Transcript Title

African Adaptation Programme
Africa Adaptation Programme
Programme Overview Presentation
By
Ian Rector, Programme Manager
Damascus, Syria
September, 2010
Supporting Integrated and Comprehensive Approaches to Climate Change Adaptation in Africa
African Adaptation Programme
African Adaptation Programme
• Funded by Government of Japan - $92m
• Duration 2009 – 2011
• 20 African Countries (includes Morocco and Tunisia
in RBAS)
• Not a traditional adaptation project – strategic focus
establishing foundations for long term action
• UN Partnerships UNICEF, UNIDO and WFP in 4
countries
• Country driven and regionally supported –good
balance
African Adaptation Programme
Africa Adaptation Programme
Overall Programme Objectives
• Enhancing the adaptive capacity of vulnerable
countries to climate change and disaster risks
within the context of sustainable development
• Promoting early adaptation through evidencebased solutions and initiatives for action
• Laying the foundation for long-term investment
to increase resilience to climate change and
other threats across the African continent
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African Adaptation Programme
20 Countries
Burkina Faso
Cameroon
Congo
Ethiopia
Gabon
Ghana
Kenya
Lesotho
Malawi
Mauritius
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger
Nigeria
Rwanda
Sao Tome and Principe
Senegal
Tanzania
Tunisia
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African Adaptation Programme
Programme Outcomes
In approaching this goal, Country Projects
Have been designed to achieve a….
–
Strengthening long term planning to
enable countries to manage both
existing and future risks associated
with climate change and other
causes
–
Building effective leadership and
institutional frameworks for
enhanced coordination and
cohesion of programmes
–
Supporting the piloting of adaptation
initiatives in the field
–
Identifying a range of financing
options for sustained adaptation
–
Building knowledge management
systems and promoting information
sharing.
Planned activities to ensure that interregional expertise and capacity development
Is provided to 20 countries including.....

Advice and assistance relating to
enhanced Government policy-making and
planning in this field

Support for leadership development and
institutional reform as well as enabling
individual development

Encouraging exposure to world best
practice and data

Support in finding innovative funding
options

Creation of region-wide databases and
learning opportunities
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African Adaptation Programme
RBAS COUNTRIES
• Morocco and Tunisia
• Strategic overview not technical presentation –
follow up if more details required
• National focus with specific pilot areas for
piloting adaptation initiatives
African Adaptation Programme
– Morocco
Morocco and Tunisia
AAP projects
• Focus: climate proofing of territorial
development and water management in Oases
areas
• Budget: 4 920 000 US$ (Japan : 2 975 000 US$ ;
Government : 1 945 000 US$)
– Tunisia:
• Focus: climate-resilient coastal zone
development
• Budget: 2 975 000 US$ (Japan : 2 975 000 US$ ;
Government : tbc)
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African Adaptation Programme
Supporting Morocco
Some Examples
• Establishing information database on CC impact
scenarios
• Creating tools for managing water resources
• Establishing mechanisms for monitoring, tracking
and reporting on observed climate changes
• Mainstreaming CC into decentralized regional
planning
• Advocacy Plan for social mobilization
• Capacity development and institutional
strengthening – people and technology skills
African Adaptation Programme
Project
areas:
Morocco
• Western Oases region (SoussMassa-Drâa, and Tata);
•Oases of the Ziz
(Errachidia, My Ali
Tinjdad, Goulmima) ;
valley
Cherif,
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African Adaptation Programme
AAP – Morocco
• Current status
– Project officially launched in April 2010
– Several activities initiated:
• Assessment of V&A and development of Territorial Adaptation Strategies
for the Oases region using downscaling techniques and adaptation DSSs
• Mainstreaming of CCA/DRR into local development plans programmes
• Establishment of an EWS against flood and droughts risks
• Implementation of two pilot adaptive water management systems
• Support to CBA activities in water and agriculture
• CB and awareness-raising activities aimed at key stakeholders of different
levels
– One complementary initiative being developed under the Adaptation Fund
African Adaptation Programme
Supporting Tunisia
Some examples
• Strengthening forecasting and monitoring of CC impacts at
national level
• Developing adaptation decision making tools for coastal zone
management
• Strengthening institutional systems , capacity development
and improving collaboration across agencies
• Mainstreaming CCA into development land use planning
• Exploring opportunities for innovative finance
• Awareness raising
African Adaptation Programme
Cap
Bon
Project
areas:
Tunisia
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African Adaptation Programme
AAP – Tunisia
• Current status
– Project officially launched in February 2010
– Several activities initiated:
• Development of a National Adaptation Strategy for the Coastal
Developement Sector
• Formulation of a pilot climate-resilient ICZM and Shoreline Management
Plans in the Cap Bon area
• Development of a GIS-based SLR risk assessment and mapping tool
• Implementation of ecosystem-based and soft coastal adaptation models
in demonstration sites
• Testing of technologies for the re-use of treated water for the artificial
recharge of coastal groundwater
• Communication activities (TV clips and knowledge products)
– Two complementary initiatives being developed under the
Adaptation Fund
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African Adaptation Programme
AAP – North Africa
• Added-value
• Offers a country-driven, meaningful and flexible response to
un-addressed national CCA priorities
• Provides a critical-mass of support and strong incentives to
develop adaptive institutional frameworks and new
collaboration modalities (‘’Enabling environment’’)
• Promotes a strategic shift from ‘’stand-alone’’, opportunistic
and scattered interventions to a more territorial, integrated
and bottom-up approach to CCA
• Acts as a ‘’catalyst’’ for leveraging additional funding and
initiatives and provides a platform for building national /subnational adaptation coalitions (‘’multiplier effects’’)
• Contributes to strengthen Regional and South-South
Cooperation
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African Adaptation Programme
AAP – North Africa
• Challenges
– Mobilization of international expertise and transfer of best practices,
including lessons from UNDP CCA/DRR global and regional portfolios
– Linking climate change risks with development challenges requires specific
analytical skills and demands rapid deployment of appropriate capacities
and tools at all levels
– Need for greater horizontal integration to reduce policy conflicts and more
effectively address the adaptation deficit and maladaptive processes
– DRR interventions in the short term require to be properly articulated with
CCA to ensure adaptation effectiveness and avoid maladaptation in the
longer term
– Need to adopt an adaptive management style and to engage in “social
learning” to deal with inherent uncertainty regarding long-term climate
change
– Going beyond a “technical quick fix” by catalysing a broad societal process
and accelerating changes in policies and practices , particularly in water
management
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African Adaptation Programme
AAP North Africa
Opportunities for all:
For Countries – strengthening sectoral capacities,
improving leadership, coordination, information
sharing and maximizing ownership
For UN and other Regional Agencies: collaboration,
leveraging and more focused support to address
country needs
For UNDP: Opportunity to refocus all practice teams
toward one integrated programme of support
African Adaptation Programme
AAP Conceptual Approach
Slide 1: A national framework for mainstreaming CC/DRR
and Gender within development strategies. It poses
the question – When does climate change become a
development issue? Most countries cannot afford to
create dual systems and, the don’t have to.
Slide 2: Adaptation or development strategies – what will
work best? It depends on the coping and adaptive
capacity gap.
African Adaptation Programme
?
Climate Change
Climate Change
Factors
Temp Variation
R/Fall Variation
Sea Level rise
Monitoring
Loop
Impact Analysis
Development
Social and Gender Inclusion
Mainstreaming
Framework
Economic and
Social Systems
Eco Systems
Critical
infrastructure
Natural Hazards
Livelihoods
other
Sector wide planning and development
Economic and Development Planning
Disaster Management/DRR
Risk Database
PRSP
NAPA
Early warning systems
Preparedness Planning
Awareness
Relief and Recovery Management
Cross cutting Inputs
(examples):
Knowledge Management
Information Management
Capacity Development
Advocacy and awarenessraising
Policy and Planning
Poverty Reduction and
MDG Goals
Lessons learned feedback loop
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African Adaptation Programme
Africa Adaptation Programme
Adaptation or Development??
• This slide demonstrates that in some cases the gap between existing coping
capacity and existing/future risk may be so great that only long term development
strategies may have an impact on reducing risk and vulnerability. Conversely,
repeated disasters can erode coping capacity and extend the gap.
CC Future Risk Predictions
Predicted Adaptation Gap
Existing Risk Levels
Existing Adaptation Gap
Existing adaptive/coping
capacity
Eroded Capacity