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Climate Change Adaptation. Dr. Lesley Breitner-Czuma CIM Integrated Expert , CAREC Programme Climate Change & Sustainable Energy. CAREC Regional Environmental Center for Central Asia. A key partner in environmental protection & sustainable development in RK & CA
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Climate Change Adaptation Dr. Lesley Breitner-Czuma CIM Integrated Expert, CAREC Programme Climate Change & Sustainable Energy
CARECRegional Environmental Center for Central Asia • A key partner in environmental protection & sustainable development in RK & CA • Founded 2001 by 5 CA states, UNDP, EC • Mission: Promote multi-stakeholder cooperation in addressing environmental problems in Central Asia at the local, national and regional levels. • 6 Departments • Environmental Policy and Management • Water Initiatives • Civil Society • Education for Sustainable Development • Information & Capacity Building • Climate Change & Sustainable Energy • www.carecnet.org
What is “Climate Change”? • Warming of the average temperature & change in the nature of weather (extremes) • Global warming assumed to be anthropogenic, caused by GHG & CO2* • Average global temperature increase of 0.74 °C in last 100 yrs • Consensus: to prevent catastrophic consequences, CC must be limited such that global warming does not exceed 2 °C • Evidence of effects of Climate Change: • Glacial, polar melting, permafrost thawing • Ice core analysis (CO2 concentration, temperature vs. sea levels) • Sea level changes • Pollen analysis (changes in plant communities: CC) • Changed vegetation • Dendroclimatology (дендроклиматология) • Insect population (reflects climate conditions)
Further Consequences of CC (generally) Trends with increasing temperature (0 - 5°C): • Extreme weather events • hurricanes, floods, drought, heat waves, wildfires • Water • ↑ moist tropics & high altitudes • ↓ mid-latitudes & semi-arid low latitudes • Ecosystems • 30% of species risk extinction (starting at 1.5°C ↑) • Species range shifts • Food • ↓ cereal productivity in low latitudes • ↑ cereal productivity in mid-/ high latitudes • Coasts • Flooding & storms • Loss of coastal wetlands (to 30% if ≥ 3°C↑) • Health • ↑ malnutrition, diarrheal, cardio-respiratory, infectious disease • ↑ morbidity & mortality from heat waves, droughts, floods • Change in disease vectors IPCC Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) 2007; • Working Group II (WGII): Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability(projections of world CC & A. priorities)
The Political Discussion • Warming not beyond 2 °C --- How (what framework)?¹ • emissions reductions obligations • technol. transfer poor - rich • Kyoto Protocol to UNFCCC² is aimed at fighting global warming. • It obligates industrialized countries to reduce GHG • below the level of 1990 by 2012 (KZ an exception)³ • it provides flexible mechanisms to achieve this • COP-13 Bali(2007) addressing Post-Kyoto • Concern of the emerging countries that GHG reduction obligations could slow their economic growth • NAMA’s & NAPA’s – National Plans for Adaptation & Mitigation • Adaptation & Mitigation foreseen in UNFCCC convention text • Failure of COP 15 (emerging countries & economic growth) • Copenhagen Accord - Need for NAMA’s & NAPA’s recognized • Post-Kyoto (2012): No consensus yet, but 5 priorities: • Assist poorest/ most vulnerable to adapt to the impacts of CC; • Ambitious emission reduction targets for industrialized countries; • NAMA’s by developing countries, with the necessary support; • Scaled-up financial & technological resources to help the developing world to adapt and to mitigate; • Equitable governance structure to manage and deploy that support. • NWP - Nairobi Work Program (on Impacts, Vulnerability & Adaptation to CC) – A RESOURCE!
What is “Adaptation”? • Addressing impacts resulting from the warming which is already unavoidable due to past emissions • Adaptive capacity = ability to • adjust to CC (incl. climate variability & extremes) • moderate potential damages, • take advantage of opportunities, or to cope with the consequences • reduce vulnerability • (susceptibility to/ inability to cope w/ adverse effects of CC) • Assumption of this presentation:There is a need for a National Adaptation Plan for RK • Especially LDC’s will be affected & must adjust • (develop “NAPA’s” – requirement of UNFCCC)
Adaptation & MitigationTogether • Mitigation: Reduction of GHG emissions & their removal from the atmosphere (e.g. sinks) • Together: Mutual reinforcement: • All CC cannot be mitigated/ prevented, but w/out prevention, adaptation will be impossible • Adaptation & Mitigation must be done together (one is not enough; complimentary) • Examples in comparison: • Adaptation: Increasing irrigation efficiency to conserve water, planting shrubs to reduce soil erosion from wind • Mitigation: Preventing emissions by using RES/ EE, sequestration by reforestation
Development & Adaptation • Combine Development & Adaptation! • The poorest nations will be hit hardest by CC.¹ • Adaptation & Mitigation are tied to rest of economy! • In spite of ratifying UNFCCC & KP (committing to GHG reduction), RK has not yet adopted an integrated LCD or Adaptation strategy. Not included in: • “Strategic Development Plan for Kazakhstan up to 2020” • “Program of Accelerated Industrial-innovative Development of Kazakhstan from 2010-2014” • “Green Growth” Program from 2010-2014”. • UNDP project underway on integrating CC issues into strategic planning of RK
Adaptation Policy Must be Planned • UNFCCC foresees NAPA’s for LDC’s & mitigation for all parties • Priorities for adaptation must be defined & vary regionally/ situationally • What criteria exist for choosing / prioritizing? • Cost-Benefit-Analysis (only partially applicable) • Adaptation will incur costs (harder to calculate than mitigation)… • Prioritizing actions: For adaptation, costs are not completely clear, CC- variables • Working groups (subsidiary bodies of UNFCCC) have developed recommendations, but they must applied locally (pilot projects can help) … • 2 UNDP projects in RK (guidelines) • One on promoting development of national A. policy (& integration into strategic planning) • One on Community Based Adaptation
Awareness of Adaptation in RK -Capacity Building Needed* • Lack of state policy on Adaptation & Mitigation • Strategic documents & development plans of RK must take A. to CC into account • Lack of experience in preparation of strategic documents reflecting • Low carbon development • Inter-sectoral coordination/ coop. • Analysis of impact of CC/ benefits of A. • international commitments UNFCCC/ KP • Especially high-level decision makers & industrialists lack awareness/ understanding of CC impacts & benefits of A. • Lack of capacity of officials to identify social, financial, economic consequences of CC • Thus lack of ability to respond with adaptation & mitigation measures
Further Barriers/ Gaps (RK) • Insufficient knowledge of decision-makers on commitments under KP • Need for sectoral strategies to reduce GHG • Identify priorities & opportunities for low-carbon development & create an overriding, integrated strategy • MEP responsible for implementation of KP = working in isolation although cross-sectoral coordination (state & private sector) necessary • Lack of experience by gov’t officials & MEP in international negotiations – i.e. for a Post-Kyoto standpoint (relevant for development) • Lack of data/ analysis to identify opportunities/ priorities for low carbon development & GHG reduction (local actors don’t know how/where GHG reduction potential is greatest) • GHG intensive industry (oil & gas, power & energy sector) needs to analyze potential for action, identify priority projects (green growth investment) & initiate modernization re CC • Lack of information available in local language
Adaptation Priority Areas in CA, Generally Adverse effects and impacts of CC on Central Asia regionally include: • Temperature increase • Variation in precipitation • Increased aridity • Changed agro-climatic zones (effecting biomass supply for growing human and livestock populations) • Reduced energy capacity potential from HPP • Extreme weather events • Increased droughts, floods, mud flows/ mudslides & glacier retreat. There is a need for • a post-Kyoto joint position in CA on adaptation & mitigation • a systematic strategy to address CC • coordination/ cooperation w/ other countries in the region (esp. where overlaps & interdependencies – e.g. water – exist)
Trends & Risks – Climate Change in KZ: • 1936-2005: Ave. temp. increase c. 0.31°C/ 10 yr. Decrease in frost days, increase in hot weather everywhere. • Increase in annual precipitation in most regionsBy 2085, precipitation shift north (= semi-arid), growth of arid zone elsewhere. • Increased extreme weather conditions (floods, droughts, mudslides, glacier retreat) • S/E mountains: Glacier melting, ave. 0.8% p.a.& ice stock by 1% p.a. (2nd half of past century). Intense reduction of glaciers predicted w/ CC. • CONSEQUENCES for: water, agricultural, energy and public health sectors. • Coordinated, strategic adaptation to CC necessary! Otherwise: • considerable economic losses • humanitarian stresses • environmental degradation
Main Risks Related to CC in RK* Vulnerability assessment for RK is underway by UNDP (to be completed by year end), but some main areas are clear: Land & water management are key to adaptation. Main areas where CC will have effect & adaptation can help: • Agriculture • Grain production • Pastures • Sheep-breeding • The water sector • Forestry • Energy • Population health.
Prioritize Most Important Projects (RK) • UNDP is planning on creating a list of priority projects on adaptation*. • Preliminary priorities for A. have already been identified by the 2nd National Communication of RK to UNFCCC. • 8 working groups have been formed, which will create a priority list (basis for adaptation projects & a National Adaptation Plan) in October. These are: - Agriculture and land use, - Institutional patterns and insurance, - Water resources and climate change adaptation of coastal areas - (Sea of Aral, Caspian Sea, lake Balkhash), - Forestry and biodiversity, tourism, unique nature monuments, - Cities, local communities and health, - Emergency situations and early warning systems, - Energy, industry, and transport, - Education and science.
NAPA’s not just for LDC’s! • Even if UNFCCC only obligates industrial countries to mitigation, adaptation must in fact accompany it for it to be effective. • LDC’s are obligated to adaptation because they will be hit hardest by CC & must be prepared. • Although RK is not an LDC, it fulfills 6 out of 9 criteria which UNFCCC defines as particular vulnerability/ priorities necessitating response to CC. RK is: • Arid/semi-arid • Liable to drought/ desertification • Has high urban atmospheric pollution • Includes fragile, mountainous ecosystems • Dependent on income generated from fossil fuels • Land-locked. • The message of this presentation: Argument for developing a National Adaptation Plan for RK • Decision-makers must understand the impact of CC & the importance & benefits of adaptation as an instrument to combat CC & develop effective policy accordingly
What CAREC is Doing in this Vein* • Project: “The Copenhagen Negotiations: Central Asia’s Perspective for a Post 2012 Agreement” • Interdependence of CA countries re CC* & development • Common position on key CC priority areas for all of CA • Negotiation basis, to strengthen their voice at COP 15 • Identified need to design Napas (national & regional), to assess • Vulnerability • financial needs • coordination between CA countries • Idea for a multilateral (convention) adaptation fund • Est. region. consultative mechanism to represent all post-KP issues • The conclusions are still relevant for the next COP in Cancun in Nov/Dec. • Project: „Promoting Adaption and Mitigation Strategies on Climate Change in Central Asia” • Trainings • On negotiation procedure (& reviewing implications of NAMA’s/ NAPA’s for economy & other policy areas) • On how to develop NAMA & NAPA strategies
Funding for Adaptation (of LDC’s) under UNFCCC Adaptation comes with costs (not adapting will cost even more). UNFCCC obliges LDC to adaptation, thus, it also foresees financial assistance: http://unfccc.int/adaptation/items/4159.php • GEF (Global Environment Facility) Trust Fund • Support for vulnerability & adaptation assessments for national communications • LDCF (Least Developed Countries Fund) • Assists LDC’s prepare & implement NAPA’s • SCCF (Special Climate Change Fund) • Finances projects relating to adaptation; technology transfer and capacity building • AF (Adaptation Fund) under KP • To finance concrete adaptation projects and programs in developing countries • From CER’s from CDM
Key Ideas/ Conclusions ! • Adaptation & Mitigation together to address Climate Change (CC) • Adaptation essential to prepare vulnerable sectors to handle CC • RK has special needs which make Adaptation especially important • RK must develop a NAPA (National Action Plan) in its own interest • Tie Adaptation to development strategies • Decision makers in RK must understand the effects of Climate Change & benefits of Adaptation to address it • Adaptation is tied to costs which are hard to quantify, but damage from no Adaptation will be even more expensive • Priority Adaptation measures must be identified (UNDP & CAREC are working on this to assist decision makers in RK) • Next steps: Possibility to use resources of UNDP & CAREC to • Receive training on developing adaptation plans (nationally & in coordination with CA). = CAREC • Learn about identified vulnerabilities, adaptation priorities, pilot projects. = UNDP