Can adaptation, in its current form, adequately solve climate  crises in Nepal? - Debunking the myth of adaptation
     
    -           Tek Jung Mahat
     When tackling climate change and accelerating  low carbon development in Nepal has been our top priority for some time now, we  cannot let any of our actions fail and starve adaptation action on its very  foundation. When there is not much in our historical records to show how  environmental and climate adversities were dealt centuries ago, there is a common  consensus that we did not have this issue as worse as now in the known history  of the country. This is primarily because, for ages, we have had a limited  population, demanding much less from the nature, and that too with diverse ecosystem  and equally diverse culture and traditions offering inherent solutions in the  form of indigenous ecological knowledge and socio-cultural practices such as the  barter system filling up the production and distribution gaps. However, this  perfection was never meant to persist indefinitely. Thus, as the time passed  by, the population increased, so did our greed. Forests degraded and forest  coverage declined, water resources became scarce and contaminated, fertile soil  continued eroding, atmosphere got loaded with more dose of anthropogenic pollution,  urban centres turned to "hot pans" and wild lives continued disappearing at the  cost of our desperateness for modernization, development and a lavish life  style. When there is nothing bad is wanting to be modern and live a better  life, our unsustainable and undesirable approach to gradually transit from "what  we were" to "what we are" and "what we are dreaming to be", created a lot of  problem. The magnitude of this problem was more worse, as this was a global  trend, and people from other parts of the world, that we refer as early industrialized  nations, seemed to have over-smarted and overtaken us, not only in developing  their countries first, but also in ruining the world first. By nature, we human  are selfish beings, who "taketh more than giveth back". However, that  selfishness needs some wisdom attached to it as we prepare to tackle the issues  like climate change and poverty. We need to accept that modernization doesn't  sustain at the cost of ruining natural capital, destroying social capital, and just  by riding the back of not-so-thriving financial capital, when the government  institutions are far more weaker than any time before, policy corruption is at its  peak, and most actors - from ordinary citizen to bureaucracy and political  leadership, all are trying to reap the benefits without caring about it's  implications (someone else's loss).
     
    When the least developed countries like  Nepal are battling against climate change, it is obvious that the focus will be  placed on adaptation and mitigation seen as secondary. When climate change  terminologies used by a specific group of people (experts) may leave the  ordinary people puzzled most of the time, it is the responsibility of all of us to  demystify this "secret science" by communicating in simpler languages that can  be understood by the majority of the population – "science for society",  especially when the issues are as basic as adaptation. Climate crisis  deserves more attention than plain jargons. Let us accept the fact – "adaptation  is never a new thing-in-making". Humans have been practicing  socio-economic and ecological adaptations to environmental adversities and  variabilities, including climate change, for ages through the development of  suitable practices (such as early examples of irrigation, insurance, and weather  forecasting), cultures, and technologies, enabling them to enhance local environmental  conditions and living. Even in the academic circle, the discussion on  adaptation has received attention as early as 1970s, first within the Club  of Rome, then within cold-war time institution  International  Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)  following the publication of C. S. Holling's Adaptive  Environmental Assessment and Management in  1978,  and later within the IPCC debates,  until now. When the discussion about mitigation and adaptation as the most  effective responses to climate change is omnipresent in the scientific  community since then,  as E.  Lisa F. Schipper nicely summarises, our  historical focus on adaptation has been on individual and ecosystem adaptation  in response to growing understanding about transforming nature-based systems,  that, at one point, could breach the non-reversible ecological threshold. The  adaptation issues have received more attention mainly after 1990s, thanks to  some deliberate efforts to categorically differentiate them. You may blame them  as academic politics or appreciate as more organised efforts to understand them  individually and in-connection, but the fact is, this eventually helped to get  the adaptation process formally recognised and acted upon within the United Nations Framework Convention on  Climate Change (UNFCCC) mechanism. This also aided in  establishing a view mitigation and adaptation need different thinking, approach  and policy as well as scientific fora to develop more and be more effective. This  change at the UNFCCC level, eventually opened door for current form of  adaptation finance and transformed adaptation actions into something big in  quick succession, despite the global economic setback started in 2007/08. With  this flow, Nepal too hugely benefitted as everything we see now presented as  adaptation in Nepal have happened in last two decades, such as Nepal National  Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA), Local Adaptation Plan of Action (LAPA), National  Climate Policy, Nepal-Pilot Program for Climate Resilience (PPCR), Nepal  Climate Change Support Programme (NCCSP) and work-in-progress National  Adaptation Plan (NAP) to name a few. However, this separation between  adaptation and mitigation also started creating a gulf of understanding between  two communities working on these now "differentiated topics" and have partly  contributed to their ideological crisis. As a result, climate solutions  somehow, suddenly, started appearing as "segregated efforts" from what they should  be – "integrated efforts". And now, it has gone too far, esp. when we see some so  called experts, unhesitatingly claiming adaptation is for least developed and  developing countries whereas the mitigation is exclusive responsibility of the  developed countries, or say those who industrialised first, polluted the  environment first, and are now are part of the Organisation for Economic  Co-operation and Development (OECD). 
     
    This was the turning point; we started  wrong approach – a rather fragmented approach, to solve the "Planetary  Catastrophe" that does not leave a single aspect of our life unharmed. Wisdom  says, adaptation is a package deal for our very survival in the changing  climate and comprises of efforts related to "struggle" and "cooperation" combined,  a shift from Darwin's early concept of "struggle for existence". In addition,  if it is so, how can we continue separating mitigation from adaptation and  still expect to develop a complete solution? Doesn't this seem like, the  legendary Kalidas cutting the branch of a tree on which he was sitting? What  kind of solutions are we expecting out of it?
     
    Given this and also considering prevailing  geo-political chaos, socio-economic divide, ecological crisis, religio-cultural  conflicts we are living with, and how global approaches to solve this crisis  are changing, we need to recognise and embrace the following, in our plans and  of course, actions:
     
    1.      It's not about adaptation or  mitigation, it is about combined efforts: It  is very often disappointing to see perennial "adaptation-mantra" from  the government and the development agencies as the only solution to the climate  crisis in Nepal, as if, talking about mitigation actions  are dispensable, and sometimes, even a crime. Three  key disciplines of climate science – scientific research, mitigation measures, and  adaptation efforts are just like bone, flesh and blood in our body. Separate  one, and rest everything else is incomplete. We must get away from rhetoric and  be more pragmatic. After all, tackling climate change is not a mere project; it  is a mission to secure very survival of the people. This is even more important  considering changing politics of climate finance at global level, increased  role of private sector, including the multilateral development bank, and their  growing attractiveness in mitigation related projects. Nepal's Intended  Nationally Determined Contributions (INDC),  could actually be a very good marketplace to start with. 
     
    2.      It's not about excessive freedom  and isolated missions impossible, it's about a concerted effort with a clear  rule-book that works: Tackling climate change, be it  mitigation, adaptation or understanding the scientific basis, is not a sole  responsibility of the state or any other individual actor in the country.  When we may unhesitantly wait for some state  actions to come and hope them to succeed, we all have our parts to play by  investing in our present and future even before the government comes in. We cannot  just hold back our greed and develop the culture of constant complaining. When  the government efforts can help develop long-term solutions to climate change  at a much larger scale, it is not in the very nature of the climate adversities  to wait for the government to make a move first. Just because the government does  not put solutions on time, or does a poor job of doing so (as it is evidently inefficient  most of the time), the floods will not stop, glaciers will not retreat, drought  will not soften and farms will not yield more food. Therefore, the first  investment has to come from people and spontaneously. Our gamble to wait  for government actions will inadvertently crumble existing infrastructures and  eventually shamble the whole system. This is where the role of social capital comes  in. Rather than dissolving or limiting roles of institutions like "Guthis", we  actually need to increase their numbers and expand their scopes, including  issues related to environment and climate change. Moreover, recent policy discussions  on regulating non-governmental organizations (NGOs) working on climate issues does  not have to be seen entirely negatively. We cannot ignore the number of the  neo-elites that have born out of NGO business in last three decades, when the countries  have failed miserably, in every aspect. We should not just take regulation  needs as an oppressive state behaviour; rather this an opportunity needs to be utilised  to refine the dirt and corruption within the non-government sector (of course, the government too needs major cleaning work). Climate populism (for creating a  trade-mill) is a massive danger to the very actions of climate change in the  country as I  have repeatedly argued before.  There is a clear need of a social movement to prevent "climate projects" from becoming  the "corruption projects". This is why, we definitely need regulations, but  more of that in the form of monitoring and evaluation, and not necessarily in  limiting their access to finance and people. Let us all held everybody  responsible, and join the force for a better cause.
     
    3.      It's just not about actors, It's  actually about climate governance: Power-sharing,  accountability, fairness, transparency, realistic assurance, leadership and  stakeholder engagement are key for every climate efforts. When a capable  leadership, and all forms of fairness, transparency and accountability are  always expected from the government (although it has always disappointed in our  countries), realistic assurance and stakeholder engagement are two issues, I  often find underachieved but always over-marketed. First thing first - The  government agencies should be prudent and proactive enough in discreetly  communicating, they do not have magic sticks to carry the environmental burden  created by all of us, at once. When they have select plans in place and some  actions on the ground, they should clearly communicate the true scope of the  work. Misinformation, such as over-expectation and wrong expectations shown by  them or any other actors, such as NGOs, should be treated as a crime. This is  because, an effective preparedness to disaster is only possible when locals  know what is the scope of support they can expect from the government or the  NGOs. When the lip-servicers or ill communicators give wrong assurances to the  people, they will eventually end up with – "God bless you" as the only  solution. Similarly, we need more clarity in terms of power-sharing between different  actors in the society and within the government, at different scales, and now  considering the complexities the concept of federalism brings in.
     
    4.      And, It's mostly about which  sector can play the most important role and deliver better economic returns: As  long as people keep converting forests and agriculture lands to urban centres,  abandoning agriculture and live unsustainably leading to an absolute import-oriented  economy, there is nothing even the smartest of the governments can achieve.  Here we need a clear assessment of our realities - resources and needs. As time  has presented the concept of green economy as one of the most convenient  options ahead, some of us have recently done much-needed assessment in this  area and have presented a roadmap for "public-private partnership-driven  full-fledged green economy" focusing on renewable energy and transport,  agriculture and forestry, water and water-induced disasters, as well as tourism  and hospitality. 
     
    For detailed analysis, please read the  articles below. The first article appears in an open-access journal, whereas  the second is available (upon request) for non-profit purposes (mail:  tekjungmahat.at.gmail.com).
     
    Climate finance and green growth: Options analysis for Nepal:
    Mahat, Tek Jung, Luděk Bláha, Batu  Uprety, and Michal Bittner. "Climate  finance and green growth: reconsidering climate-related institutions,  investments, and priorities in Nepal."  Environmental Sciences Europe 31, no. 1 (2019): 46.
    
    Framing the green economy in mountainous countries like Nepal:
    Rueff, H., Kohler, T., Mahat, T. J.,  & Ariza, C. (2015). Can  the green economy enhance sustainable mountain development? The potential role  of awareness building. Environmental science &  policy, 49, 85-94.
     
    Co-founder  of the Climate Himalaya Initiative and the initiator of the Centre for Climate  Research and Advocacy (CCRA) at the Central Department of Environmental  Science, Tribhuvan University, Tek Jung Mahat is a Nepalese climate policy researcher,  who regularly writes on climate change adaptation, climate finance, environmental  related knowledge management and communication. Follow Tek: https://twitter.com/tjmahat
Source: Republished from https://www.spotlightnepal.com/2019/08/01/can-adaptation-its-current-form-adequately-solve-climate-crises-nepal-debunking-myth-adaptation/. Mr. Mahat's original article is available on New Spotlight Magazine Nepal.