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Devastated by the earthquake in 2015, Sikhreghyangh village in Nepal’s central Kavre district is slowly regaining shape.
The village still looks like a battleground; piles of mud and stones from collapsed buildings bring back memories of the brutality of the earthquake that killed more than 9,000 people. While a few families are busy building new houses, many are waiting for the government’s support.
Dominated by the Tamang, an indigenous group of Nepal, the village has not received much attention from the government, even though it is less than 50 kilometres from the capital, Kathmandu.
Despite the troubles, Rupa Tamang has made every effort to make her family’s life easier. On the left of the entrance to her small hut, a wooden tripod holds a bamboo dustbin off the ground to collect plastic. The 500-litre water tank collects rainwater from a six-metre long pipe tied to the roof.
Sikhreghyangh is one of three villages planned as an eco-development village, supported by several NGOs, such as the Centre for Renewable Technology Nepal (CRT-N). “We don’t give much financial support but provide them with technical support to use any technology, and provide seed money to buy those facilities,” said Subas Lamichhane, a field coordinator at CRT-N.
“The rest is done by the communities themselves.”
Rupa has also installed a solar panel to power light bulbs, and uses an improved cook stove which emits negligible smoke and has helped her cook food more easily. “After the earthquake, life became hell, but we are returning to normalcy and these small technologies have brought in rays of hope,” she says. “I spend less time collecting firewood as the new improved cookstove consumes less firewood. It saves time which I can spend with my three-year-old son.”
Using a single improved cook stove can reduce 60 to 90 percent of indoor air pollution and 2.5 tonne of greenhouse gases per stove per year, according to Nepal’s Alternative Energy Promotion Centre.
“These kind of small interventions help communities ease their lives. Indirectly, this also helps mitigate global problems like climate change,” says Lamichhane, who coordinates local activities in the district under CRT-N. “We don’t talk much about climate change at a grassroots level, but we help them understand the benefits of such green technologies.”
Preeti Man Tamang, 50, has limited land and had no idea about greenhouses, which, with a small investment of just Rs 2,000 (US $20), could eventually bring him more money.
Patali Tamang, 67, smiles from the window of his newly-built house. It’s one of a few houses that have been built so far, out of around 40 in the village. Next door, her neighbour, Bir Bahadur Tamang, is busy caring for the vegetables in the backyard of his house.
This year, the production of tomatoes drastically reduced. “I try to apply as little pesticides as possible. We would like to be an organic village but controlling pests was very hard this year,” says Bir. “It’s the major challenge.”
(The original article was published in The Third Pole)
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