Climate change is expected to increase
temperatures in Nepal by several degrees by 2060, but a new database set up by
the Asian Development Bank (ADB) should help this geographically diverse
country better prepare for the various climate change impacts.
"The potential applications of this
database are manifold: If a farmer has a better idea of how rain patterns are
going to change, he can make better decisions about the crops he will plant,
while the engineer can make a more informed decision about how to build roads
that will last, and the government official can better direct public
spending," said senior water resources specialist at ADB Cindy Malvicini.
Information on climate change impacts across
the country has, until now, been very general. This was not very useful given
that Nepal’s topography ranges from Arctic regions to tropical plains all
within a 200-km span from north to south. Frequent earthquakes, landslides and
melting glaciers also make it highly vulnerable to climate change.
Under a project called 'Strengthening Capacity
for Managing Climate Change and the Environment', ADB has coordinated a more
specific set of climate change projections for areas as small as 12-sq-km. The
previous climate change data provided projections for wide swathes of up to
100-sq-km.
The new data is more targeted, allowing for
more effective climate response plans to be drawn up. Data shows that between
2030 and 2060, the annual mean maximum temperature will increase in most areas
of Nepal.
While it will rise only slightly in the
central part of the country, it will go up by about three degree Celsius in the
northwestern high mountain region. Meanwhile, average annual rainfall will
increase slightly across the whole country, but will increase most in the
western and northern high mountain regions.
The data was prepared by a team comprising the
Asian Disaster Preparedness Center in Thailand, the Bjerknes Centre for Climate
Research of Norway, the Faculty for Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation
of the University of Twente in the Netherlands, and India’s The Energy and
Resources Institute. In Nepal, the Department of Hydrology and Meteorology was
the focal institute, while Tribhuwan University (TU) was the local technical
partner.
ADB, based in Manila, is dedicated to reducing
poverty in Asia and the Pacific through inclusive economic growth,
environmentally sustainable growth and regional integration. Established in
1966, it is owned by 67 members — 48 from the region. In 2011, ADB approvals
including co-financing totalled $21.7 billion.
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