Leading food policy and mountain research organisations, IFPRI and ICIMOD, join forces to boost climate-smart agriculture in the Hindu Kush Himalaya

Kathmandu, 27 November 2024  – The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) and the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) today signed a ...

5 Jan 2026 Press releases
Analysis finds multi-trillion-dollar climate financing gap in crucial Hindu Kush Himalaya region 

Paro, Bhutan, 5 January 2025 - The Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH), a vital water source for billions in the region, ...

19 Jun 2016 Press releases
Knowledge forum calls for strengthened regional collaboration to support inclusive climate resilience in the Himalayan and downstream region

Unless countries in the Himalayan and downstream region strengthen collaboration to address food, water and energy issues, the region’s agricultural ...