How One Of The Smallest Countries Became A Eco Leader

Bhutan may be small, but it is scaling great heights in sustainability.

From its age-old traditions advancing into the modern era alongside magical mountains and monasteries, Bhutan is nothing short of enchanting. With a population of around 750,000 people, it is making milestones with the fight against climate change. Nestled between India and China, it can easily be forgotten, but in recent years, the world has watched as Bhutan’s success in sustainability has triumphed – with many crowning it the greenest country on the planet.

 

Rooted in tradition, Bhutan – the native name of Druk yul translates as ‘Land of the Thunder Dragon’ – has been careful when curbing climate change not to expose its people to unwanted modern technology. In 2014, the government introduced electric cars to its citizens – a major feat considering a television ban was only lifted in 1999. In an effort to encourage people to buy them, they suspended import taxes (and heavily subsidised LED lights).

For a small country, Bhutan has set and achieved big goals. Back in 2009, it became the first ever country to commit to being carbon neutral. Now, it’s the only carbon negative country in the world, otherwise known as a ‘carbon sink’. Thanks to its extensive forestry, it absorbs three times more C02 than the entire country emits. As it stands, 72 percent of the land is currently forested – with a law outlining it can be no less than 60 percent at any one given time. It has even banned export logging.

Due to its success, national parks, wildlife sanctuaries and nature reserves cover more than half of the country. To keep this going, it is started Green Bhutan, a programme that enables the planting of trees, plants and flowers in towns, cities and countryside.

 

Only last year, the country welcomed its first wind turbines. Located in the village of Rubesa, the two turbines are expected to generate a combined 600 kilowatts, which should provide ample electricity to 300 homes. If a success, 24 more wind farms will make their way to other towns. As demand increases across Bhutan for electricity, it is committed to meet it with new renewable energy sources.

A huge amount of farming taking place on government land, so they provide rural farmers with free electricity (farmers, in general, make up 70 percent of the population) as a measure to prevent them from using firewood to cook.

Last year, there was a plan to install solar panels that would produce around one megawatt of electricity, and supply 13,500 solar cook stoves and 2800 home biogas digesters in 20 districts. Mini hydropower plants, with the potential to generate 33,000 megawatts of electricity, were also in consideration.

 

Hydropower is a crucial component to Bhutanese life, providing 100 percent of electricity to its urban areas and 94 percent in rural sectors. Every year, the country sells 70 percent of the power it generates to its neighbour, India. If Bhutan achieves the goals set within its hydroelectric sector, it may well export more clean power to high-emitting economic giants, China and India.

Tshering Tobgay, Bhutan’s prime minister, said last year during a TED talk: “Every country is different. But every country is also hungry for models that let them overcome the limits of traditional models of conservation. There is no other Bhutan on Earth… but anytime you do something that works on a scale that matters, people are hungry to learn from it.”

The Bhutanese government are aiming for zero net greenhouse gas emissions, zero waste by 2030 and the growth of only 100 percent organic food by 2020.

For a country that only opened itself up to the rest of the world in the 1970s, it’s certainly curbing climate change without much help from other nations. With an abundance of fresh air, rolling countryside and free flowing rivers, it is considered to be one of the greenest and happiest places on Earth, and no wonder why.

Source: Huff Post

BHUTAN “MOST CARBON NEGATIVE” COUNTRY IN THE WORLD

This Country Isn’t Just Carbon Neutral… It’s Carbon Negative

Bhutan is often overlooked by the international community. The small nation lies deep within the Himalayas between China and India, two of the most populated countries in the world.

But the country of about 750,000 people has set some impressive environmental benchmarks. As we’ve written about in the past, Bhutan is not merely carbon neutral, it’s also a carbon sink—making it one of the few countries in the world to have negative carbon emissions.

 

The Punakha Dzong (the Palace of Great Happiness). It’s located at the confluence of Mo Chhu and Pho Chhu (Mother and Father rivers) in Bhutan. 

 

This means the country’s carbon sinks, such as its forests, absorb more carbon dioxide each year than its sources of pollution, such as factories, emit.

“According to recent figures, the country emits around 1.5 million tonnes of carbon annually, while its forests absorb over 6 million tonnes,” Proudly Carbon Neutral said.

To boot, Bhutan is aiming for zero net greenhouse gas emissions, zero-waste by 2030 and to grow 100 percent organic food by 2020. The Himalayan nation is currently 72 percent forested and the constitution requires that no less than 60 percent of it remains forested. It has even banned export logging.

Trees hold special value in Buddhism, the nation’s dominant religion. Last June, a team of 100 volunteers set a world record for planting 49,672 trees in just one hour. And earlier this month, to celebrate the birth of the first child of King Khesar and Queen Jetson, all 82,000 households in Bhutan planted a tree, while volunteers planted another 26,000 in various districts around the country, for a total of 108,000 trees.

Bhutan also refuses to judge its success on Gross Domestic Product, instead using an index that measures Gross National Happiness.

Many have credited its Gross National Happiness index as part of the reason for the country’s strong commitment to environmental stewardship. Rather than focusing solely on economic indicators, the index measures prosperity by giving equal importance to non-economic aspects of well being.

“Bhutan’s Gross National Happiness index gives the natural world a central place in the making of public policy, and environmental protection is a core guiding principle in Bhutan’s constitution,” the Santa Cruz Sentinel reported.

 Taktsang Palphug Monastery (also known as Tiger's Nest), is a prominent Himalayan Buddhist sacred site and temple complex. Many credit the Bhutanese people's devotion to Buddhist principles for the country's impressive environmental stewardship. Photo credit: Aymaan Ahmed / Flickr
Taktsang Palphug Monastery (also known as Tiger’s Nest), is a prominent Buddhist temple in Bhutan. Many credit the Bhutanese people’s devotion to Buddhist principles for the country’s impressive environmental stewardship.

 

The country would also like to increase its share of renewables, while decreasing its reliance on hydropower and electricity imports in the winter. So, it’s currently exploring wind, biogas and solar.

And the Bhutanese government has formed a partnership with Nissan to provide hundreds of electric cars to the country—with the promise of thousands soon after. Bhutan’s Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay wants to eventually convert all of the country’s vehicles to electric power.

The nation is not without its problems of course, as Tobgay readily admitted in a TED Talk he gave last month. But the country is no doubt unique in a world that has too often valued economic growth above all else, often at the expense of the environment.

For more on how Bhutan emerged as an environmental leader, watch Tobgay share his country’s mission to put happiness before economic growth and set a world standard for environmental preservation in his  TED TALK.