Fund Launched to Help Mountain People Face Climate Change Threat

  • by Aruna Dutt (united nations)
  • Inter Press Service

But then he heard a dripping sound at 18,000 feet, there on the Gangotri glacier, the headwaters of the Ganges river, arguably the most sacred river in the world, the very lifeblood - spiritually and physically - of 500 million people living downstream.

The Ganges was flowing from above the glacier. An area which should be a realm of ice and snow, was now a place of melting rain and disintegrating glaciers, recalled Norton, the Mountain Partnership Ambassador and an intrepid climber who is known for conquering Mount Everest three times.

"As we lose glaciers we lose more than just snow and ice or rock - we lose our water towers and our flood controls," he said here last week as he talked about his experience at the Gangotri. "We lose farmland to floods and forests to fires. We lose some of the balance that took a millennia to build, and but a century to destroy."

Norton sees hope for the future in the resilience and adaptability of the mountain people themselves, who, he says are "strong people with rich cultures and deep, profound histories, who have managed to survive with a delicate balance between themselves and their environments."

But at the same time he pointed to the magnitude of the problems they now faced: "They are vulnerable. In a single lifetime, climate change is disrupting the survival strategies that took generations to build."

In this ecological mayhem, the ones who often suffer the most are the world's most marginalized people, those who live among the towering peaks and sweeping valleys.

According to a Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) report, "Mapping the vulnerability of mountain peoples to food insecurity," the average number of people suffering from chronic hunger in developing countries is one out of eight, but among the mountain people of developing countries, it is one out of three.

During the years 2000 to 2012, while food insecurity decreased at the global level, there was  an alarming 30 percent increase in the number of mountain people  in developing countries who vulnerable to food insecurity.

The developing world's mountain people number 915 million, making up 13 percent of the global population and the mountain areas they live in make up a quarter of world's surface.

With these new findings, the FAO launched the Mountain Facility initiative here last Friday, a funding mechanism to support governments and NGOs in addressing food insecurity in mountainous regions.

Thomas Gass, an Assistant Secretary-General in the UN's Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA) asserted that the interests of the mountain people is being promoted.

"The 2030 Agenda pledges to leave nobody behind and leaving nobody behind is not just a rhetorical choice," he explained.. "It's not just a philosophic approach. It is a strategic choice. "This involves understanding who are the people most marginalized, and that includes mountain people. This report is an important first step to leaving nobody behind."

To meet this challenge, Mountain Facility has come up with five targets: developing local economies, climate change adaptation, natural resource management, policy making and capacity building.

Thomas Hofer, Coordinator of the Mountain Partnership Secretariat, stressed the need to promote products made in mountains and help the mountain production process. "Promoting mountain specific products could give the people living in mountainous areas more voice in the nation," he told IPS.

Another area that needed attention was preserving the diversity of food crops in the mountains, which could protect the world from future food crisis, he said. "If certain species become diseased, in the end we depend on mountain farmers for the variety of crop genes."

© Inter Press Service (2016) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service

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