ABSTRACT

The international literature often portrays Bhutan as an environmental role model, but the country also faces significant challenges related to climate change. The formation of supra-glacial lakes due to the accelerated retreat of glaciers with increasing temperatures creates severe problems for livelihoods and policymakers. Potential disasters already give rise to threats to lives and development. Reliance on climate-sensitive sectors such as agriculture, hydropower, and forestry raises questions about resilience, adaptation, and social and coherent policy responses. Understanding the social and political dimensions of the impacts of glacial retreat on Bhutan’s changing water regime, especially the river basins and the groundwater, requires a careful reading and close study of the issues involved. This contribution critically examines the implications of how the Bhutanese government has coped with the multi-dimensional impact of climate change, and it traces the success of national adaption plans, the National Environment Strategy, the “The Middle Path,” and relevant policies. The chapter asks whether these measures are enough to cope with the challenges involved. Incomplete implementation and donor dependency may challenge the country’s ability to sustainably manage forests and environment, agriculture, and the reliance on hydropower as a strategic policy to create wealth for redistribution. Moving toward higher temperatures exposes that local and poor communities will be the first to experience the impact of climate change. Thus, the chapter explores the problems involved in facing governance, implementation, and action for mitigating the impacts of climate change.