The registrar of Kathmandu University Dr. Achyut Wagle said. Wagle said this on Friday at the Nepal-India Economic Conference being held in New Delhi, the capital of India.
Nepal Contemporary Studies Center under Kathmandu University and India's In the conference jointly organized by the Foundation for Economic Growth and Welfare (Agro Foundation), Wagle said that the international laws and structures made in relation to carbon trade are not in the interest of non-carbon producing countries like Nepal. "Currently, the international laws and regulations of carbon trade are such that countries with developed and industrial structures continue to pollute the nations and only serve their interests of economic growth," he said. A country like this should not fall into the trap of trade.'' In the
conference, Wagle came to identify the possibilities of educational and regional cooperation between Nepal and India He clarified that the conference was organized. Explaining this conference as an example of 'Track to Diplomacy', he expressed the view that studies and data from the academic field can be used to contribute to policy cooperation. Pointing out the imbalance of foreign trade between Nepal and India, he presented the fact that the remittances imported by India from Nepal are 40 percent more than the remittances imported by Nepal from India.
Wagle pointed out the need for cooperation between the two countries in solving the common problems of climate change. He said that the melting of mountains is not only a problem of Nepal but also of India and the entire world. "Cooperation has become indispensable for the concepts of green and sustainable development," he said, "the problem of youth migration should be taken seriously."
