To reduce these shocks and stresses from climatic variability and hazards, particularly for the women of the Panchase region, the Mountain Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) Programme, led by the Government of Nepal, through the Department of Forests, and UNDP, is supporting the Panchase Women’s Network to scale up its Amriso plantation.
Cultivation of Amriso (Thysanolaena maxima) – an indigenous plant commonly known as broom grass - is a long-standing tradition among poor rural communities in the Panchase region of Nepal. In the past, households only cultivated enough for personal use. Amriso, however, is a plant with multiple benefits and significant and untapped commercial potential. It has the ability to quickly regenerate even in degraded lands, requires little maintenance, outcompetes invasive species. Its strong web-like rooting system also helps to reduce top- and sub-soil loss, particularly important with increasingly frequent intense rainfall events.
Additionally, Amriso’s inflorescence (panicles) can be used to make sweeping brooms, while the leaves of the plant can be used as livestock fodder and stems used as fuelwood. As such, broom grass provides a stable and promising livelihood opportunity, with high demand from local markets, regional centres, and even internationally (particularly India). Overall, these characteristics make Amriso ideal for ecosystem-based adaptation, as it can improve slope stability and rehabilitated degraded lands, while simultaneously providing sustainable livelihoods.
As part of this initiative, the women’s network was able to lease 0.25 hectares of marginal land, which was barren and degraded at the time, and prone to soil erosion given its steepness. Now the land is ecologically improved and economically productive, a marked improvement over the previous state of affairs.