Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (Mar 2019)

Invited perspectives: Mountain roads in Nepal at a new crossroads

  • K. Sudmeier-Rieux,
  • B. G. McAdoo,
  • S. Devkota,
  • P. C. L. Rajbhandari,
  • J. Howell,
  • S. Sharma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-19-655-2019
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19
pp. 655 – 660

Abstract

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In Nepal and many developing countries around the world, roads are vehicles for development for communities in rural areas. By reducing travel time on foot, opportunities are opened for quicker transportation of goods and better access to employment, education, health care and markets. Roads also fuel migration and numerous social changes, both positive and negative. Poorly constructed roads in mountainous areas of Nepal have increased erosion and landslide risk as they often cut through fragile geology, destabilizing slopes and altering local hydrological conditions, with costs to lives and livelihoods. The convergence of the newly constituted decentralized Nepali government with China's Belt and Road Initiative is likely to bring more roads to rural communities. The new provincial government administrations now have the opportunity to develop policies and practices, which can realign the current trend of poorly engineered, inefficient and hazardous road construction toward a more sustainable trajectory. This commentary provides an overview of some of the obstacles along the way for a more sustainable road network in Nepal and illustrates how good governance, development and landslide risk are intertwined. The opinion presented in this brief commentary lends little hope that Nepal's current pathway of unsustainable road construction will provide the country with the much-needed sustainable road network, unless checks and balances are put in place to curb noncompliance with existing laws and policies.