Agro Ecology
Agro Ecology
Agro Ecology
agroecology
– Concepts, fields, and scope of environmental science and
agroecology with particular reference to Nepal
– Interrelationships between human population and the
environment
Human Dimensions Of
Environmental Science
• We Live In An
Inequitable World
Figure 2.4
Scope of environmental studies
• Ecosystem structure and function :link between biotic and abiotic, Knowledge about
ecological system
• Management and maintenance of natural resources
• Awareness
• Necessary information about biodiversity
• Understand and plan about disaster and pollution control
• To evaluate alternatives for different issues
• Environmental justice
• Research and development on different issues
• Identify tranditional eco-friendly practices
• Environmental education to citizens
• Theoritical knowledge into practice
• Social development (NGO) : awareness
• Environmentalists
• Environmental journalism
• Green advocacy
• Green marketing: green marketing refers to the process of selling environmentally
friendly products and/or services.
Importance of environmental
studies
1. Environment Issues Being of International Importance: provides
solution and maintain ecological balance
2. Environmental studies helps achieve sustainable development and
understand the relationships between development and the environment.
3. It helps in formulating the broad social, economic, and regulatory
frameworks in which environmental problems are resolved.
4. Environmental studies applies economic methods and concepts to issues of
the environment, environmental policy analysis, and management.
5. Environmental studies also aims to protect biodiversity
6. The concepts from environment studies can be applied to the study of
agriculture and the design of sustainable production systems.
7. Environmental studies gives information related to population explosion,
growth and development, impact of population growth on the resources
consumption, and national economy.
Need for public awareness
it is essential to be familiar with different environmental
problems.
• Greek origin
• OIKOS = household
• LOGOS = study of…
AND…
• Living organisms…
– Plants
– Animals
– microorganisms in soil, etc.
Divisions
• Autoecology is the ecological study of
individual species of plant and its
environment or is the ecological study of
individual animal or plant species or its
population thought its life history in relation
to the habitat in which it grows.
4. Agro-population ecology
Based on population ecology.
Prespective of population dynamics.
5. Holon agroecology
agricultural endeavor as an
unfinished accomplishment
adjusting itself to its many
contexts and their conflicts.
"holding together" in order to
persist through change
6. Inclusive agroecology
basis for the land-use
sciences
humans are the primary
governing force for organisms
7. .Integrated assessment of
multifunctional agricultural systems
focuses in the multifunctionality
three land-use sciences, agriculture, forestry,
and agroforestry
the land-use sciences further subdivide
human/environment interaction
ways in which people use and interact with
the Earth.
Human-Environment
Interaction
A History through the Ages
CLOTHING
FOOD
SHELTER
HUMAN
ENVIRONMENT
INTERACTION
LIVELIHOOD RECREATION
Humans are part of the Earth's
ecosystem. Human activities
can either deliberately or
inadvertently
alter the balance
of an ecosystem.
What do you Think???
How do human
activities affect the
environment?
“The tragedy of
the
commons!”
• Garrett Hardin,
1968:
• In a “commons”
open to all,
unregulated use
will deplete
limited
resources. Figure 1.4
With more info…
Gap between Rich & Poor, & other Socio-Economic Political Issues:
1.1
12 Biggest Environmental Problems
according to Jared Diamond
(author of Collapse)
Category 1: Destruction or loss of natural
resources
1. destruction of natural habitats
2. overfishing
3. loss of biodiversity, including genetic
biodiversity
4. degradation and loss of soils
Category 2: Ceilings on natural
resources
5. depletion of major energy sources
6. depletion of water resources
7. photosynthetic ceiling is being reached
Category 3: Harmful things we generate
or move around
8. toxic chemicals
9. alien species
10. atmospheric gases
Category 4: Effects of increase in human
populations
11. human population growth and size
12. per capita impact
Human impact on the environment
How does human activity affect the environment?
Reduce the
land available
for plants and Raw materials
animals (inc. non-
renewable)
resources are
being used up
More waste is
produced which (if not
handled properly) may
pollute air, water &
land
Human impacts on the
environment
Deforestation
Habitat Fragmentation
Human impacts on the
Environment
Fishing activities
•
Human impacts on the environment
Invasive species (EXOTIC SPECIES)
Human impacts on the Environment
Earth worm
(Lumbricus terrestris)
Chanterelle
(Cantherellus
cibarius)
• An herbivore
grazing on a
plant is another
example of
predation.
• Usually, only
part of the prey
is eaten by the
predator.
• Photo Credit: Rhett A. Butler @
mongabay.com
Herbivore-Plant Interaction:
Manatee Grazing on Aquatic Plants
Prey Defenses
• Predation usually results in
the evolution of defensive
adaptations in prey.
• These can include:
– Chemical defenses (toxins,
poison, acrid sprays)
– Behavior (living in groups,
scouts, alarm calls)
– Morphological features
(spines, color, structures
that allow you to run fast or
detect predators), and Caterpillar with Venomous Spines
other traits
• Photo Credit: Rhett A. Butler @ mongabay.com
Behavioral Defense Example
• Caterpillar Video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oWOC8trquFo
Camouflage
• Camouflage is
protective coloration
in which an animal
resembles its
background.
• Photo Credit: Rhett A. Butler @ mongabay.com
Competition
• A small
Chthamalus
barnacle is
circled in red.
• A large
Balanus
barnacle is
circled in blue.
• Photo Credit: Department of the Interior
Symbiosis
• Mutualists and
parasites
coevolve with
their hosts.
• Pollinators
coevolve with the
flowering plants
they pollinate.
• Photo Credit: Mike Sykes
Functions of Ecosystems
• The principal steps in the operation of ecosystem are as follows:
• Regulatory Function : air, water, soil, biological control
• Habitat function
• Production function
• Information function
Energy Flow in Ecosystems
103
Trophic Levels
104
Feeding Relationships
Energy flow through an ecosystem in one direction, from
the sun or inorganic compounds to autotrophs
(producers) and then to various heterotrophs
(consumers).
Food Chains are a series of steps in which organisms
transfer energy by eating or being eaten.
Food webs show the complex interactions within an
ecosystem.
Each step in a food chain or web is called a trophic level.
Producers make up the first step, consumers make up
the higher levels.
Food Chains
• A food chain is simple and direct
• It involves one organism at each trophic level
– Primary Consumers – eat autotrophs (producers)
– Secondary Consumers – eat the primary consumers
– Tertiary Consumers – eat the secondary consumers
– Decomposers – bacteria and fungi that break down
dead organisms and recycle the material back into the
environment
Food Webs
• Most organisms are part of
many food chains.
– Arrows in a food web
represent the flow of energy
and nutrients.
– Following the arrows leads
to the top carnivore(s).
Smaller fishes,
water beetles
Rotifers
Phytopl
ankton,
algae
Fig. 4–19
Energy Flow Between Trophic
Levels
Why such low efficiency?
Three Reasons:
1) Escape behavior/protective
coloration/unavailable material
2) Indigestible material
3) Cellular respiration
Hydrologic Cycle
117
Carbon Cycle
118
Nitrogen Cycle
119
Phosphorus Cycle
120
Sulfur Cycle
121
Biomass
• The total mass of the organic matter at each
trophic level is called biomass
Many types of
Khet : lowland
low land to man vegetable and
which is
1. hill farming ratio as fruits can be
bonded and
system compared to grown together
can be flooded
Terai. with cereals
to grow rice.
and pulses.
cash crops
easy
, fruits
access
vegetables
Terai
farming
system
Buffalo,
“bread
cow, goat,
basket” of
pig, poultry,
Nepal.
fishery
23 percent
of total
land area
infertile and
poor
access
buckwheat,
35%land
potato,
area
chino
Mountain
farming
system
yak, nak,
Farming
sheep ,
very difficult
chyangra
Farms
• The farming practices followed in the country
can be grouped into three broad categories:
1.Shifting cultivation
2.Sedentary peasant farming
• This is commonly adopted farming practice by
majority of farmers of our country.
3.Capitalistic farming
• This is followed by large farms or estates with
the use of sophisticated technologies and farm
mechanizations and is done on large scale.
e.g. tea estates and mechanized farms.
• A learning centre
Gender
participation
!!!!
2. Understanding Farm
Components
Farmers
Farmer’s social
organizations
Type of farmers
• Innovators
• Early adopters
• Late adopters
• Laggards
Diversity of
agroecosytem,
species and
genetic
resources
Diversity
of
medicin
es
Do Farmers Innovate?
5W & 1H
What?
When?
Why?
Whom
?
Which?
How?
Do Farmers Innovate?
A traditional innovation
Do Farmers Innovate?
Do Farmers
Innovate?
A1
Do Farmers Innovate?
Source: FAO
Slide 147
Crops
Cereals, Vegetables,
fruits, oil crops
3. Analyzing Crops
• Cereals
• Vegetables
• Fruits
• Spices
• Medicinal plants
• Pulses
• Ornamental Plants
• Pests: weeds, insects, pathogens
Agrobiodiversity of Tharu Culture
Genetic
diversity
Product diversity
Ecologi
cal
agricult
ure in
Nepalg
anj
Faces
of
Agrobiodiversity
2. Understanding Farm
components:
Animals
Habitat destruction
Invasive species
What is environmental
hazard?
The risks that cause imbalance in healthy
environment.
Pollution
• Soil pollution
Soil pollution can be caused by the following
*Accidental Spills *Acid rain (Which is caused by air pollution)
*Intensive farming *Deforestation*Genetically modified plants
*Nuclear wastes *Industrial Accidents *Landfill and illegal dumping
*Land Erosion *Agricultural practices, such as application of
pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers *Mining and other industries *Oil
and fuel dumping *Buried wastes *Disposal of coal ash *Disposal of
ammunitions and agents of war *Drainage of contaminated surface
water into the soil *Electronic waste
Clean Up
Problems With Pollution Clean-Up
It is only temporary.
Removing a pollutant from one area can cause it to
be added to another.
Pollutant are easily dispersed in the environment.
WHAT KIND OF
ENVIRONMENTAL
OUTLOOK SHOULD WE
HAVE?
Measurement of Human impact on Environment
I= PAT
-In the I=PAT equation, the variable P represents
the population of an area, such as the world. Since
the rise of industrial societies, human population
has been increasing exponentially.
“What is the
relationship between
resource consumption and
environmental
problems?”
Kiva: Loans that Change Lives
http://www.kiva.org/
Earth Portal (website)
http://www.earthportal.org/
Environmental News Service
NPR: Environment (Podcasts)
http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast/podcast_detail.php?siteId=4985907
Energy and Environment TV
http://www.eandetv.com
PRI: Living on Earth (RSS Feed)
http://www.loe.org/
http://www.loe.org/podcast.rss
The Grist (News Blog)
http://gristmill.grist.org/
Pesticides and the
Environment
Pesticides
misuse
• Institutional level
• Social level
• Technical level
Potato famine of Ireland was
caused by genetically uniform
crops and lack of pesticides to
protect them
Blight hits
potatoes,
1845
Pests attack
and eat our
food crops
This problem is
due, in part, to
not selecting
for pest
resistance
Based on: National Geographic, February 1980
during
domestication
DDT was invented
in the 1940’s and
viewed as:
- miracle for
farmers
- and safe
“The most discussed of the new
insecticides is dichloro-diphenyl-
trichloroethane, shortened to DDT but
also called Guesarol. Painstaking
investigations have shown it to be signally
effective against many of the most
destructive insects that feed upon crops.”
• Silverbullet Pesticide
– 1939 Swiss Chemist Synthesized DDT
• Paul Humen Muller
Slide 212
c1 I would like to take the applicators through separate perspectives that occured throughout the last century. I would also like to focus
on how we thought we knew what safe was, and it was redefined every few decades. The first perspective is called 'the what does not
kill you makes you stronger!'.. This is referring to the rampant use of DDT from 1939 to 1965.
Photo on the right was used to control manage malaria by killing the Anopheles mosquito. This product saved millions of lives and
people did not die from this pesticide. Did it have a downfall?
ctharp, 11/19/2010
c2
• Agent Orange
1:1 mixture of 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T
Produces dioxins – carcinogen
1896 –
Hodgkin's disease and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).
1985!
Slide 213
c2 Perspective number 2 takes us from 1965 - 1985. titled 'beware of who you trust, always be on the safe side. Sometimes we get
complacent that certain government organizations will protect us or that even 'science at the time' knows best. That is not always the
case and takes us to a product called agent orange.
Agent Orange: government claimed agent orange did not cause any health concerns in 1970. Government mainained this claim in
1980 but rescinded this in the 1990's. At that time the US government claimed that the Agent Orange used in the Vietnam war caused
a variety of cancers. That was because in the manufacturing of agent orange a byproduct was created 'dioxin' which causes these
cancers. Perspectives change and the government should not have been trusted in this scenario.
Agent White: Mixture of 2,4-D and picloram. Did not see the health problems associated with agent orange, due to this either active
ingredient is used today. Does that mean we can drink 2,4-D or picloram?
Gordon Shrum: mid 70's did just that to prove picloram was safe in a right of way dispute. He lived another 10 years. Does that prove
you can drink picloram. Yes and NO.
Yes. you could drink pure picloram because of its low acute toxicity.
#1. Is tordon just picloram, no, inert ingredient which are much more toxic than picloram itself.
#2. Do we know how long Mr. Shrum would have lived if he didn't drink picloram? NO this was not a replicated study.
#3. Do we know if Mr. Shrum developed any health concerns later in his life from drinking the picloram (cancers, mutagenic, etc..).
No, Information not available and not a replicated study.
• Breakdown of pesticides by
soil microflora
• A normal process in soil
• Recycles pesticide residues
to harmless and useful
elements like N, P, S, etc.
Bioaccumulation
• = Cumulative buildup of toxic elements or
compounds in the body of an organism.
• Organohalides = very soluble in fat tissues of
organisms, good candidates for
bioaccumulation.
Biomagnification
The concentration of
pesticides in higher
levels of food chains
Biomagnification =
Increase in concentration of
toxic products in higher
consumers in food chains
Biomagnification
DDT is
concentrated as it
moved up food
chain
This is because
energy is lost (from
respiration) as go
up food chain but
DDT is not
Based on: Campbell et al,
Biology: Concepts and
Connections, Benjamin
Cummings
Pesticide Movement
What is Eutrophication?
2. Long-term consequences of
environmental pollution
Harmful Effects
Protective Equipment
Pesticides – Harm to Humans
• Hazard – risk of harmful effects due to:
• Toxicity – ability to cause harm
• Exposure – Contact of the chemical
with the body
Directions Formulation
Re-entry
Ingredients
Statement
Storage &
Disposal
Child
Registry No. Warning
Manufacturer
*DANGER/POISON
ingestion
= extremely toxic by
•Dermal – skin
•Ocular - eyes
Types of Toxicity to
Pesticides
•Acute – usually immediate,
obvious, reversible
c3 ctharp, 11/19/2010
c4 Photo on the left is an individual wearing PPE including a tyvek suit and respirator. Why is this uncomfortable for this applicator? It is
like a sauna in these suits and can be as warm as 110 degree F at 80 degree ambiant temperature. What if his neighbor doesn't wear
PPE and doesn't drop dead? That may eventually drive this same applicator to not wear PPE on the next application. If so that
breaches our first mode of entry: Inhalation, and a second: The Skin.
Photo on the lower right: Many applicators are required to wear eye protection as imaged on the lower right. What is the problem
with this? Goggles often fog up, applicators then remove eye protection, often clean eye protection with there contaminated hands,
and place back on their face. At that point they have breached a third mode of entry: EYES!
Photo on the upper right: Many applicators face plugged nozzles while in a field situation with little time and contaminated equipment
and field conditions. Applicators are often required to fix nozzles using EPA mandated chemically resistant gloves. These gloves are
often cumbersome and difficult to use to unplug nozzles. Applicators often will remove gloves to fix nozzles, thus contaminating
themselves once again. Mode of entry: SKIN
Photo
ctharp, 11/19/2010
Emergency Responses
• First aid
259
URBANIZATION
or
263
What are Wastes?
Basel Convention Definition of
Wastes
Disposal means
“any operation which may lead to resource
recovery, recycling, reclamation, direct re-use
or alternative uses (Annex IVB of the Basel
convention)”
264
Kinds of Wastes
Solid wastes: domestic, commercial and
industrial wastes especially common as co-
disposal of wastes
265
Classification of Wastes
according to their
Properties
Bio-degradable
can be degraded (paper, wood, fruits
and others)
Non-biodegradable
cannot be degraded (plastics, bottles,
old machines,
cans, styrofoam containers and 266
others)
Classification of Wastes according to
their Effects on Human Health and the
Environment
Hazardous wastes
Substances unsafe to use commercially,
industrially, agriculturally, or economically
Non-hazardous
Substances safe to use commercially,
industrially, agriculturally, or economically
267
Sources of Wastes
Households
Commerce and
Industry
268
Sources of Wastes
Agriculture
Fisheries
269
EFFECTS OF WASTE IF NOT
MANAGED WISELY
270
WHAT SHOULD BE DONE
• Reduce Waste
- Reduce office paper waste by implementing a
formal policy to duplex all draft reports and by
making training manuals and personnel
information available electronically.
272
WHAT SHOULD BE DONE
Donate/Exchange
- old books
- old clothes
- old computers
273
WHAT SHOULD BE DONE
Education
274
WHAT SHOULD BE DONE
Preventing Waste
275
WHAT SHOULD BE DONE
Conduct outreach program adopting an
ecologically sound waste management
system which includes:
• waste reduction
• segregation at source
• composting
• recycling and re-use
• more efficient collection
• more environmentally sound disposal
276
GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
Mitigation
Priority Issues/ Solutions:
In addition there are a large number of Private Organizations, sometimes known as Non-
Government Organizations (NGOs). A significant number of these have a worldwide coverage
and although some of them are relatively unknown outside a fairly specialized circle, several,
such as Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace have an international profile and reputation.
List of International Organization Working on
Environmental Issues:
• Earth System Governance Project (ESGP).
• Global Environment Facility (GEF).
• Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC).
• International Union for Conservation of Nature
(IUCN).
• United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP).
• World Nature Organization (WNO).
• Centre for Science and Environment (CSE).
etc.
That ends my presentation.
Although there
is considerable
Uncertainty about future,
all climate models
indicate a rising trend in
temperature
By 2100 a rise
of 1.8 to 4°c is
Expected
(IPCC, 2007)
WEATHER AND CLIMATE
• Weather is the condition of the atmosphere at a particular place and
time
• relatively dynamic
4
What is the difference between “global
warming” and “climate change”?
GLOBAL WARMING CLIMATE
is the increase of the
CHANGE
Earth’s average surface is a broader term that
temperature due to a refers to long-term
build-up of greenhouse changes in climate,
gases in the atmosphere. including average
temperature and
precipitation.
GLOBAL WARMING AND CLIMATE
CHANGE
Source: www.abcnews.com/sections/us/global106.html
8
(IPCC, 2007)
LANDSCAPE OF NEPAL
LANDSCAPE
LANDSCAPE
CHINA
150
500
2000
0
1000
25
150
0
0
2000
150 1500
0
3000
INDIA
1500
2000
3000
2000 1500
150
0 Bay of Bengal
1500
3000
2000
1500
150
0
2000
3000
N
Physiographic Map of Nepal Elevation Climatic Mean annual
W E
(m) Zone Air Temp.
S
°C
5000 0
Arctic
4500
Alpine
4000 5
Subalpine
Altitude in (m)
3000 10
Cool
2000 15
Warm
Above 5000 Temperate
4500-5000 1000 20
4000-5000
Subtropical
3000- 4000
2000-3000 0 25
1000-2000 100 0 100 km
Below 1000
N
Population Distribution in Nepal
12
Population (million)
10 49%
43%
8
54103 km² 6
4 8%
2
60024 km² 0
Mountain Hill Terai
(Source: CBS 2009=
28.5 million)
33864 km²
Himal
Hill 100 0 100 km
Terai
Energy consumption in Nepal
GLOBAL WARMING AND ITS EFFECTS
http://localnepaltoday.com/wp-
content/uploads/2014/05/drought.jpg
What is Climate Change?
Any change in climate overtime, whether due to
natural Variability or as result of human activities is
the Climate Change. (IPCC 2004)
Climate Change refers to a statistically significant
variation in either the mean state of the climate or in
its variability which may be due to natural processes
or external forcing, or to persistent anthropogenic
changes in the composition of the atmosphere or in
land use” (IPCC, 2001).
Climate encompasses the long-run pattern of
numerous meteorological factors (e.g. Temperature,
humidity, atmospheric pressure, wind, rainfall,
sunshine etc.) in a given location or larger region.
(Gutierrez 2010)
The average temperature of the earth’s surface has
risen by 0.74 degree Centigrade since the late 1800s
(IPCC, 2007).
Causes of climate change
22
NATURAL CLIMATE FLUCTUATIONS –
EXAMPLE OF EL NIÑO AND LA NIÑA
URL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFqO3_2dYxA
26
Section 4: Projected Trends and Impacts of Climate Change
HAVE HUMANS CAUSED
SOME OF THE RECENT
CLIMATE CHANGES?
ANSWER: POSSIBLY.
THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL
ON CLIMATE CHANGE (IPCC)
Assesses relevant
Leading body for scientific, technical
Established in 1988
the assessment of and socio-
by UNEP and WMO
climate change economic
information
Thousands of
scientists from all
Does not conduct
over the world
any research itself
contribute to its
work
30
Section 5: Sources of Scientific Data
EVIDENCE FOR CLIMATE CHANGE
1. 20th C was hottest in the past 1000 years
2. Global temp has risen 0.6°C (1.1°F) since 1861
3. 16 warmest years on record since 1980, 10 warmest
since 1990
4. Glaciers and sea ice are melting
5. Sea level has risen 100-200 cm over 20th C
Why Agriculture vulnerable to climate change ?
33
CLIMATE CHANGE EVIDENCE IN NEPAL
• rise in maximum temperature at an annual rate of
0.04 – 0.06º C (MoE, NAPA 2010).High mountains are
warming faster (0.08º C per year) than lower hills
and the plains (0.04º C per year).
• Nepal is responsible for only about 0.025% of total
annual greenhouse gas emissions of the world
(Karki, 2007)
• Over two million Nepalese people depend on
climate sensitive sectors like agriculture and forestry
for their livelihood (Garg et al., 2007).
CLIMATE CHANGE SCENARIO IN NEPAL
IPCC predicts that by 2050, freshwater availability in central, south, east and
south east Asia, particularly in large river basins, is projected to decrease.
Climate change will increase the frequency and intensity of water induced
disasters.
37
IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN NEPAL
Long–term impacts
• Agriculture and food security: 34.7% GDP of Nepal is from
Agriculture (DOA, 2011). Overall crop yield (wheat, maize and
rice) could decrease in Nepal by up to 30% by the end of this
century (IPCC, 2007).
©ccafs.cgiar.org
•Water resources: Projections for Nepal suggest a 20% loss of snow
and glaciated area with 1°C increase in temperature increasing
likelihood glacial lake outburst flooding (GLOF) (IPCC, 2007).
©blog.waterdiplomacy.org
IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON
AGRICULTURE
Direct impacts from temp/precip. changes,
plus:
Increased variability in weather
Extreme conditions
Sea level rise & surge – inundating &
ruining coastal agricultural lands
CO2 fertilization
45
CONT…
Initial National Communication,2004 states that with the increase of temperature beyond 4
degree Celsius, the yield of Terai rice is projected to decrease. The effect of temperature on rice
crops in the hills is little more severe than in the Terai. But in mountain region it is better, but rice
is grown negligibly there.
The yield of wheat is projected to fall down with the rise in temperature in Terai. The effect of
temperature on wheat yield in the hills is less than in Terai. There is insignificant decline of wheat
yield in mountain environment with rise in temperature.
The rise in temperature will affect yield of maize crops in Terai more than wheat and rice crops.
It affects less in the hills than in Terai but increases production of maize in mountain areas.
46
DISEASES INCIDENCE DUE TO CLIMATE CHANGE
Rice - blasts, sheath blight, and brown spots
Wheat- stem rusts such as yellow rust, black rusts
Maize – foliar blight (dollar disease)
Lentil and chick peas- Botrytis Gray Mosaic Virus (BGM)
Lentil- Lentil blight (organisms not known)
Potato- Late blight
Citrus- citrus cancer, greening virus, powdery mildews
• Nepal’s economy is overwhelmingly
dependent on agriculture. Approximately
40% of the country’s GDP came from
agriculture in 2000; down from 52% in 1990
• A heavy reliance on tourism and agriculture
makes Nepal’s economy very sensitive to
climate variability (World Bank, 2002).
• The temperature difference are most
pronounced during winter season and least
after the summer monsoon begins (Shrestha
et al., 2000).
• Glacial retreat not only contributes to the
variability in river and stream flows but also
can be an additional source of risk to
agriculture.
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR IN SOUTH
ASIA
Effects in South Asia will have ripple effect in Nepal. Therefore, it
is necessary to learn about the impacts on this sector in South
Asian countries too.
• Although some crops may benefit from the extra CO2 in the
atmosphere, research suggests this may be offset by damage
from higher temperatures, water stress, more virulent disease
and pest attacks” (Yamin and Depledge 2004,22). 49
Global climatic changes can affect agriculture through their direct and
indirect effects on the crops, soils, livestock and pests.
The in can :
Reduce crop duration.
Increase crop respiration rates.
Alter photosynthate partitioning to economic products.
Affect the survival and distribution of pest populations.
Hasten nutrient mineralization in soils.
Decrease fertilizer-use efficiencies.
Increase evapo-transpiration rate.
Insect-pests will become more abundant through a number of inter-
related processes, including range extensions and phenological changes,
as well as increased rates of population development, growth, migration
and over-wintering.
An increase in atmospheric level will have a fertilization
effect on crops with C3 photosynthetic pathway and thus will promote
their growth and productivity.
IMPACT ON LIVESTOCK
Livestock production is highly sensitive to climate change.
55
HEALTH DETERMINANTS AND HEALTH
OUTCOMES IN SOME SOUTH ASIAN
COUNTRIES
56
IMPACT ON HEALTH
Climate change has both direct and indirect impact on health.
Drought, heat waves, and flash floods have direct impacts on health.
Climate-induced economic dislocation, conflict, crop failure, and associated malnutrition and
hunger, and the spread and aggravated intensity of infectious diseases due to changing
environmental conditions have indirect impacts on health.
The infectious diseases include the vector-borne diseases such as malaria, kala-azar, dengue,
Japanese enchepalities and water related diseases such as diarrhea.
IPCC IV Assessment Report, 2007 reveals that endemic morbidity and mortality due to
diarrheal disease associated with floods and droughts are expected to rise in East, South and
South East Asia due to projected changes in the hydrological cycle.
57
IMPACT ON LIVELIHOOD
By directly eroding the resources that Poor People depend on for their livelihoods, climate change
makes it easier for people to fall into poverty and harder for the poorest to escape from it:
• Human resources. Malnutrition and the incidents of infectious diseases are predicted to rise with
changing weather patterns.
• Social resources. Reduced livelihood security and prolonged or more frequent droughts and
floods will lead to the displacement of communities
• Natural resources. Ecosystems are directly threatened by climate change. Change to the natural
environment undermines the poor who depend on local ecosystems for a variety of goods and
services, and rely on the productivity of their environment to support agriculture. Changes in local
ecosystems may require changes to agricultural systems and practices.
• Financial resources. The repeated failure of crops or loss of infrastructure and homes leads to
increased household costs, decline in income, slower economic development and lower
livelihood security.
58
(Source: Promoting Adaptation to Climate Change in Nepal, Practical Action)
OTHER IMPACTS: FLOOD
• In Nepal, Flood is mainly restricted to Terai region. It has 6000
rives with 4 mega basin ( perennial, fed by snow melt) and 6
smaller basins.
• Rivers exhibit great variation in their dry and wet season flows.
Not only small rivers but also the larger ones exhibit seasonal
variations of more than 100 %. Intense cloudbursts in the
catchments result in devastating flood.
• Floods in Terai occur regularly and causes considerable
damage. In case of sudden release by GLOFs, damage
caused by cascading water and associated debris can be
catastrophic.
Source: www.saarc-sec.org
59
IMPACT: ECONOMIC LOSS
• The paper, titled Assessing the Costs of Climate Change and
Adaptation in South Asia, forecasts that six countries - Bangladesh,
Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, and Sri Lanka - will see an
average economic loss of around 1.8 % of their collective annual
gross domestic product (GDP) by 2050, rising sharply to 8.8 % by 2100
if the world continues on its current fossil fuel-intensive path.
• Mahfuz Ahmed, the ADB's Principal Climate Change Specialist and
co-author of the report, says in a DW interview that if climate
change slows in line with the two degree temperature rise under the
Copenhagen-Cancun agreement, then these countries will only lose
1.3 percent of their economies by 2050 and 2.5 percent by 2100.
(Source: http://www.dw.de/climate-change-to-severely-impact-growth-in-south-
asia/a-17867698)
60
ANNUAL ECONOMIC LOSS: SOUTH
ASIA
61
CLIMATE CHANGE, LAND DEGRADATION AND FOOD SECURITY
United Nations Framework Convention • Nepal signed UNFCCC on 12th June 1992
on Climate Change (UNFCCC) • Ratified Kyoto Protocol on 16th September 2005
65
ADAPTATION INITIATIVES IN NEPAL
• Sustainable Development Agenda (SDAN), 2003
• Climate Change Council 2009
• Climate Change Management Division, 2010, MoEnv
• NAPA, 2010
• Climate change policy 2011
• Climate Resilient Planning Tool, 2011 : NPC
• Local Adaptation Plan of Action (LAPA), November 2011
• Three year Plan 2010 emphasized on climate resilient planning of
infrastructure sector and integrated poverty environment initiatives
66
CLIMATE CHANGE INITIATIVES
• Before COP 15
Nepal organized
a Cabinet
Meeting at
Kalapatthar, near
the base camp of
the Mount Everest,
and issued the
“Kalapatthar
Declaration.”
67
CLIMATE CHANGE INITIATIVES
68
OVERCOMING CLIMATE CHANGE
ADAPTATION
MITIGATION
“avoids the unmanageable…”
• Energy efficient appliances and Increasing the height of the dykes can protect
from flooding
vehicles
Introduction of New variety of disease resistant
and high productive crops
• Planting trees
Introducing cash crops like banana in rice field
• Reduction of green house gases where precipitation has significantly reduced to
support rice plants
69
ADAPTATION REQUIRED IN NEPAL
Agriculture is the most important contributor in the economy,
therefore, adaptation for this sector should be rightly
promulgated.
• Smart Agriculture system by Rain Water harvesting and use of
right nutrients. Drought and flood proofing measures,
promoting crop diversification, Integrated watershed
management program, etc. should be used.
• Proper management of water resources system, promotion of
indigenous and sustainable technologies, etc.
70
ADAPTATION INITIATIVES
The government of Nepal prepared the NAPA in 2010 to address its urgent and immediate adaptation
needs through a consultative and country-driven process.
NAPA is a strategic tool to access climatic vulnerability, and symmetrically respond to climate change
adaptation issues by developing appropriate adaptation measures.
Out of about 250 adaptation options proposed by the Thematic Working Groups (TWG), nine
integrated projects have been identified as the urgent and immediate national adaptation priority.
The government of Nepal has approved the National Framework on Local Adaptation Plans for Action
(LAPA Framework) in 2011 that helps to integrate climate adaptation and resilience aspects in local and
national plans.
71
CONT…
The government of Nepal has approved the National Framework on Local Adaptation Plans for
Action (LAPA Framework) in 2011 that helps to integrate climate adaptation and resilience aspects in
local and national plans.
Agriculture, forestry, health, water and sanitation, watersheds and micro-finance have been
identified as the main entry points. But it states that education, local infrastructure, disasters and other
environment-related areas may also be taken as entry points.
Since 2013, the government is implementing 70 Local Adaptation Plan for Actions in 69 village
development committees and one municipality of 14 districts in the Mid and Far Western regions of
Nepal with support from Nepal Climate Support Programme: Building Climate Resilience in Nepal
Project funded by UNDP/DFID/EU
72
LAPA PROCESS
The LAPA Framework consists of the following 7 steps for formulation and
implementation. They are:
STEP 7:
ASSESSING STEP 3:
PROGRESS PRIORITISATION
OF ADAPTATION
{Carried out in OPTIONS
all steps}
STEP 6:
STEP 4:
IMPLEMENTING
ADAPTATION PLAN
ADAPTATION
DEVELOPMENT
PLAN
STEP 5:
INTEGRATING THE
ADAPTATION
PLAN
73
ADAPTATION STRATEGIES TO CLIMATE CHANGE
Developing cultivars tolerant to heat and salinity stress.
Resistant cultivars to flood and drought.
Modifying crop management practices.
Improving water management.
Adopting new farm techniques such as Resource
Conserving Technologies (RCTs).
Crop diversification.
Improving pest management.
Better weather forecasting.
Crop insurance and harnessing the indigenous technical
knowledge of farmers.
Developing Climate-ready Crops.
Diversification of crop and livestock varieties.
MITIGATING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN NEPAL
What initiatives could be undertaken to mitigate these impacts?
Mitigating the consequences of climate change due to anthropogenic emission
of Co2 and CH4 in the atmosphere in order to limit the temperature rise up to 2°C
is the major concern of whole world so as our country Nepal. The need to act has
never been more urgent. We need to
•Reduce emission level and individual carbon footprint (at the local level)
•Promote sustainable transport system and lower the use of fossil fuels (at national level)
Act •Abide by the Global rules and regulations as initiated in Climate Change forums (at international level)
Together
•Use of Smart Technology in Agriculture, Innovative approach to adapt to consequences of climate change
•Use of Carbon free technology for further industrial development and restructuring of industries with larger emission by providing
subsidies to promote low carbon technology
Act •Promotion of Renewable Energies.
Differently
76
emission from
rice cultivation could be
alteration in water
management, particularly
promoting mid-season
aeration by short-term
drainage; improving
organic matter
management use of rice
cultivars with few
unproductive tillers, high
root oxidative activity and
high harvest index.
Most efficient management practice to reduce
is site-specific, efficient nutrient management
nitrification inhibitors such as nitrapyrin and dicyandiamide
(DCD).
• CBM
• Diversity of adaptation / innovation cases of Nepal :
Reduction in tillage and mulching of garlic to cope
with less rain
Additional millet crop in winter
Hanging nurseries on platforms to protect seedlings
against floods
Own crossbreeding to develop maize varieties that
withstand lodging
• Examples of pastoralist adaptation to CC: Ethiopia
Developing own cut-and-carry feeding system
Creating private and community waterpoints
Increasing market interaction (credit, vehicle use)
Changing herd composition
Settling on islands in dryland lakes
Diversifying livelihood sources by men & women
Empowering traditional institutions
Ethiopian pastoralists’ cut-and-carry innovation
COMBINING TECHNICAL AND SOCIO-ORGANISATIONAL INNOVATION
(COLLECTIVE ACTION WITHIN COMMUNITY)
• Some examples from other
countries
Niger: Donkeys as dowry
for young women to cover
long distances to water
points
India: Flood protection by
planting bamboo
Jamaica: Protecting
banana plants from high
winds
Indonesia: Fencing for flood
protection; early-maturing
beans; moving houses
3/31/2016 90
REDUCE YOUR GO
CARBON GREEN!!!!!!!
FOOT PRINT