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Category: Action for clean air

25 November 2024
Nepal’s Department of Environment and ICIMOD team up for clean air in the country  

As another winter sets in, air quality has again become a worrying issue for Nepal, but a recent agreement between the Department of Environment and the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development holds the promise of better air for the country.

21 November 2024
From one of the most densely populated and polluted airsheds on Earth, calls for an ‘air pollution revolution’  

Hundreds of millions of people across the Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP) and Himalayan Foothills (HFH) are still breathing hazardous air ....

18 September 2024
China reflects on a stunning reversal on air pollution

In 2013, Beijing had some of the worst air quality in the world: a decade on emissions have plummeted. Five years after he was last in China to work on air quality management, Bertrand Bessagnet, who coordinates ICIMOD’s work on air quality, returns to a city transformed, to find out how China got it so right, and what next.

12 September 2024
Harmonising actions for cleaner air across borders – sharing solutions for a shared problem

Air respects no borders, nor does the pollution it carries. When crop residues are burned […]

6 September 2024
Regional science-policy dialogue on air quality: Thimpu outcome text stresses need for collective action and funding

The Thimphu Outcome summarizes the key discussions and recommendations from the Second Regional Science Policy Dialogue on Air Quality Management in the Indo-Gangetic Plain and Himalayan Foothills (IGP-HF) held on June 26-27, 2024, co-organized by ICIMOD and the World Bank, in partnership with the Royal Government of Bhutan.

22 April 2024
As Nepal’s air quality plummets, experts urge a focus on forest fires

With twice the number of forest fires recorded in the first two weeks of April versus the March total, air quality has plummeted and nature loss is rising. Data tools, training, early-warning, and the revival of traditional forest management practices offer a way to reduce the frequency and severity of forest fires.

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