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Improving flood resilience in India and Nepal

The Koshi River system has its sources in the territory of Tibet and flows through an old channel near the border with Nepal and the Indian city of Bihar. Changes in its course, construction of dams and heavy rainfall have led to devastating flood disasters in the past. The local population in the northern Indian state of Bihar have seen their livelihoods threatened by the devastating effects of frequent flooding.

On the Nepalese side, vulnerable communities affected in 2008 by the heaviest floods in record have become further impoverished by rapidly encroaching deserts into farmlands that were once fertile.

Income opportunities for the local population have also lessened. The areas bordering the River Koshi are particularly exposed to the risk of flooding. Insufficient water and sanitation supply on both sides of the border, especially during the flood periods, represents a high risk for the health of the people in this communities.

Situation

In traning the vulnerable populations on both sides of the border on altenative ways to secure their livelihoods and providing them with access to water, sanitation, Malteser International aims to reduce their exposure to flooding.

To help them better secure their livelihoods in the event of future disasters, plans for disaster risk reduction are collectively developed with the villagers and problems facing people on both sides of the river are also jointly addressed, meaning effective solutions for everyone involved are reached. While the project supports 3,000 affected Nepalese households in Sunsari, 5,000 households in the Saharsa, a district in the Indian state of Bihar, benefit from our work.

With our multi-sectoral approach comprising activities in livelihood and income generation, WASH and disaster risk reduction, it is necessary that we work in close cooperation with partner organisations on both sides of the border to strenghten the resilience of vulnerable communities in the event of future flooding, thereby contributing to poverty reduction in these communities. Additionally, our cross-border approach focuses on developing similar solutions for the culturally intertwined societies in our project regions in India and Nepal. The project target groups include 5 village development committees in Nepal composed of 3,000 households and 3 Gram Panchayats encompassing 5,000 households in India.

The overall goal of the project is to strengthen the resilience of 3000 commuities and 5,000 households affected by flooding in the Sunsari and Saharsa districts of Nepal and India respectively. This goal will be reached through harmonising these components:

  • Improving income opportunities for families
  • Improving hygiene conditions as well as access to safe water and adequate sanitary facilities
  • Developing community-based plans for disaster risk reduction and management
  • Establishing a plattform for transnational information and knowledge transfer
  • Training of small scale farmers on good and alternative farming practices
  • Construction of irigation systems and agricultural warehouses
  • Preparatory courses for young people
  • Professional certificate courses for members of the community in masonry, painting, repair of mobile phones, and processing of agricultural products
  • Construction of flood-proof drinking water wells
  • Construction of flood-proof latrines and training of community members in the safe use and maintenance of latrines
  • Hygiene education in communities and schools and training on menstrual hygiene for young girls
  • Supporting village committees in developing or updating their plans for disaster preparedness and managemen
  • Improvement of local early warning systems
  • Campaigns and trainings on disaster preparedness in schools and communities
  • Sailing lessons and distribution of boats to women
  • Regular cross-border exchanges of community representatives and project organizations, which allow a rapid transfer of knowledge between the project regions

Country info

India

Capital: New Delhi 
Area: 3,288,000 km²
Population: approx. 1.25 Billion

Nepal

Capital: Kathmandu
Area: 147,181 km²
Population: approx. 28.5 Million

 

Project data

Project duration: September 2016 till August 2019
Financing: German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), private donations
Partner: RSDC (Nepal), SSK (India)

Last updated: May 2017

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