About the project

The Integrated Climate Adaptation Solutions for the
Hindu Kush Himalaya Region (HI-CAS) is a multi-
country project designed to enhance the climate
resilience of vulnerable communities, particularly
women, girls, Indigenous Peoples and marginalised
communities in the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH)
region.

Guided by ICIMOD’s gender equality and social
inclusion (GESI) policy and Canada’s Feminist
International Assistance Policy, the project aims to
promote socially inclusive and community-based
approaches that address barriers to gender equity,
social inclusion, and human rights, with an explicit
focus on the most marginalised and vulnerable
women who face discrimination, social and
economic exclusion, and inequitable access to and
rights over resources.

Project tenure

February 2025 – March 2029

Donor

Global Affairs Canada (GAC)

Geographical Area

Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Nepal

Lead Organisation

International Centre for Integrated Mountain
Development (ICIMOD)

Partner Organisations
  • Arannayk Foundation, Bangladesh
  • Tarayana Foundation, Bhutan
  • Center for Environmental and Agricultural
    Policy Research, Extension and
    Development, Nepal

Climate change poses significant challenges to
marginalised women and Indigenous Peoples and Local
Communities (IPLCs), exacerbating existing inequalities
and creating unique vulnerabilities. The project aims
to bridge the gap between high-level climate policy and
local climate action by promoting gender-responsive
Integrated Adaptation Solutions Packages (IASPs),
grounded on the principle that effective climate action
must be responsive to local needs, be locally led,
ecosystem-based, and socially inclusive.

Core activities

Develop and implement a gender-responsive
integrated adaptation solutions package
– combining springshed management,
agrobiodiversity, and productive use of renewable
energy – using a participatory co-design process led
by women’s groups, Indigenous Peoples and Local
Communities (IPLC) networks and local institutions
in Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Nepal.

Build the capacity of women’s groups, IPLC
networks, and local/subnational government
institutions to implement the IASPs and
access climate finance for their sustained
implementation.

Inform policy formulation and decision-making
for scaling and uptake of the IASPs by national
and subnational governments.

This project seeks to improve the livelihoods of approximately 40,000 IPLCs and reduce their vulnerability to climate change whilst also delivering positive outcomes for nature and advancing gender equality and social inclusion. This outcome will be achieved through the IASPs,
which will leverage the expertise of ICIMOD and its partners to combine springshed management with renewable energy for irrigation and agrobiodiversity inputs.

The project will directly support communities, especially women and vulnerable groups, in enhancing their knowledge, skills, and assets to adapt to the growing challenges of climate change and advance sustainable development. Furthermore, leveraging the learnings from
these pilots, the project will work to drive impact at scale through inputs into national policy formulation, the scaling-up of gender-responsive integrated adaptation solution packages, and improve access to climate finance for women and IPLCs, driving transformative change at scale.

The IASPs will be co-designed and co-implemented with active support from local communities and governments, gearing activities towards increasing women’s technical capacities and participation, which is an essential factor for sustaining these interventions and the mainstreaming of IASPs. By building their capacity to access climate finance, the initiative also builds long-term sustainability for implementing and scaling climate adaptation solutions.