UN-backed fund earmarks 39 mln USD to tackle climate change impact in Nepal

UN

UNITED NATIONS, Nov. 13 (Xinhua) -- More than 39 million U.S. dollars in funding was approved on Wednesday for a project that will build resilience and mitigate the effects of climate change, benefitting nearly 1 million Nepalis, the UN-backed Green Climate Fund (GCF) said.

Co-funding the initiative, Nepal's Ministry of Forests and Environment (MoFE) is adding another 8 million U.S. dollars for a total of more than 47 million U.S. dollars, which will see the project to fruition over the course of seven years, GCF said in a press release Wednesday.

Communities in the Churia hills region, the southernmost range of the Himalayan foothills, running east-west through Nepal, will be targeted as it provides vital ecosystem functions to the heavily-populated plains downstream where the most fertile agricultural land is located.

"This major GCF contribution... will benefit more than 200,000 households in the Churia hills," said Somsak Pipoppinyo, UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) representative to Nepal, noting that it would help rural families to "become more resilient to the changing environment in which they find themselves."

Decades of unsustainable use of natural resources have resulted in forest degradation, floods and soil erosion. And the negative effects on downstream communities have been exacerbated by increased droughts and extreme weather events precipitated by the climate crisis.

It is predicted those impacts will intensify in coming years, further threatening food security and livelihoods, said the press release.

"It will also help them adapt to, and mitigate the effects of climate and extreme weather events in the years to come," added Pipoppinyo.

Kailash Pokharel of Nepal's Ministry of Finance underscored the region as "a national priority critical to Nepal's food security and climate change policy," and pledged to ensure that the project "brings transformational change to grassroots communities" and enhances climate resilience.

Designed to directly contribute to Nepal's nationally determined contribution towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), much of the project's work will focus on developing infrastructure to move away from unsound and environmentally damaging natural resource management practices.

And its long-term sustainability will rely on building both individual and institutional capacity at all levels, according to the press release.

"The project will work with both government and communities to coordinate actions," said Ben Vickers, FAO's lead technical officer. "We anticipate these actions will deliver average annual emission reductions of nearly half-a-million tonnes of carbon dioxide each year."