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Presentation of the UNFCCC Technical Paper on Coastal Adaptation Technologies (FCCC/TP/1999/1) UNFCCC Regional Workshop on Transfer of Technology Consultative.

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Presentation on theme: "Presentation of the UNFCCC Technical Paper on Coastal Adaptation Technologies (FCCC/TP/1999/1) UNFCCC Regional Workshop on Transfer of Technology Consultative."— Presentation transcript:

1 Presentation of the UNFCCC Technical Paper on Coastal Adaptation Technologies (FCCC/TP/1999/1) UNFCCC Regional Workshop on Transfer of Technology Consultative Process Cebu, Philippines, 17-19 January 2000 Dr Stephen Peake UNFCCC Secretariat

2 Presentation of the UNFCCC Technical Paper on Coastal Adaptation Technologies (FCCC/TP/1999/1) Transfer of Technology Regional Workshop, Cebu 17-19 January 2000

3 Outline of Presentation Background and introduction Needs, concerns, how coastal adaptation technologies are transferred, barriers: a Pacific Island perspective Coastal adaptation technology transfer: an IHE perspective

4 Secretariat activities related to adaptation technologies Amsterdam meeting 1997 Overview paper (FCCC/TP1997/1) Series of sectoral papers First is coastal adaptation technologies

5 Goal of the UNFCCC technical paper on coastal adaptation technologies What coastal adaptation technologies are available/needed to respond to sea level rise and its associated effects? Identify options to accelerate the development and transfer of sustainable coastal adaptation technologies to coastal nations and small island states

6 UNFCCC expert meeting on coastal adaptation technologies, Germany, March 22-23 1999 Study involved inputs from over 20 coastal engineers Expert meeting included 11 participants from 9 countries: Argentina, Barbados, China, Fiji, Netherlands, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, UK, US (IPCC Lead Author)

7 UNFCCC expert meeting on coastal adaptation technologies, Germany, March 22-23 1999

8 What’s in the technical paper? Description of technologies Technology needs How coastal adaptation technologies are transferred Barriers Options

9 Sustainable Coastal Adaptation Technology Development and Transfer The project cycle is the key pathway for the development and transfer of sustainable coastal adaptation technologies National funds, bank loans and international aid are the main sources of finance for coastal projects

10 Five Characteristics of Sustainable Coastal Adaptation Technology Development and Transfer sound understanding of coastal processes coastal zone plans and decisions in place ‘best practice’ project cycle undertaken local/regional capacity building enhanced longer term collaborations achieved between finance providers, government, and the private sector

11 Various stakeholders can help accelerate the development and transfer of sustainable coastal adaptation technologies Development banks, other loan providers and aid agencies Intergovernmental Organisations National, regional and local government Universities Private Sector Non-governmental Organisations

12 Status of institutional capacities to support sustainable coastal adaptation technology development and transfer Few institutions in Africa, Caribbean, Latin America, South Pacific, Developing Asia Few international/regional centres Challenge is to find ways to boost institutional capacities for sustainable engineering within a network of enhanced centres of coastal zone management

13 Sea Level Rise: The IPCC’s Second Assessment Global mean sea level is expected to rise in the order of 20 to 86 cm by 2100 (assuming the IS92a emissions scenario) Big uncertainties Spectrum of adaptation options: retreat (managed); accommodate; and protect …but not just SLR

14 Coastal Adaptation Technologies: A Pacific Island Perspective Concerns of Pacific SIDS Needs - local and regional How are coastal adaptation technologies transferred? Barriers to the transfer of coastal adaptation technologies

15 Concerns - Environment and People Population, industries and infrastructure located along the coast. Communities and infrastructure are highly susceptible to ASLR. Pacific SIDS are small, flat, low lying, geological young, affected by frequent natural hazards and face severe erosion problems: THEY ARE VULNERABLE.

16 Concerns - Expertise and Finance Pool of local expertise, knowledgeable of local conditions are few. Retention of technically trained staff is low. Pacific SIDS are largely developing nations, with restricted capital flow and finance.

17 Pacific SIDS Needs - Data and Training Fill gaps in local database on baseline conditions: natural and man-made, e. g. SOPAC- GEF proposal. Understand the local, natural and built environment. Capacity building and institutional strengthening; develop local awareness. Create local institutions/departments for addressing local/regional problems.

18 Pacific Needs - Funding & Collaboration Seek funding for basic research on the local and regional problems e.g. SOPAC- GEF proposal. Seek collaborative technical efforts with assistance of countries with a tradition of coastal engineering/ICZM. Develop local/appropriate technology, e. g. SOPAC-GEF proposal.

19 How are coastal adaptation technologies transferred? Through externally funded (bi- and multi- lateral aid) projects, consultancies collaborative research and development. University and technical training: privately funded studies, scholarships and fellowship programs. Donor agencies and institutions.

20 Barriers to Transfer - Ownership and Priority Ownership of the project. Not always perceived as a priority.

21 Barriers to Transfer -Information and Technology Lack of information and awareness. Lack of or inappropriate technology. Poor or inadequate institutional capacity.

22 Barriers to Transfer - Socio-Economic Factors Social and cultural preferences: peoples perception of appropriate solutions. Economic/financial problems. Legal framework.

23 Basic problems in Technology Transfer Coastal problems are issue driven, therefore focus on symptoms, and not on causes Basic training on understanding processes

24 Climate change aggravates existing problems Climate change is usually blamed for coastal problems But often the problem is an uncontrolled development at an eroding coastline The Bali example …directions of winds and waves and ultimately coasts

25 Chronic erosion vs. Acute erosion Chronic erosion is caused by gradients in longshore transport, by rise of the sea level; so by structural processes Acute erosion is caused by storms, sometimes even cause flooding; however the original situation will recover

26 Acute Erosion

27 “Once and for all” solutions These do not exist So you need local capabilities to maintain your protection in a sustainable way The major mistake is trying to solve chronic erosion with solutions against acute erosion

28 Prevention is better than cure Integrated approach is needed You need to know on beforehand what is the consequence of your decision Often “doing nothing” is a not acceptable option, and therefore sustainable protection is part of the job

29 Local tasks to be executed Recognition of the problem Data collection Integrated approach Supervising work contracted out Construction of small initial works Supervision of maintenance work Execution of maintenance work

30 Work which can be contracted out Detailed hydro-morphological analysis Overall design of protection schemes Design of initial works Construction of large initial works

31 Capabilities needed Focus should be on tasks to be executed locally This implies focus on integration, supervision and data collection This implies less focus on –detailed and advanced design –execution of large works –fundamental research activities

32 UNFCCC Technical Paper on Coastal Adaptation Technologies on the web Go to www.unfccc.de; then go to “programmes”; then go to “technology”; then click on the technical paper


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