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Synthesis of National Experiences with Integrated Development and Climate Policies

Synthesis of National Experiences with Integrated Development and Climate Policies Kirsten Halsnæs, URC andP.R. Shukla, IIM, Ahmedabad. Structure. Overview of how sustainable development and climate change perspectives have been applied in different studies. Lessons from mitigation studies.

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Synthesis of National Experiences with Integrated Development and Climate Policies

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  1. Synthesis of National Experiences with Integrated Development and Climate Policies Kirsten Halsnæs, URC andP.R. Shukla, IIM, Ahmedabad

  2. Structure • Overview of how sustainable development and climate change perspectives have been applied in different studies. • Lessons from mitigation studies. • Lessons from adaptation studies. • Sustainable development and international climate policy implications. • Cross cutting conclusions. • Suggestions for new activity areas.

  3. Sustainable Development and Climate Change Perspectives • Studies vary according to scope and methodological approach: • Scope: • Sectors: Energy, agriculture, forestry, water, infrastructure etc. • Mitigation versus adaptation. • National and international climate policy conclusions. • Approach: • National scenarios and quantiative results. • In depth analysis of case studies. • Policy dialogues

  4. Conlusions on the Overview • Particularly large countries like Brazil, China, India, and South Africa have been included. • Many Asian countries have participated. • Very few African and Latin American countries have participated. • Weak link between national studies and international climate policy conclusions. • Relatively few outputs in peer reviewed literature.

  5. Development, Energy and Climate, URC with ”the big four” (Brazil, China, India and South Africa) + Bangladesh and Senegal. • SD PAM’s, WRI with ”the big four” Mitigation Focused Studies

  6. Development, Energy and Climate Approach • Country study work including assessment of energy policies with regard to implications on MDG’s and climate change. • Focal areas for SD indicators: • Costs, benefits and other general economic impacts. • Income generation and distribution. • Energy provision and distribution. • Environmental impacts. • Health impacts of energy use and access to health services. • Education • Local participation. • Quantitative and qualitative analysis using scenarios and models

  7. Focal Study Areas • The role of energy in SD seen in a macroeconomic context and at housholed level. • Social, economic and environmental impacts of energy scenarios. • The impacts of including GHG emission reduction in national policies. • Case study results for China, India, and South Africa are shown

  8. Policy Impacts -China • Clean Coal Technologies will provide: • Energy security. • Large employment to low income families that are employed with the production of the technologies (7.6 mill people in 2004 and 7.8 mill. people in 2030). • Establishment of a strong position for China on international markets for cleaner coal technologies. • Reduction in local and global emissions.

  9. SD Policies and Measures - Approach • SD PAM’s are defined as policies and measures taken by a country in pursuit of its domestic policy objectives. • Criteria for SD PAM’s: • Specific national development objectives. • Can include specific legislative or executive acts, regulations, various instruments, and public-private partnership. Solely private projects or initiatives are excluded. • GHG emissions should be reduced. • Suggested as a basis for climate change commitments.

  10. SD PAM Case Study Results • China: Motorization trends. • India: Rural electrification. • South Africa: Carbon capture and storage. • Brazil: Biofuels for transport. • Issues include energy security, non-energy sectors, international agreements/finance.

  11. Adaptation Focused Studies • OECD project Bridge Over Troubled Water • Case studies for Egypt, Fiji, Bangladesh, Nepal, Tanzania, and Uruguay. • General lessons: • Climate Change is already affecting development. • Future climate change may also need consideration in development planning. • A significant portion of development assistance is directed at climate sensitive sectors. Range 50-65% in Nepal to 12-26% in Tanzania. • Development activities routinely overlook climate change and often also variability.

  12. Adaptation Focused Studies, Continued • Proposed activities: • Making climate information more relevant (including short term forecasts and variability). • Developing and applying climate risk screening tools (including at project level). • Identifying and using appropriate entry points for climate information (EIA, land use planning). • Shifting emphasis to implementation. • Encouraging meaningfull coordination • and the sharing of good practices • (private/public, international climate policies).

  13. International Climate Policies • Asian consultations on climate regime beyond. 2012, IGES. Dialogues with China, India, Indonesia, Korea, and Vietnam. • Ideas for strenthening the future climate regime from an Asian perspective: • Developmental concerns, in particular energy security, should be addressed as a priority. Due consideration of equity. • Flexibility in accomodating national conditions. Mitigation and adaptation differentiation. • CDM projects with SD impacts. • Mainstreaming of adaptation. • Finance including flexible inter-governmental approaches and private finance. • Capacity sthrengtening for Asian negotiatos and NGO’s.

  14. Cross-cutting Conclusions • Mitigation policies have to be framed in the context of SD. • Large growth in energy consumption is expected. Due to energy security and costs this can imply increasing CO2 intensity of energy consumption. • GHG emission reduction policies need special consideration beyond baseline issues. • Energy access and affordability issues are to be integral elements.

  15. Cross-cutting Conclusions • Climate change impacts already today influence major development priorities. • Very limited information and capacities are available for mainstreaming. • Mainstreaming need to be anchored in EIA and national planning, integrated in project implementation now. • SD framework is still not deeveloped as a framework that can be used in international climate cooperation despite various attempts are done by SD-PAM’s, Asian dialogues and other initiatives.

  16. Proposed New Activities • Link SD and Climate scenarios with stabilisation scenarios and future international scenario work.

  17. Proposed Activities, Continued….. • Integrate adaptation and mitigation studies: • Methodological framework. • Case examples on agriculture/energy, water/agriculture, energy/agriculture, biomass etc. • Emphasis social impact analysis e.g. using household expenditure data and time series. • Integrated local environmental impacts and health issues. • Address key energy sector issues including: • Energy security. • Finance. • The future role of coal and renewable energy. • Draw general conclusions about replicability of case study lessons. • Link to international climate policy regimes.

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