Climate change and cities in low- and middle-income nations; what constrains adaptation? David Satterthwaite International Institute for Environment and.

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Presentation transcript:

Climate change and cities in low- and middle-income nations; what constrains adaptation? David Satterthwaite International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED)

2 Key points: n What we know about climate change n Why action on adaptation is needed now n Why a focus on urban areas n How adaptation is not an environmental issue but a development+disaster preparedness issue n Core of adaptation is local development including poverty reduction & good local governance –Very difficult to get this in most low- and many middle- income nations n Effective adaptation for urban areas needs effective adaptation for rural areas

3 What we know about climate change n CO 2 concentration in atmosphere rising –matches growth in fossil fuel use/emissions –recent evidence showing this is faster than anticipated by IPCC n Warming of climate system n Systematic change in precipitation in most regions n Ocean temperatures up; acidity up (sea level rise) n Loss of arctic sea ice extent n Loss of glacier mass –increased run-off & earlier spring peak discharges in many glacier and snow fed rivers n More intense extreme weather events –with very large development impacts n More serious because of time-lags & political constraints to adaptation n Many uncertainties – eg on form local impacts will take, likely speed of change.... many possible but uncertain ‘high-impact’ changes

IPCC 2007 report on observed and predicted temperature change

Change Warm spells/heat waves frequency up on most land areas Heavy precipitation events, frequency up over most areas Intense tropical cyclone activity increases Increased area affected by drought Increased incidence of extreme high sea level Impacts on urban areas Extreme temperatures (worst in heat islands in cities); air pollution worsened. Large vulnerable population Floods/landslides; injuries and deaths, households losing homes, possessions, assets, livelihoods. Large population displacements and disruption of city economies, transport and other infrastructure damaged. Health services and emergency services unable to cope. Water shortages, food shortages, malnutrition, distress migration into urban centres, hydro-electric constraints Loss of lives, property and livelihoods to coastal flooding, damage to tourism, damage to buildings, salinization of water Some likely impacts of climate change

7 Disasters from extreme weather show vulnerability to climate change n 95% of disaster deaths over last 25 years in low- and middle-income nations n Rapid growth in number of extreme weather ‘natural’ disasters: –I.e. storms, floods and droughts rather than earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and industrial accidents –2007 the worst year ever for extreme weather disasters? n 1% of enterprises & households in low- income nations have disaster insurance n 90% of deaths & serious injuries among poor?

8 Why focus on urban areas in low- & middle-income countries? n More than a third of the world’s total population n Their ‘slums’/informal settlements house a sixth of the world’s total population n They house most of the growth in the world’s population n They house most economic growth –87% of total GDP in low and middle income nations now from industry and services (81% in sub-Saharan Africa) –Successful economies need well-functioning urban centres n Urban and rural development can be hugely complementary –Urban areas as markets and service centres for agriculture and rural populations –Successful agriculture as a key stimulus to local urban development

9 Urban areas and climate change risks n Urban areas include a large part of the people whose lives, homes, assets and livelihoods are most at risk from climate change –the mega-deltas in Asia (Dhaka and Shanghai) and Africa (the Nile and the Niger....) –many West African coastal cities; Alexandria, Mumbai..... Potentially catastrophic risks being imposed on nations & cities that have contributed very little to the problem & that lack institutional capacity to take needed adaptation measures

Distribution of the world’s urban population 2000

11 Urban population in low-elevation coastal zone

12 Urban areas and adaptation n Most cities already have large populations at high risk from extreme weather –Common for 30-60% of the population to live in informal settlements –A high proportion on dangerous sites – floodplains, steep slopes –Drainage networks rarely cover more than half a city’s population n Climate change imposing new constraints, changing constraints and bringing uncertainty n Adaptation impossible without –basic protective infrastructure & services for entire population (but very few urban areas have these) –Special programmes to address those who are most vulnerable

13 Adaptation is not an environmental issue n Adaptation about the quality of local development –reductions in poverty (more stable livelihoods, better housing, infrastructure and services) central to successful adaptation n Adaptation needs effective, accountable local government, for what it does & what it supports –among households, community organizations, NGOs, private sector.... –Planning and implementing adaptation needs local competence, local capacity, local knowledge, accountability to local populations n (these also apply to rural areas) n To achieve needed adaptation implies dramatic changes in the effectiveness of local governments and aid agency support for them

14 Big issues for adaptation n You cannot adapt infrastructure that is not there –Most costings of adaptation based on cost of modifying climate- sensitive infrastructure –Not appropriate with large deficits in infrastructure –100-fold difference in the cost-effectiveness of different actors; What $25,000 can do in the hands of a savings group formed by women ‘slum’ dwellers n Successful adaptation not possible if local government refuses to work with the poor and sees their homes, neighbourhoods and enterprises as ‘the problem’ n Building the competence and capacity of local government is a slow, difficult, often contested process n Adaptation, like poverty reduction, not solved by large international funding flows –UNFCCC documents do not understand this

15 Mitigation is important but n Most urban centres in low-income nations with such low levels of GHG emissions; not much to ‘mitigate’ –Not true that cities account for 80% of GHG n Strong synergies between mitigation & adaptation for prosperous cities but not for all urban centres n Of course urban expansion needs to take into account mitigation – but for most urban centres in low-income nations, adaptation far more important –Why are northern funded programmes in Africa and Asia emphasizing mitigation above adaptation?

CO2 emissions (metric tons per capita); 2002

17 Urban centres need successful rural development & adaptation n Urban dependence on rural resources and eco- system services (including protective services) n Many urban livelihoods depend on rural (producer and consumer) demand for goods and services n How vulnerable low-income urban populations are to higher food prices or disruptions in food supplies n How many (poor and non-poor) households have rural and urban components to their livelihoods, incomes and asset bases

18 Let local innovation & precedents drive national policies n CAPAs and LAPAs driving NAPAs –Learn from good experiences e.g. Durban at city level n Explore synergies between local development and adaptation –Get the attention of the ‘development’ bits of local government n Build on innovations in local development successes –community-led & municipal led ‘slum’ and squatter upgrading & housing finance; a lot of innovation to draw on

19 Get international funding for adaptation embedded in local development n Successful adaptation is –Informed by good local knowledge about hazards, risks and vulnerabilities (and who is most vulnerable) –Underpinned by land-use management that delivers on development and protecting/expanding protective eco- systems (rural and urban working together) –Supported by citizen/civil-society capacity and willingness to work with government

20 What needs to be done: Building adaptive capacity in tens of thousands of localities to the many impacts of climate change that: n supports & works with reduction of risks to other environmental hazards n is strongly pro-poor n builds on knowledge acquired over the last 20 years on reducing risk from disasters n is based on and builds a strong local knowledge base of climate variabilities and of likely local impacts from climate- change scenarios n encourages and supports actions that reduce risks (and vulnerabilities) now, while recognizing the importance of measures taken now for needed long-term changes

21 What needs to be done (2) n recognizes that the core of the above is building the competence and accountability of local government & changing their relationship with those living in informal settlements & working in informal economy n recognizes that government policies must encourage and support the contributions of individuals, households, community organizations and enterprises n recognizes key complementary roles by higher levels of government and international agencies to support this n builds resilience/adaptation capacity in rural areas too n builds into the above a mitigation framework –But generally only for successful economies

Passenger cars per 1,000 population (2000)

23 Joined-up thinking easier than joined-up action n Needs all sectors of government to buy in: –housing, building, planning and land-use management, infrastructure, water, transport and roads, health and emergency services n Needs most governments to change way they work with low-income groups –Otherwise “adaptation” will be used by powerful groups to evict low-income communities

24 Who is most at risk among urban populations n Urban populations already facing difficulties with extreme weather events –High vulnerability of infants & young children including impacts on long term development as well as more immediate impacts –Disruptions that affect urban livelihoods n Urban centres/districts at risk of sea-level rise - on coasts with settlements and water sources at risk n Urban populations that cannot adapt –Who cannot change locations n Urban populations with the least resilience –There will be lots of disasters; how large their impact is so dependent on what is done in advance regarding preparedness