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Glacial
Lake
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Bhutan
Pledges Carbon Neutrality
BY
NEDUP TSHERING
(IDN)
The
under-reported Bhutan’s National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA)
to combat climate change recognizes that the landlocked South Asian
nation is highly vulnerable to climate change.
With its fragile ecosystem, glacier lake outburst floods in the northern
mountains constitute an ever-present threat. Of the 2,674 glacial lakes
in Bhutan, 24 are considered to be potentially dangerous, says a new
report.
The
rise in temperatures in recent decades has led to a reduction in
Bhutan’s glacial cover. Some
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glaciers
have been receding at a rate of 30 to 60 metres in a year. The retreat
of some glacier cover in recent decades has already led to the formation
of supraglacial lakes and breaches in the critical geostatic thresholds
of several glaciers.
A new report by the World Bank says. Bhutan will see an increase in
winter temperature of 1.5°C to 4.0°C by 2050s. The report titled
‘Shared Views on Development and Climate Change’ was released at the
United Nations Climate Change conference in Copenhagen.
Bhutan owes its vulnerability to fragile mountain ecosystems, reliance
on subsistence agriculture and farming of dry land crops, a population
of 691,141whose growth rate is among the highest in the world (2.5 to 3
percent), a high dependency on monsoon rains (70 percent of the
country’s rainfall falls during the monsoon season), and export of
hydropower.
Visible effects of climate change in Bhutan are reduced agricultural
production, water shortage and groundwater depletion, loss of forest
area or production, threat of biodiversity loss, and exposure to glacial
lake outburst floods, among others.
Meteorology officials say that in the last five years Bhutan has
experienced a two degrees increase in the average temperature. It has
resulted in late monsoons, which have harmed paddy production.
Dasho Nado Rinchhen, the Deputy Minister for Environment, points out
that glaciers in Bhutan are already melting and that the country is
asking for immediate and deeper cuts from developed nations while urging
them to improve support in terms of capacity building, technology
transfer and financial resources to enable the countries to adapt to
climate change.
In fact, as Bhutanese officials showcased their friendly environmental
projects in Copenhagen, back in Thimphu Prime Minister Jigmi Y.Thinley
signed a historic climate declaration committing Bhutan to absorb more
carbon than it emits for all times to come.
The declaration calls for global attention to Bhutan’s commitment to
preserving its rich eco system and in return is asking for support for
its mitigation and adaptation measures to adapt to climate change.
“In spite of our status as a small, mountainous developing country,
with so many other pressing social and economic development needs and
priorities, we feel that there’s no need greater or more important
than keeping the planet safe for life to continue,” states the
declaration.
“Therefore, we commit ourselves to keep absorbing more carbon than we
emit and to maintain our country’s status as a net sink for greenhouse
gases (GHG).”
“We pledge that we will not produce greenhouse gases in excess of what
we can sequester, but we’ll also serve as a carbon sequestration tank
for the world in general, and that we’d like to be rewarded for
this,” said the prime minister, who signed the declaration after the
closing of the winter parliament session Dec. 11.
“Because there are costs of conservation in maintaining this
ecological balance against rising population, agricultural growth,
urbanisation and industrialisation.”
The prime minister said the Bhutanese government and the media have a
responsibility to make the world realise that Bhutan is threatened.
“It’s something that’s truly threatening, and it’s that spectre,
which has haunted Bhutan from the moment His Majesty the fourth king
came to the throne. That is why, he was one of the earliest
environmentalists in the world, long before environmental conservation
became a fashion.”
While other countries were talking about sustainable development, under
His Majesty’s leadership Bhutan adopted the philosophy of Gross
National Happiness (GNH) where environmental protection is one of the
pillars out of the four pillars of GNH.
Agriculture Minister, Lyonpo Dr Pema Gyamtsho, said the pledge in the
declaration had been made against the economic sacrifices Bhutan has
made and environmental friendly polices in place, such as high value-low
volume tourism, banning the export of timber, high prices for natural
resources and discouraging the use of chemical fertilisers, which
affects the farmers with decreased income, added.
“Bhutan’s rich ecosystem isn’t by default but because of its sound
environmental policies.”
According to the minister, Bhutan’s total emission is about 1.5
million tonnes, against its sequestration capacity (carbon absorption
capacity) of about 6.3 million tonnes annually. Bhutan’s carbon
balance of minus 4.7 million tonnes means that it can still absorb more
carbon.
Bhutan is mainly seeking financial and expertise from developed
countries said the agriculture minister. “If we want to keep our
forest cover at 60 percent, it comes with a cost. So we’ll have to
look at how other countries, especially the rich countries can
compensate the economic opportunities that we’ve foregone,” he said.
The minister said that funds are needed to convert to green
technologies, to take up organic agriculture, technologies for
hydropower generation and to reverse the degradation of land and improve
soil fertility.
Maintaining the healthy existing ecosystem, however, is challenging for
Bhutan. Besides water and forest management, one of the biggest
challenges for Bhutan would be to provide alternatives for income and
employment generation by controlling the development of industries in
the country.
[Source:
IDN-InDepthNews
| Analysis That Matters]
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Nedup
Tshering worked for the Royal Government of Bhutan's National
Environment Commission for more than 12 years. He is one of the founders
of Bhutan Innovative Community, an NGO. For details visit
www.bhutanicommunity.org.