.  .
  • English
  • Français
  • Español

Human Development Reports - United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)

  • Skip to main content
  • home
  • Human Development 
  • Reports (1990-2013)
  • Indices & Data
  • Countries
  • Events
  • Media
  • About Us
  • Search
Share
  • About the Reports
  • Search the Database
  • Global Reports
    • HDR 2013
    • HDR 2011
    • HDR 2010
    • HDR 2009
    • HDR 2007/8
      • Download
      • Order a copy
      • Youth booklet
      • Policy recommendations
      • Launch presentations
      • In the news
      • Videos
      • Climate change data
      • Supporting statements
      • Background papers
    • HDR 2006
    • HDR 2005
    • HDR 2004
    • HDR 2003
    • HDR 2002
    • HDR 2001
    • HDR 2000
    • HDR 1999
    • HDR 1998
    • HDR 1997
    • HDR 1996
    • HDR 1995
    • HDR 1994
    • HDR 1993
    • HDR 1992
    • HDR 1991
    • HDR 1990
  • Regional Reports
  •    Africa
  •    Arab States
  •    Asia & Pacific
  •    Eastern Europe & Central Asia
  •    Latin America & Caribbean
  • National Reports
  • Other Publications
  • Glossary
  • eBooks

Join us

  • Get email updates
  • Subscribe
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

HIGHLIGHT

2013 Report

The Rise of the South: Human Progress in a Diverse World is available for free downloading

Climate Change Poses High Risks for Nepal

The Himalayan Times

Kathmandu, November 28
Avalanches and floods pose special risks to densely populated
mountain regions, such as Nepal, where glaciers are retreating at
a rate of several metres every year, states the United Nation's
Human Development Report, released on Tuesday, which is
focused on climate change this year.
"Lakes formed by melting glacier waters are expanding at an
alarming rate. The Tsho Rolpa Lake being a case in point, having
increased more than seven-fold in the past 50 years," the report,
'Fighting Climate Change: Human Solidarity in a Divided World',
says.
It also stresses that the time and energy being spent for fuel wood
collection is also affecting Nepal's productivity. "In Guatemala and
Nepal, wood expenditure represents 10-15 per cent of total
household expenditure in the poorest quintile. Collection time for
fuel wood has significant opportunity costs, limiting opportunities
for women to engage in income generating activities. More
broadly, inadequate access to modern energy services restricts
productivity and helps keep people poor," the report says.
The report also appreciates the attempts being made in Nepal. "In
Nepal, communities in flood-prone areas are building early warning
systems - such as raised watchtowers - and providing labour and
material to shore up embankments to prevent glacial lakes from
bursting their banks," it says, adding that farmers across the
developing world are responding to emerging climate threats by
drawing on traditional cultivation technology.
If climate change is not properly addressed in South and East Asia,
changes in rainfall, temperatures and the availability of water
would cause great loses in productivity of food staples, thereby
thwarting efforts to cut rural poverty, it states, adding,"Central
Asia, Northern China and the northern part of the South Asia are
particularly vulnerable to retreating glaciers".
The report makes a case for the urgency with which climate
change needs to be addressed. "Time matters for all of us. Today
we are living with what we did yesterday/ tomorrow we will all live
with what we do today. We need to take action now," it says.

Return to the list <<<<<


Back to top

2013 Report

  • Home
  • Site Map
  • Contact Us
  • Employment
  • Internships
  • Terms of Use
  • Webmaster
  • Get email updates