Zürcher Nachrichten - Bhutan's Tobgay, environmental advocate facing economic headwinds

EUR -
AED 4.164447
AFN 72.004008
ALL 94.192054
AMD 417.364792
ANG 2.030235
AOA 1040.391472
ARS 1677.41211
AUD 1.64532
AWG 2.042535
AZN 1.930749
BAM 1.955652
BBD 2.284927
BDT 139.536383
BGN 1.917381
BHD 0.427768
BIF 3380.74462
BMD 1.133954
BND 1.471889
BOB 7.839339
BRL 5.899396
BSD 1.134514
BTN 107.038914
BWP 15.480694
BYN 3.228585
BYR 22225.505097
BZD 2.281708
CAD 1.614791
CDF 2572.941842
CHF 0.922228
CLF 0.026522
CLP 1043.827275
CNY 7.700119
CNH 7.71754
COP 3900.247298
CRC 516.360994
CUC 1.133954
CUP 30.04979
CVE 110.255699
CZK 24.253412
DJF 202.022958
DKK 7.474296
DOP 66.85495
DZD 151.455507
EGP 56.136297
ERN 17.009315
ETB 178.928606
FJD 2.544817
FKP 0.861749
GBP 0.861788
GEL 2.993284
GGP 0.861749
GHS 12.759924
GIP 0.861749
GMD 82.212457
GNF 9941.249043
GTQ 8.655346
GYD 237.369976
HKD 8.890871
HNL 30.356707
HRK 7.536148
HTG 148.278799
HUF 355.563292
IDR 20390.766972
ILS 3.374079
IMP 0.861749
INR 107.019152
IQD 1486.187734
IRR 1559243.917571
ISK 144.012695
JEP 0.861749
JMD 178.806493
JOD 0.803924
JPY 183.550352
KES 146.948813
KGS 99.164194
KHR 4568.6146
KMF 492.135677
KPW 1020.559304
KRW 1750.190057
KWD 0.351197
KYD 0.94542
KZT 549.838465
LAK 25213.873004
LBP 101596.829476
LKR 382.341118
LRD 206.472582
LSL 18.787581
LTL 3.348272
LVL 0.685917
LYD 7.28545
MAD 10.680393
MDL 20.137301
MGA 4836.591994
MKD 61.64877
MMK 2380.776672
MNT 4063.891816
MOP 9.161727
MRU 45.062596
MUR 54.645287
MVR 17.519607
MWK 1967.234048
MXN 20.004786
MYR 4.668829
MZN 72.470882
NAD 18.787581
NGN 1564.641505
NIO 41.745926
NOK 11.216854
NPR 171.258288
NZD 2.011646
OMR 0.436007
PAB 1.134504
PEN 3.882321
PGK 4.978624
PHP 69.42412
PKR 315.72835
PLN 4.287396
PYG 6932.415194
QAR 4.135351
RON 5.232175
RSD 117.384725
RUB 85.611258
RWF 1667.159361
SAR 4.259484
SBD 9.130547
SCR 15.940623
SDG 680.372671
SEK 11.070479
SGD 1.471646
SHP 0.846611
SLE 28.120022
SLL 23778.459723
SOS 648.345307
SRD 42.478358
STD 23470.565428
STN 24.498149
SVC 9.92725
SYP 125.338352
SZL 18.785167
THB 37.877702
TJS 10.488215
TMT 3.96884
TND 3.368546
TOP 2.73029
TRY 52.745603
TTD 7.705418
TWD 36.116109
TZS 2969.757262
UAH 51.013146
UGX 4197.682909
USD 1.133954
UYU 45.516562
UZS 13627.97055
VES 703.905542
VND 29845.678273
VUV 135.871245
WST 3.149871
XAF 655.901669
XAG 0.019811
XAU 0.000285
XCD 3.064569
XCG 2.0446
XDR 0.814184
XOF 655.907453
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.589849
ZAR 18.783807
ZMK 10206.954842
ZMW 20.477273
ZWL 365.132835
  • CMSD

    -0.1200

    21.9

    -0.55%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61.3

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0550

    22.12

    +0.25%

  • BCC

    1.5300

    79.19

    +1.93%

  • GSK

    1.2100

    52.3

    +2.31%

  • BCE

    -0.2250

    22.975

    -0.98%

  • NGG

    0.8750

    83.705

    +1.05%

  • BTI

    0.6750

    62.065

    +1.09%

  • RYCEF

    0.7500

    19

    +3.95%

  • RELX

    0.1700

    31.32

    +0.54%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    13.8

    -0.07%

  • RIO

    1.0900

    95.12

    +1.15%

  • AZN

    3.0500

    186.07

    +1.64%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.62

    +0.4%

  • BP

    0.0400

    37.9

    +0.11%

Bhutan's Tobgay, environmental advocate facing economic headwinds
Bhutan's Tobgay, environmental advocate facing economic headwinds / Photo: TIMOTHY A. CLARY - AFP

Bhutan's Tobgay, environmental advocate facing economic headwinds

The man set to become Bhutan's new prime minister is a passionate environmental advocate and sportsman, a veteran politician in a mountain kingdom where parliamentary democracy is still young.

Text size:

Tshering Tobgay, who is expected to become premier for a second time after his party won nearly two-thirds of seats in elections on Tuesday, served as prime minister from 2013 to 2018.

The 58-year-old former civil servant, who holds degrees from the University of Pittsburgh and Harvard, was leader of the opposition in Bhutan's first parliament when it was established in 2008.

Head of the liberal People's Democratic Party (PDP), Tobgay fielded a heavyweight team that included several former ministers and lawmakers to win 30 of 47 seats in Tuesday's election, Bhutanese media reported.

Usually dressed in the Himalayan nation's traditional colourful "gho" clothes, a striped knee-length robe, he is an ardent backer of the country's constitutionally enshrined policy of "Gross National Happiness".

The policy, launched by the previous king in the 1970s, is based on four pillars: governance, socio-economic development, preserving culture and protecting the environment.

In a TED talk Tobgay called the policy a "pioneering vision that aims to improve the happiness and well-being" of citizens.

He argued that while economic growth is important, it "must not come from undermining our unique culture or our pristine environment".

But he also acknowledged it is a policy that is "easier said than done, especially when you are one of the smallest economies in the world".

- 'Strengthen our economy' -

For Bhutan, a country of about 800,000 people sandwiched between the world's two most populous nations India and China, the challenges are many.

They include rural poverty, high youth unemployment and brain drain abroad.

"We must strengthen our economy not only to retain our valuable human resources at home but also entice those who have migrated overseas to return and actively participate in nation-building," Tobgay pledged in his election manifesto.

He has promised to boost ties with India, including by developing rail links with his country's giant southern neighbour.

More than two-thirds of landlocked Bhutan is covered in forest, and the country boasts of being among a handful of carbon-negative countries, a source of pride for Tobgay.

An advocate of conservation policies and efforts to protect biodiversity, Tobgay has warned of the dangers caused by fast-melting Himalayan glaciers as global temperatures rise.

He is also clear-eyed about the problems his nation faces.

"Bhutan is a small country in the Himalayas, we've been called Shangri-La... but let me tell you right off the bat, we are not," he said in the TED talk in 2016.

"My country is not one big monastery populated with happy monks... the reality is that we are a small, underdeveloped country doing our best to survive."

Married with two children, Tobgay is a keen sportsman, enjoying yoga and hiking in his country's mountains.

He is also passionate about the national sport, archery, as well as cycling, and has competed in the country's tough 266-kilometre (165 mile) one-day "Tour of the Dragon" mountain bike race.

X.Blaser--NZN