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How hazards, data, and governance will shape the next age of preparedness and response in the HKH

The new climate reality of the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) is visible across three paradigms: thresholds being crossed as climate change accelerates cascading risks; pronounced inequalities in the adaptive and response capacities of communities across the region; and the growing need for data-driven, impact-based decisions that will determine the success of response measures.
Published: 24 Mar, 2026
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⏲ 4 minutes Read

The new climate reality of the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) is visible across three paradigms: thresholds being crossed as climate change accelerates cascading risks; pronounced inequalities in the adaptive and response capacities of communities across the region; and the growing need for data-driven, impact-based decisions that will determine the success of response measures.

When the World Meteorological Organization released its 2025 report, the world had just experienced its 11th warmest year on record. Global surface temperatures were recorded at 1.44°C above pre-industrial levels, indicating that warming thresholds had effectively been breached and would continue shaping the years ahead.

The World Economic Forum’s 2026 report echoed this concern, identifying extreme weather events, biodiversity and ecosystem collapse, and critical Earth system changes as defining risks of the coming decade.

On the occasion of this year’s World Glacier Day, World Water Day, and World Meteorological Day, we are given an opportunity to reflect on what these changes mean for a quarter of humanity. The Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) in 2026 reflects what these global assessments have long predicted. The region is undergoing rapid changes that will shape how we understand the issues, test and institutionalise solutions, and determine how effectively communities can respond and build back better.

At the core of this challenge lie three parameters: we must continue to monitor cryospheric and river basin changes, including glacier melt, permafrost thaw, and shifting water availability; we must continue to collect data while reflecting the realities of diverse and vulnerable communities; and our governance must remain central to building resilience.

The tipping point begins at the headwaters, in the glaciated regions of our river basins. With over 63,700 glaciers covering nearly 55,782 square kilometres and storing approximately 5,735 cubic kilometres of ice, the HKH holds one of the world’s largest freshwater reserves. This reserve, however, is shrinking rapidly.

ICIMOD’s analyses have consistently highlighted these changes, including through the HI-WISE research initiative, annual snow updates, and technical assessments of upstream disasters such as the Melamchi and Thame floods in Nepal. However, the issue is not confined to a single dimension – it is unfolding across the region, where snow droughts, glacial mass loss, and permafrost degradation are sending clear downstream signals.

These changes require sustained monitoring and robust data collection to fully understand the scale of risks communities face. These risks affect nearly two billion people who depend on the HKH river basins. The headwaters of these systems are critical for irrigation, hydropower, cities, and ecosystems downstream.

Yet the reality remains far from ideal. Only a fraction of glaciers is being monitored, leaving large parts of the Himalaya as blind spots. Without improved monitoring coverage, accelerated changes in water flows and cryospheric risks may go undetected until they manifest as downstream disasters.

These disasters will further deepen existing inequalities – exacerbating poverty, triggering displacement, and disproportionately burdening women and marginalised groups. Changing hazard profiles will amplify these disparities.

ICIMOD’s work across Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan shows that meteorological data has been crucial in enabling communities to respond early to hazards. But a critical question remains: what is lost when this data is not translated and tailored to the needs of diverse stakeholders?

Greater granularity can ensure that the needs of the most vulnerable are heard and addressed. It also requires improving how data is generated and shared, while accounting for barriers such as language, access, inclusion, and exposure.

While data informs planning, governance is the other essential pillar for a cohesive response. Experience shows that while top-down mandates exist, local realities are ultimately shaped by community priorities.

Inclusive governance will determine how women and other groups respond and make decisions to safeguard their interests. In Nepal, for example, local planning frameworks mandate equitable representation, yet implementation remains challenging. Working with local line agencies, ICIMOD has sought to simplify and institutionalise gender, equity, and social inclusion within local adaptation planning processes.

Finally, do we have the means to support these efforts? As hazards intensify, adaptation will require innovative climate solutions. Yet the financing gap continues to widen. UNEP’s 2025 Adaptation Gap Report estimates that developing countries will need over USD (United States dollar) 300 billion annually by 2035 to meet adaptation needs.

The HKH of 2026 must therefore confront adaptation as a systems challenge. Data must inform preparedness, inclusion must guide planning, and, critically, the region can no longer afford to address these issues in silos.

Author(s)

Director General, ICIMOD

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