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3rd SPFD: NbS for a resilient HKH
FROM RISK TO RESILIENCE: NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS FOR A GREEN, RESILIENT AND INCLUSIVE HINDU KUSH HIMALAYA
Strategic Group: Regional Action and Global Advocacy , Action Area: Regional & HI-REAP
Paro, Bhutan
25 November 2025 to 27 November 2025
The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) in collaboration with the Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources of the Royal Government of Bhutan, will convene the third Hindu Kush Himalaya Science-Policy-Finance Dialogue (SPFD) under the theme “From Risk to Resilience: Nature-based Solutions (NbS) for Green, Resilient and Inclusive HKH region” in Thimphu, Bhutan, on 25–27 November 2025. This regional dialogue aims to strengthen shared understanding, foster regional collaboration, and inform policy making and investment in NbS for the Hindu Kush Himalaya region.
This dialogue is funded by the United Kingdom International Development through ICIMOD’s Himalayan Resilience Enabling Action Programme (HI-REAP) and the Swedish Development Cooperation (SDC).
The Hindu Kush Himalaya cryosphere is warming at nearly twice the global average, with glacier melting 65% faster compared to the last decade. Projections suggest a temperature rise of 1–2°C between 2021 and 2050, relative to the 1961–1990 period. This has profound consequences for water, food, and energy security in the region. Disasters with transboundary and multi-hazard risks and impacts are increasing with more uncertainty about their trigger, agro-pastoral resources are rapidly depleting, and springs are drying up at an unprecedented rate, resulting in a broad range of societal challenges for both mountain communities and populations downstream. Biodiversity, which is the foundation of sustainable development, is degrading faster than ever before, posing serious threats to the HKH region, its people, and its development.
In response to these challenges, NbS are gaining prominence as integrated, cost-effective, and comparatively sustainable approaches to address water management challenges, enhance ecosystem services, support community livelihoods, and reduce disaster risks enhancing resilience of communities and infrastructure.
In the HKH, countries are increasingly implementing NbS to address these interconnected challenges and promote sustainable development. Among these, community – and institution-led management and restoration of forests and watersheds are the most widely adopted approaches.
While NbS offer multiple co-benefits, critical gaps remain in knowledge, policy integration, and practice. There is limited guidance on identifying the most effective NbS options and typologies suited to the diverse ecological and socio-economic contexts of the HKH. Similarly, existing analytical frameworks for assessing the effectiveness and impact of NbS remain fragmented and are not yet well integrated into local policy frameworks, socio-economic transition pathways, and spatial planning processes.
Hence, this regional dialogue will serve as platform for policymakers, scientists, financial institutions, practitioners, and community representatives to catalyse cross-sectoral collaboration, facilitate knowledge exchange, and advance investment and policy mechanisms that support the scaling of nature-based solutions in the HKH region. This SFPD will serve as a regional dialogue platform to bridge science, policy, and finance gaps, identify priority pathways for scaling NbS, and strengthen science-policy-finance interfaces in advancing water security, disaster risk reduction and resilience, biodiversity conservation, and sustainable livelihoods across the HKH region.
This third HKH Science-Policy-Finance Forum (SPFF) aims to:
Some 50-60 scientists/researchers, experts (including professionals, practitioners, and managers), and policymakers from within and outside the HKH region.
About: NbS in the HKH
Nature-based solutions (NbS) are actions that use natural processes and ecosystems to address societal challenges like climate change, food and water security, and disaster risk reduction. NbS leverages the power of ecosystems—such as forests, wetlands, and agroecological landscapes to build resilience while contributing to climate adaptation, benefit biodiversity, and meet conservation goals.
In the HKH context, NbS and hybrid solutions play a pivotal role in Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) by stabilising fragile mountain slopes, restoring degraded catchments, improving watershed retention, and reducing flood, drought and landslide hazards that increasingly threaten both upstream and downstream communities. NbS such as reforestation, spring restoration, bioengineering for slope stabilisation, watershed management, wetland management, and sustainable rangeland management not only mitigate hazard exposure but also enhance the adaptive capacity of local livelihoods. Importantly, NbS integrates traditional and scientific knowledge, bridging community-led action and regional policy frameworks to build systemic resilience in a region characterised by complex disaster risks and cascading climate impacts.
Emerging evidence, however, clearly demonstrates that NbS can deliver transformative, long-term solutions for climate action, ecosystem resilience, and human well-being in fragile mountain ecosystems. As climate-related disasters intensify across the region—from flash floods to forest fires to droughts and landslides—the role of NbS in reducing underlying risk drivers, strengthening community preparedness, and ensuring sustainable recovery becomes even more vital.
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