Climate change adaptation is understood as the actions undertaken by communities to cope with actual or predicted impacts of climate change.1 The actions may either reduce the level of harm or maximize the positive outcomes from climate change.2 Adaptaton differs from mitigation, which means taking action by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and developing carbon sinks, to reduce the impacts of climate change. 3
Defining adaptation
Adaptation projects are usually more locally focused, although national support is necessary in the form of strategic planning and policy making. Each country in the LMR has developed and approved national level climate change strategies that address adaptation. The UNFCCC has also developed a process by which least developed countries develop “National Adaptation Programs of Action”, identifying urgent and immediate adaptation needs of each country.4
A regional approach to adaptation is also very useful, given that climate change does not observe country borders. This is particularly important in a region like the Lower Mekong Subregion, where over 60 million people, primarily poor and living in rural communities, are linked by and highly dependent on a single water source – the Mekong River.
At the regional level, adaptation primarily looks like capacity building5 and collecting data.6 In contrast to mitigation projects, which require synchronized efforts at a national, regional, or international scale, adaptation efforts can look like many different things. This is because each project needs to respond to the unique needs of the people on the ground. As such, in a middle income country such as Thailand you see a community focused case study on adaptation to sea level rise,7 while in the lower middle income countries highly dependent on agriculture and fisheries, you see climate smart agriculture being developed in Lao PDR, 8 rural road development in Cambodia,9 small scale water management infrastructure development in the dry zone of Myanmar,10 and sewerage and flood prevention facility upgrades in an urban setting in Vietnam.11 Of course, these are just a few of the many projects ongoing in the region. As these examples suggest, the majority of adaptation projects in the LMC are on capacity building, scientific innovation, or infrastructure development. Slowly gaining traction are adaptation projects using ecosystem-based approaches, emphasizing environmental conservation and sustainability approaches. Leading the region in this area is Vietnam, with projects such as mangrove rehabilitation.12
International attention to climate change adaptation
Climate change requires, and has attracted, the attention of the international community. It has been enshrined in the Paris Agreement, forms the meat of SDG 13 on Climate Change, and is implied in SDG 15 Life on Land. Projects using adaptation strategies like the ones stated above have had the ability to tap into a variety of streams of funding, including multilateral funding specific to climate change adaptation. Examples include the Adaptation Fund and the Pilot Program for Climate Resistance. Other funds, like the Global Environment Facility, the Nordic Development Fund, and the Green Climate Fund, are open to fund both adaptation and mitigation activities.
The Global Environment Facility (GEF) is a partnership of 18 agencies – including United Nations agencies, multilateral development banks, national entities, and international NGOs – working with 183 countries to address the world’s most challenging environmental issues. Chart created by ODM June 2017. Licensed under CC-BY-SA 4.0. View metadata
Climate change adaptation strategies often see overlap with resilience strategies for disaster risk management and humanitarian aid, as well as development projects. Given the disproportionate impact of climate change on those in developing countries, it makes sense; however, not all development or resilience building is adaptation, nor is all adaptation development or resilience building. In fact, one study of adaptation practices in the LMR asserted that only 11 percent (45 of 417) of climate-change related projects were on-the-ground adaptation efforts driven by climate risks.13
Climate change adaptation projects address the impacts of climate change and would be irrelevant were it not for climate change. Development projects assume “business as usual”, addressing issues without taking into account climate change. For example, projects that are required to address the impacts of climate change in order to assist development projects in meeting their goals, or projects to climate “proof” an infrastructure project might also be considered adaptation projects.14 Resilience should be understood as an umbrella term that takes into account a range of hazards and risks, including climate change, that a country or a community might face. Thus, a resilience action might take into account climate change risks alongside humanitarian, natural disaster, and development-related risks.
It might seem excessive to spend so much time clarifying what climate change adaptation actually is. After all, the nexus between adaptation and mitigation is recognized, not least with regard to financing. For example, the UNFCCC’s Adaptation Fund, which funds adaptation activities, is primarily funded by GHG emissions activities conducted under the Clean Development Mechanism. Yet, ambiguities in the definition of “adaptation”, especially in high-level, international conventions like the Paris Agreement, has led to confusion in how exactly to take action.15
Because climate change adaptation projects touch on a wide range of other project sectors, project managers do seek co-financing. Further, as the LMC develop, grow, and shift in economic status, they will need to be able to access different types of financing. However, without proper definition, projects run the risk of duplication, inefficiencies, and losing sight of its adaptation aims, and the purpose of adaptation specific funding is muddied. Coordination and cooperation is needed to fully address the risks associated with climate change.
Climate Finance
Another concern is that development funds have occasionally been provided with regard to internationally agreed safeguards. The future framework for development financing will need to incorporate climate finance. Some Asia-Pacific countries already devote significant domestic resources to climate change activities. While some countries raise funds domestically, others rely almost exclusively on bilateral and multilateral funds. Cambodia, for example, depends on international sources for 86 per cent of its climate-related expenditure.16
Related to Adaptation
- Climate Change
- Mitigation
- Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions
- Clean Development Mechanism
- Environment and Natural Resources
- Social Development
- Agriculture and Fishing
References
- 1. United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Focus: Adaptation. Accessed 15 October 2017
- 2. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. “Glossary A-D.” Accessed June 2, 2017
- 3. UNFCCC Focus: Mitigation. Accessed 15 October 2017.
- 4. UNFCCC Conference of the Parties: Report of the Conference of the parties on it’s 7th Session. Held at Marrakesh from 29 October to 10 November 2001, Page 7.
- 5. MRCClimate Change and Adaptation Initiative
- 6. GIZ Supporting the Mekong River Commission in climate change adaptation measures for the region
- 7. Office of Natural Resources and Environmental Policy and Planning, 2010. Thailand’s Second National Communication under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment. Bangkok, Thailand.
- 8. SNV Climate Smart Agriculture in Laos
- 9. Cambodia: Rural Road Improvement Project, ADB (2010 -2016).
- 10. Addressing Climate Change risk on water resources and food security in the Dry Zone of Myanmar. Adaption Fund, Project/Program Proposal (2013-2016).
- 11. Project Agreement for Loan 3340-VIE: Urban Environment and Climate Change Adaptation Project, ADB Project Agreement (2017).
- 12. Ecosystem-based Approaches to Address Climate Change Challenges in the Greater Mekong Subregion
- 13. Hijioka, Y., E. Lin, J.J. Pereira, R.T. Corlett, X. Cui, G.E. Insarov, R.D. Lasco, E. Lindgren, and A. Surjan, 2014: Asia. In: Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability. Part B: Regional Aspects. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Barros, V.R., C.B. Field, D.J. Dokken, M.D. Mastrandrea, K.J. Mach, T.E. Bilir, M. Chatterjee, K.L. Ebi, Y.O. Estrada, R.C. Genova, B. Girma, E.S. Kissel, A.N. Levy, S. MacCracken, P.R. Mastrandrea, and L.L.White (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, pp. 1327-1370.
- 14. McGray, H, Hammil, A, and Bradley, R.Weathering the Storm Options for Framing Adaptation and Development, (2007). World Resources Institute.
- 15. Huang,J, and Suarez, I. Addressing adaptation in a 2015 climate agreement. 2015. The Centre for Climate and Energy Solutions
- 16. Making it happen: Technology, finance and statistics for sustainable development in Asia and the Pacific. Asian Development Bank, United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific and United Nations Development Programme, 2015.