A woman affected by climate change in Nepal sits gloomily with her sickle. — Photo by author Sunita Adhikari, 16, is a grade 12 student who travels 4km downhill everyday to reach her college. She also has the additional duty of fetching water from a spring about 7km from her house.
“I make three trips to fetch water after walking a distance of 7km from one side early morning. In the scorching heat, it is difficult and tiring to do the laborious task on a daily basis,” she says.
Piqued by the blistering heat and cumbersome rounds of carrying water, Sunita wishes her village had enough water so she could concentrate on her studies in order to become a teacher and educate village children.
Aware of the hazards of climate changes in their area, local communities in Nepal’s Kavrepalanchok district have joined hands with climate change scientists and organisations to understand, deal with and adapt to the changes.
Of the five villages in the district, Dhaitar village, which is a two hours’ drive from Kathmandu, encountered climate change threats when its abundant water reservoirs dried up, and agricultural land in the highlands turned barren, leaving farmers downcast.
The villagers breathed a sigh of relief after learning the Climate-Smart Village (CSV) technique initiated by the Center for Environmental and Agricultural Policy Research, Extension and Development (CEAPRED) and the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD).
The concept is known as Climate Smart Villages and is being rolled out under the programme titled Himalayan Climate Change Adaptation Programme (HICAP).
Based on the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation’s approach of climate-smart agriculture, the CSV combines the three dimensions of sustainable development — economic, social, and environmental — for an integrated approach to climate adaptation, resilience and food security.
“After being introduced to a number of programs with a focus on organic practices, growing off-season vegetables, use of bio-pesticides, collection of waste water in ponds for irrigating agricultural fields and promotion of System of Rice Intensification (SRI) method, the villagers realised the difference and they started earning more income,” says Ram Deo Shah, a senior agriculture expert in CEAPRED.
SRI, a climate-smart methodology aimed to increase rice productivity, is an organic practice that requires less water and labour and uses young seedlings spaced singly.