Rationale

The Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) is at a critical juncture where rapid urbanisation, fragile mountain ecosystems, and increasing climate risks intersect. Unplanned construction, reliance on high-carbon materials, and the loss of vernacular architecture are placing mounting pressure on biodiversity, water, energy, and basic services – ultimately threatening the resilience of mountain communities.

Globally, the building and construction sector accounts for an estimated 37% of carbon dioxide emissions, largely from operations and material production (UNEP, 2022). In the past two decades (2000-2020), built-up areas in the HKH expanded by nearly 75% – 1.7 times faster than the population growth. This rapid expansion is dominated by carbon-intensive building materials like cement, steel, and aluminium. While these modern structures are becoming the norm, they drive up energy costs for heating and cooling and are replacing traditional architecture – designs that were far better adapted to mountain climates and cultural heritage.

Against this backdrop, nature-based alternatives remain underutilised and fragmented, and knowledge gaps persist. Bridging these gaps through dialogue and collaboration is essential to balance ecological integrity, social wellbeing, and economic development.

The Webinar Series

The three-part series showcases practical applications of local materials, looks at what enables or hinders
policy, and identifies strategies to scale solutions across the region.
Episode I – Locally sourced materials
Showcases the use of bamboo, stone, timber, and compressed earth blocks as low-carbon,
climate-appropriate alternatives.

Episode II – Policy and enabling environment
Explores regulations, incentives, and planning tools, while addressing the barriers and ground realities
that affect implementation.

Episode III – Scaling solutions
A side event of the Myanmar Climate Action Week 2025 by UN-Habitat, it highlights strategies to link
innovation, policy, and community practice for sustainable, resilient settlements across the HKH.

Objectives

The series aims to:

  • Foster dialogue among practitioners, policymakers, researchers, and communities to bridge knowledge and implementation gaps.
  • Showcase successful examples and practical approaches using locally sourced materials and innovative practices.
  • Identify key actionable strategies and collaborative approaches to scale nature-based solutions and strengthen climate-resilient development in the HKH.

Webinar Recordings