Abstract

This article explores plastic and other non-compostable waste pollution in the Limi Valley, in Nepal’s impoverished Humla district along the northern-western Nepal border. The Himalaya currently undergoes rapid environmental transformation. Environmental degradation, disappearing glaciers and climate change-related floods are increasingly shaping its landscape. At the same time, motorable roads and telephone connections as well as new modes of governance are arriving to its remotest areas linking Limi to the expanding Chinese market (and to a lesser extent the Nepali and Indian ones) with the consequence that an increasing amount of plastic packaging, wrappings, containers and single-use plastic items (as well as non-degradable electronic items) are reaching these villages. This article argues that these new challenges can be best understood and addressed as part of cosmopolitical ecologies of the Himalaya. They require a significant number of decisions at multiple levels, involving different forms of knowledge and moral frameworks dealing with issues of causality, responsibility, prioritization and action. Arising out of an international project and a ‘stakeholders’ workshop as a ‘collaborative event’, this article offers an opportunity to reflect on the predicament of Himalayan people and contribute to the debate on non-compostable waste pollution as linked to a wide range of environmental challenges including those related to climate change. These issues intersect and compound requiring a wide spectrum of responses at different levels bringing together socio-economic, political and cosmological dimensions. Mediation by a wide range of operators, potentially understood as ‘cultural brokers’, turns out to be decisive in the design and implementation of any strategy.

Highlights

  • In October 2018 at Halji village in the Limi valley a team of researchers including one of the authors of this article witnessed the arrival of the first lorries on the new dirt road that connected this village in Limi, North Western Nepal, to China.1 People were thrilled with their boxes of drinks, packaged noodles, items of furniture and all kinds of utensils

  • This article explored the predicaments of Himalayan people when dealing with new non-compostable waste as one of many pressing environmental challenges

  • Cultural mediation as deployed by a wide range of actors emerged as crucial in the conceptualisation and implementation of any strategy. This became evident at the workshop ‘Environmental management in a changing climate – Communicating local perspectives from the Kailash Sacred Landscape’ where members of the Limi community expressed their concern about the arrival of non-compostable waste as one of the emerging urgent environmental threats

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Summary

Introduction

In October 2018 at Halji village in the Limi valley a team of researchers including one of the authors of this article witnessed the arrival of the first lorries on the new dirt road that connected this village in Limi, North Western Nepal, to China.1 People were thrilled with their boxes of drinks, packaged noodles, items of furniture and all kinds of utensils. These new environmental challenges have been requiring an increasing number of decisions at multiple levels, involving different forms of knowledge and moral frameworks dealing with issues of causality, responsibility, prioritization and action.

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