Monday 16 December 2013

C-FISH: Alternative Livelihoods Programme and the Craft Fair Experience

Craft is not only a very important part of the culture and economic life of small communities, but is also a powerful medium for communicating messages of sustainability, community action and of course (coming soon) adaptation to climate change. 


CARIBSAVE, in partnership with community craft artisans from C-FISH beneficiary Fish Sanctuary communities participated in two Craft Fairs which were recently hosted in Kingston, Jamaica. CARIBSAVE and the artisans used the events to collect information from customers and craft producers to in order to enhance the C-FISH alternative livelihoods programme.


Thirty-two (32) artisans from three (3) areas were represented through craft products brought – Bluefields Bay fish sanctuary,  Oracabessa Bay and Sandals Boscobel fish sanctuaries, and Galleon, St. Elizabeth fish sanctuary (through the Treasure Beach Women’s Group).


The fairs also served as an opportunity for some of our partnered artisans to gain some valuable experience and exposure to the current market, networking (with other artisans and customers), assessing (of their group’s products in relation to current market) and opportunity for sales. All profits went back to artisans.


The community artisans were very appreciative and thankful for the experience, and representatives were able to return to their communities with feedback and suggestions for improvement and way forward. Market testing of current products also occurred during the craft fair to help guide product development and training workshops.


More information coming soon on this and the C-FISH website.

Thursday 7 November 2013

Greenhouse Gas Concentrations in Atmosphere Reach New Record

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Media Release from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO):

Geneva, 6 November 2013 - The amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere reached a new record high in 2012, continuing an upward and accelerating trend which is driving climate change and will shape the future of our planet for hundreds and thousands of years.


The World Meteorological Organization’s annual Greenhouse Gas Bulletin shows that between 1990 and 2012 there was a 32% increase in radiative forcing – the warming effect on our climate – because of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other heat-trapping long-lived gases such as methane and nitrous oxide.


Carbon dioxide, mainly from fossil fuel-related emissions, accounted for 80% of this increase. The atmospheric increase of CO2 from 2011 to 2012 was higher than its average growth rate over the past ten years, according to the Greenhouse Gas Bulletin.


Since the start of the industrial era in 1750, the global average concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere has increased by 41%, methane by 160% and nitrous oxide by 20%.


What is happening in the atmosphere is one part of a much wider picture. Only about half of the CO2 emitted by human activities remains in the atmosphere, with the rest being absorbed in the biosphere and in the oceans.


“The observations from WMO’s extensive Global Atmosphere Watch network highlight yet again how heat-trapping gases from human activities have upset the natural balance of our atmosphere and are a major contribution to climate change,” said WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud.


The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its recent 5th Assessment Report stressed that atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide have increased to levels unprecedented in at least the last 800,000 years,” he said.


“As a result of this, our climate is changing, our weather is more extreme, ice sheets and glaciers are melting and sea levels are rising,” said Mr Jarraud.


“According to the IPCC, if we continue with ‘business as usual,’ global average temperatures may be 4.6 degrees higher by the end of the century than pre-industrial levels – and even higher in some parts of the world. This would have devastating consequences,” he said.


“Limiting climate change will require large and sustained reductions of greenhouse gas emissions. We need to act now, otherwise we will jeopardize the future of our children, grandchildren and many future generations,” said Mr Jarraud. “Time is not on our side,” he added.


The WMO Greenhouse Gas Bulletin reports on atmospheric concentrations – and not emissions - of greenhouse gases. Emissions represent what goes into the atmosphere. Concentrations represent what remains in the atmosphere after the complex system of interactions between the atmosphere, biosphere and the oceans.


Carbon dioxide (CO2)


Carbon dioxide is the single most important greenhouse gas emitted by human activities such as fossil fuel burning and deforestation. According to WMO’s Greenhouse Gas Bulletin, on the global scale, the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere reached 393.1 parts per million in 2012, or 141% of the pre-industrial level of 278 parts per million.


The amount of CO2 in the atmosphere increased 2.2 parts per million from 2011 to 2012, which is above the average 2.02 parts per million per year for the past 10 years, showing an accelerating trend.


Monthly observed concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere exceeded the symbolic 400 parts per million threshhold at several Global Atmosphere Watch stations in the Arctic during 2012.  During 2013 hourly and daily concentrations passed this threshold in other parts of the world, including at Mauna Loa, Hawaii, the oldest continuous atmospheric measurement station in the world which is widely regarded as a benchmark site in the Global Atmosphere Watch. Concentrations of CO2 are subject to seasonal and regional fluctuations. At  the current rate of increase, the global annual average CO2  concentration is set to cross the 400 parts per million threshold in 2015 or 2016.


CO2 lingers in the atmosphere for hundreds if not thousands of years and so will determine global mean surface warming by the late 21st century and beyond. Most aspects of climate change will persist for centuries even if emissions of CO2 are stopped immediately.


Methane (CH4)


Methane is the second most important long-lived greenhouse gas. Approximately 40% of methane is emitted into the atmosphere by natural sources (e.g., wetlands and termites), and about 60 % comes from human activities like cattle breeding, rice agriculture, fossil fuel exploitation, landfills and biomass burning.


Atmospheric methane reached a new high of about 1819 parts per billion (ppb) in 2012, or 260% of the pre-industrial level, due to increased emissions from anthropogenic sources. Since 2007, atmospheric methane has been increasing again after a temporary period of levelling-off.


In a special section on methane, the bulletin said that there has not yet been a measurable increase in Arctic methane due to melting of the permafrost and hydrates. It said that the increase in global average methane levels was rather associated with increased emissions in the tropical and mid-latitude Northern Hemisphere. Attribution of this increase to anthropogenic (human-influenced) or natural sources requires better coverage and more sophisticated observations in the atmosphere which are currently not available.


Nitrous oxide (N2O)


Nitrous oxide is emitted into the atmosphere from both natural (about 60%) and anthropogenic sources (approximately 40%), including oceans, soil, biomass burning, fertilizer use, and various industrial processes. Its atmospheric concentration in 2012 was about 325.1 parts per billion, which is 0.9 parts per billion above the previous year and 120% of the pre-industrial level.  Its impact on climate, over a 100-year period, is 298 times greater than equal emissions of carbon dioxide. It also plays an important role in the destruction of the stratospheric ozone layer which protects us from the harmful ultraviolet rays of the sun.


Other greenhouse gases



The total radiative forcing by all long-lived greenhouse gases in 2012 corresponds to equivalent CO2 concentration of 475.6 parts per million, compared to 473.0 parts per million in 2011. Other long-lived greenhouse gases include ozone-depleting chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), as well as hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) and hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) which are increasing at relatively rapid rates.


Notes for Editors


The WMO Global Atmosphere Watch Programme (www.wmo.int/gaw) coordinates systematic observations and analysis of greenhouse gases and other trace species. Fifty countries contributed data for the Greenhouse Gas Bulletin. Measurement data are reported by participating countries and archived and distributed by the World Data Centre for Greenhouse Gases (WDCGG) at the Japan Meteorological Agency.


Additional resources: Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change 5th Assessment Report
(The Physical Science Basis) http://www.climatechange2013.org/
WMO: The Global Climate 2001-2010:
A Decade of Climate Extremes http://library.wmo.int/pmb_ged/wmo_1119_en.pdf


Note to journalists:  For more information, please see www.ipcc.ch, www.wmo.int or www.unep.org, or contact: Clare Nullis at WMO on +41-79-709-1397 or cnullis@wmo.int


Original Media Release can be found here.

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Wednesday 6 November 2013

VACANCY: East Africa Regional Coordinator

The INTASAVE Partnership and CARIBSAVE are seeking an experienced and self-motivated individual for the position of East Africa Regional Coordinator initially for a two-year term (open to renewal for the right candidate). The successful candidate will be based at our INTASAVE Office in Nairobi, Kenya; and will work directly with the Chief Executive Officer (CEO), managing and coordinating a growing number of projects in the East Africa region relating to innovative climate change solutions and sustainable international development.


A full description of the position is available for download below.


Please submit your application complete with a covering letter and Curriculum Vitae to the Human Resource Manager at: hr@caribsave.org. When submitting your application please quote reference “EAST AFRICA REGIONAL COORDINATOR” in the subject title of the email.


Closing date for applications is Friday, January 17th 2014.


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Monday 12 August 2013

The Partnership for Canada-Caribbean Community Climate Change Adaptation

Thousands of kilometres separate Negril in Jamaica and Lunenburg in Nova Scotia but one project is finding common ground between them.

The Partnership for Canada-Caribbean Community Climate Change Adaptation, or ParCA, is a five-year research programme investigating the ways Caribbean and Canadian coastal communities are grappling with long-term shifts in the environment and what they can teach each other.

It combines science and local knowledge to paint a big picture of change in four dramatically different places and pinpoint where those developments overlap. The four sites are Negril in Jamaica, Speyside to Charlotteville in Trinidad and Tobago, Lennox Island to Rustico in the Prince Edward Islands, and Lunenburg to Queens in Nova Scotia.

Beyond the obvious contrasts, the sites share some vulnerabilities and economic characteristics: each is making the switch to high-value tourism, each has strong links between fishing and tourism and each relies in big part on nearby protected marine zones. Learning how these factors play out in each area could be the start of a chain of best practices linking communities around the world.

Researchers will use the results to scale up plans to the national and regional levels, exploring where the authorities can sustainably develop a range of sectors, from coastal management and tourism planning to disaster preparedness and infrastructure.

The project is driven by a fundamental need to have people on the ground define just how and where their communities are vulnerable to climate change and what factors stand in the way of adaptation. The support and input of residents is critical if ideas for adaptation are to take root and grow into global collective knowledge.

That input is also essential if people are to come together around their common interests and use the strength of their combined local experience and resources to face challenges well into the future. ParCA’s goal is to leave a lasting legacy of shared awareness and information so that communities can find answers within themselves.

A big part of the endeavor will be to forge stronger scientific and professional research links between Canada and the Caribbean and train the next generation of highly qualified personnel. Scholarships will be awarded to many Caribbean nationals to conduct post-graduate studies at the Masters and PhD levels in various disciplines, ensuring ParCA’s ambitions live on well beyond the life of the project.

ParCA is a CARIBSAVE project conducted in partnership with the University of Waterloo (Canada).

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For further details about this initiative, visit the ParCA website: parca.uwaterloo.ca

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The overall objective of the five-year Partnership for Canada-Caribbean Community Climate Change Adaptation (ParCA) research programme, funded by the International Development Research Centre (IDRC), is to utilize a common community-based vulnerability assessment (CBVA) framework to integrate scientific and local knowledge from comparative ‘learning sites’ to understand the multi-scale socioeconomic, governance and environmental conditions that shape vulnerability and capacity to adapt to climate change within and between communities.

Four ‘Learning Sites’ have been strategically selected to take advantage of existing research networks of the research team, as well as common vulnerabilities and economic characteristics (e.g., high value tourism economy, tourism-fishery linkages, and significance of nearby protected areas to community livelihoods). These shared characteristics will serve to maximise the transferability of knowledge and best-practices to the hundreds of communities that will face common challenges in the Caribbean and Atlantic Canada.

The four sites (two in the Caribbean and two in Canada) are:

  1. Jamaica: Negril to Montego Bay (Northwest shore)

  2. Trinidad and Tobago: Speyside to Charlotteville [including Little Tobago], Tobago)

  3. Prince Edward Islands (PEI): Lennox Island to Rustico (North shore)

  4. Nova Scotia: Lunenburg to Queens (South shore)


Five principles guide the ParCA project: 1) application of a community?based vulnerability assessment (CBVA) framework to identify, in collaboration with communities and partners, exposure?sensitivities and associated adaptation strategies; 2) addressing key data gaps that constrain adaptation efforts in the Caribbean and Atlantic Canada; 3) participatory development and evaluation of adaptation portfolios; 4) ‘mainstreaming’ and ‘scaling?up’ of adaptation planning to incorporate local perspectives and values into governance arrangements for climate change adaptation; and 5) mobilising knowledge and empowering communities and partners to respond to climate change.

The approach directly meets the need for participatory community based adaptation research in the Caribbean region. CBVA has proven an effective tool for community engagement in the dialogue on adaptation, with strengths that include highlighting the needs of the various stakeholders within communities, the integration of local-traditional knowledge, and the identification of existing adaptation practices and contributors to adaptive capacity. The approach also identifies the role of climate-related exposures in the context of other, non-climatic stresses and highlights the necessity of understanding that adaptation decisions to climate change are rarely made in isolation from other social, economic and political concerns.

 

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Climate Change Risk Atlas

CARIBSAVE’s flagship Climate Change Risk Atlas is where the best climate science and thinking from communities come together to enable a region prepare for the future.  In short, it’s a one-stop, comprehensive guide to the threats climate change poses to 15 Caribbean countries and what they can do about them.


Framed with the key tourism sector in mind, the atlas pinpoints where and when fundamental shifts in the environment will occur across the Caribbean and how they will affect every aspect of life.


During three years, some of the world’s leading researchers in climate, physical and social sciences plotted the path of coming change and assessed the vulnerability of the region’s people, environment and infrastructure. The team worked with regional experts and institutions, particularly the University of the West Indies and the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre and applied various state-of-the-art, high-resolution climate models to estimate the most likely changes across the region. The project also used advanced mapping and survey techniques to identify where storm surges would hit or what infrastructure would be submerged by the projected rise in sea level.


Hundreds of meetings were held with residents, businesses and decision-makers to build up a picture of the social and economic consequences of the projected changes, adding an essential practical outlook and community knowledge to the project. When the consultations were done, the researchers had a much better idea of what the priorities would be for each community.


A critical goal of the consultation phase was to “democratise” climate change science. Through film (insert YouTube link), clear data maps and animation, the team brought the message home to individuals, explaining what changes, for example, increases in water temperature, were likely to mean for them.  Further, at each stage of the project, vital information surfacing from the study was shared with key ministries and policymakers in each country, underscoring the fact that climate change affects not only the environment but the economy, society, the physical landscape and national finances.


The task was to suggest ways that each island could take to mitigate and offset these threats. Coastal threats emerged as a core issue, with storms and hurricanes projected to increase in intensity and inflict an ever-greater toll, damage that will be compounded by sea level rise. The region’s largest industry, tourism and key infrastructure such as roads and airports, which are mostly based along the coastline, are highly vulnerable to these projected threats.  Further, the degradation of coastal ecosystems, in particular coral reefs, will also add to the rate of coastal erosion and risk of flooding.


Food security and energy were also key issues for the region, as most countries rely on imports to meet their needs.  Despite the availability of abundant renewable energy sources such as solar and wind, seven of the 15 countries examined rely on fossil fuels to generate all of their electricity. Here, cutting dependency on these fuels and turning to alternative sources makes sound economic and environmental sense; it would allow money spent on fuel to be diverted to local sources and play a part in reducing carbon emissions. Suriname, one country in the study, is leading the way, producing 95 percent of its power from hydro plants.


The result of the project is an accessible, science-based, practical guide that lets the general public and specialists alike compare and contrast their present and future risks.


The CARIBSAVE Climate Change Risk Atlas was funded by UKaid from the United Kingdom Department for International Development and the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID).


The project was implemented in 15 countries: Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, the Dominican Republic, Grenada, Jamaica, Nevis, St Lucia, St Kitts, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, and the Turks and Caicos.


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For more information click here: link to the short CCCRA Briefing Note

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The CARIBSAVE Climate Change Risk Atlas was funded by UKaid from the United Kingdom Department for International Development (DFID) and the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID). The project was implemented in 15 countries: Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, The Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Grenada, Jamaica, Nevis, St. Lucia, St Kitts, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, and the Turks and Caicos, over a period of three (3) years, and focused on reducing vulnerability and enhancing resilience of the tourism sector and related sectors, vital to the economy and livelihoods of the Caribbean region.


These sectors or components were:




  1. Climate Data, Variable Modelling and Impacts

  2. Water Resources

  3. Energy

  4. Agriculture and Food Security

  5. Human Health

  6. Biodiversity (Marine and Terrestrial) and Fisheries

  7. Sea Level Rise and Storm Surge Impacts on Coastal Infrastructure and Settlements

  8. Comprehensive Disaster Management

  9. Community Livelihoods, Gender, Poverty & Development


The main outputs from CCCRA Phase I are Climate Change Risk Country Profiles which detail the key climate processes of relevance and key results specific to each country; the analysis of sea level rise and storm surge impacts on sections of national coastlines; the impact of climate change on coastal communities and an assessment of gender and livelihood differentials; and in coordination with national stakeholders vulnerability and adaptive capacity analyses of tourism and its related sectors are conducted. These outputs contribute to the work being conducted by national and regional organisations working in the areas of gender, sustainable development, climate change, and risk and disaster management. Other crucial components of the project included significant capacity building and awareness?raising initiatives for a range of agencies and institutions including coastal management agencies in the countries, national, local and regional tourism stakeholders, local communities and the University of West Indies.




 

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Greening Tobago

The belief is clear – the question is how to get there. There is widespread appeal throughout the Caribbean to turn the region’s islands into green economies where the only footprint is the one left by people in the sand.

One of the big elements of this transformation would be to encourage more use of renewable technology and less consumption of ever-more expensive fossil fuels.

Trinidad and Tobago is one country that could lead the way. Unlike most other island developing states, Trinidad is a major producer and exporter of fossil fuels, mainly natural gas.  The smaller sister Island of Tobago, however, is famed as one of the most pristine Caribbean tourist islands and markets as “Green, Clean and Serene”.  The economic drivers of these two islands are clearly in sharp contrast, but their differences are an opportunity for Trinidad and Tobago to diversify both its economic and energy bases.  Also, the country is in the envious position of being one of the few in the Caribbean that could afford to invest in a large-scale transition to renewable energy as part of its tourism branding for Tobago.  It’s a shift that could present major business opportunities for Trinidad and Tobago in the manufacturing of low-carbon and renewable technologies.

How can it be achieved?


With funding from the British High Commission and the German Embassy, CARIBSAVE carried out a consultation and workshop in Tobago to investigate the idea. The project was called Greening Tobago and it looked at the challenges Tobagonians face in making the switch to renewable energy, power-efficient technology and low-carbon economic growth.

Tobago was chosen as a pilot site because its government is committed to helping its citizens prosper, its authorities are keenly aware of the need to cut emissions of greenhouse gases and it has an abundance of natural sources of renewable energy.

In the first phase of the project, talks with government, non-governmental organisations and business exposed a wealth of ideas for achieving greener development. One of the most promising proposals was to transform Tobago into a “low-carbon tourism destination”, a proposal that could both conserve the limited fossil fuels and be a major marketing pull for tourism.

The ideas from the talks were sent out to involved parties for feedback and suggestions. The results revealed broad support for low-carbon goals as well as major challenges in meeting them. The main barriers were the high initial cost of alternative energy systems, government subsidies for fuel imports, the need for more government leadership in the area and a lack of people with the technical skills to install and maintain renewable energy systems.

The study is one activity in a bigger effort to assist the people of the Caribbean move toward a sustainable future and prosperous green economies.

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For further information contact: Dr Owen Day, owen.day@caribsave.org

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Funded by the British High Commission and the German Embassy, this project focused on addressing the challenges facing Tobagonian stakeholders in adopting renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies, revealing an array of actions that could be taken forward to facilitate greater investments in these areas in pursuit of a green growth low-carbon development pathway and potentially 'carbon-neutral tourism destination' status.

 

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MSMEs: Building Climate Resilience (CCCCE-ARK)

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For many people living in the Caribbean, the difference is already being felt: climate change and a host of other factors have led to unpredictable weather and the loss or degradation of natural resources, like coastal erosion.  Whether they make their living from the sea, farming, tourism or crafts, residents in coastal communities want to know and understand more about these changes because they affect their lives and livelihoods.

The big question for them is what they can do about it?


The Climate Change, Coastal Community Enterprises, Adaptation, Resilience and Knowledge (CCCCE-ARK – pronounced “sea-ark”) project, is a two-and-a-half-year initiative to help people who operate small-scale businesses tackle the storms of climate change and make their businesses more economically viable and sustainable over time. It involves finding ways to deal with the challenges they face, for example water scarcity, drought, flooding and coastal erosion from storm surge and sea level rise.

Small businesses play a vital role in Caribbean coastal communities and their local economies, providing about 90 percent of all jobs and accounting for roughly 70 percent of the overall economy. They are also some of the most vulnerable to both environmental and economic impacts  – their reliance on natural resources combined with their limited financial means (amongst others), makes it that much harder for them to change their  operations, relocate or rebuild when disaster strikes.

The CCCCE-ARK project will benefit about 1,200 low-income residents and 50 micro- to medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) across eight coastal communities in Jamaica, Belize, Barbados, and the Bahamas. Its goal is to develop adaptation plans for the community as whole, and also for the 50 enterprises participating in the project. Half of these businesses will receive funding and targeted training to put their adaptation strategies into commercial practice. Participants will be selected based on their interest, capacity to learn and ability to influence others in the community.

Best practices will be shared from community to community, and country to country through several exchanges. For example, Bahamian fishermen, who have already well-established sustainable fishing practices designed to counter coral bleaching, will travel to Barbados to share their experience with fishermen there. Conditions will vary from business to business and place to place but the underlying holistic approach promises benefits for the wider MSME community.

This project is just the start of what is hoped will be a broader venture showing other communities and businesses throughout the region how the model can be expanded and applied to their situation.  Case studies and videos of the lessons learned from the process will be made available so that others too, can find a way to adapt their businesses to thrive in the future – despite a changing climate.

The project is the first climate change adaptation project being funded by the Multilateral Investment Facility of the Inter-American Development Bank.

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For further information contact: Judi Clarke,  judi.clarke@caribsave.org

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The Climate Change, Coastal Community Enterprises, Adaptation, Resilience and Knowledge project, or CCCCE-ARK, is a two and a half year-long initiative being funded by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), and the purpose of the project is to ensure that 50 micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) across 8 coastal communities in Jamaica, Belize, Barbados, and the Bahamas are more resilient to changes in climate. More specifically, it is anticipated that 1,200 low income individuals will benefit from capacity building workshops on climate change and adaptation, and 50 MSMEs including fishermen, tourism operators, and craftsmen will receive training in climate change adaptation. 25 MSMEs will receive additional training to incorporate climate change into their business plans, and funding to launch initiatives. The indirect beneficiaries will be: 3,000 low-income individuals, family members and friends of project participants, who will indirectly gain knowledge about potential climate change impacts, business adaptation alternatives, and potential alternative income-generating activities.

The project consists of four primary components: (1) the development of Community Adaptation Plans; (2) implementation of Community Adaptation Plans through training; (3) the development and implementation of detailed MSME Adaptation Plans; and (4) dissemination, monitoring, and evaluation of results. Along with the community and MSME adaptation plans, other project outputs will include an inventory of MSMEs and local stakeholders in coastal communities; climate change training of coastal MSMEs; creation of knowledge networks between selected coastal communities; funded and implemented MSME adaptation strategies; and knowledge products, including video, radio, and written case studies.

This project will demonstrate a model that can be continued and expanded after project completion. The knowledge and learning products generated, such as videos, audio and reports will summarise the lessons learned from this early MSME adaptation project. At the end of the project, beneficiary coastal communities and MSMEs will understand the risks presented by changing climate, allowing them to have developed appropriate adaptation and response strategies for their homes and businesses, and to share lessons with each other and other non-target vulnerable coastal communities.

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Management of Caribbean Climate Change Research Projects

CARIBSAVE’s wealth of expertise puts it not only at the forefront of work in climate change in the Caribbean, but also at the centre of efforts to conduct climate research in the Caribbean.


In November 2011, The CARIBSAVE Partnership was selected by the Climate Development Knowledge Network, as the managing partner of the Climate and Development Knowledge Network in an initiative to support climate change research in the Caribbean and to help decision-makers design and deliver climate-compatible development.


Through a process of inviting research proposals and rigorously evaluating them against a set of criteria, CARIBSAVE and an international expert panel selected five research projects to receive a total of US$480,000 in funding from the UK’s Department for International Development and the Netherlands’ Directorate-General for International Cooperation.  These are:





    1. "Participatory research to enhance climate change policy and institutions in the Caribbean: ARIA tool pilot” being implemented by the Caribbean Natural Resources Institute.

    2. "Assessing the potential impacts of climate change on Belize’s water resources” being implemented by the Environmental Research Institute of the University of Belize.

    3. “Climate Change and inland flooding in Jamaica, risk and adaptation measures for vulnerable communities” being implemented by the Department of  Geography and  Geology, Mona Campus, University of the West Indies.

    4. "Identifying opportunities for climate compatible tourism development in Belize” being implemented by the World Wildlife Fund Belize.

    5. “Climate Impacts and Resilience in Caribbean Agriculture: Assessing the consequences of climate change on cocoa and tomato production in Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica”  - being jointly implemented by the Department of Geography and Geology, Mona Campus and the Department of Life Sciences, St. Augustine Campus, both of the University of the West Indies.



The range of outcomes from this two-year initiative will include case studies of activities which are compatible with climate change, planning and practice in a range of countries and contexts as well as academic peer-reviewed papers.


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For more information contact: Judi Clarke, judi.clarke@caribsave.org

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In progress...

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Loss & Damage from Slow Onset Events in SIDS

The changes may be gradual but the dangers are potent and real. Sea level rise, higher temperatures, ocean acidification, desertification and salinity, all associated with climate change, take a long time to appear but deserve immediate attention.


There is much that can be done to minimise these “slow onset” events but for many small island developing states the solutions are out of reach – their already limited resources are focused on defending their economies and communities from the damage of extreme weather events and responding to economic, environmental and social losses when they happen.


CARIBSAVE’s 2013 study “Assessing and Addressing Loss and Damage from Slow Onset Events in Small Island Developing States and Vulnerable Countries”, gives vulnerable countries an overview of the pragmatic and realistic responses they can make to slow onset events and the help that’s available to implement them. This project is funded by: the United Nations Development Programme, Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States.


Slow onset events are complex and interconnected, and can have a lasting impact across a population, from the way people earn a living to the best place to build an airport. The responses can range from drafting better building practices for more efficient water use and retrofitting hospitals for greater ventilation, to cultivating lower-impact food production.


There are many international mechanisms to help smaller countries cope with climate change but most don’t specifically address the longer-term phenomena. However, many of these schemes have elements that can be repurposed for adaptation to slow onset events. Funding and technical support is available under programmes like the Kyoto Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism and the Hyogo Framework for Action.


There are also ways that smaller island states can prepare now for inevitable losses in the future. In some cases, for example, it will be unfeasible to protect very low-lying and very small islands from sea level rise, so plans have to be put in place now to relocate people living in those areas. Countries can start preparing for those unavoidable losses by building up reserve funds or securing loans when interest rates are lower. Some form of insurance scheme specifically for slow onset events would also go a long way in preventing financial setbacks, as yet one does not exist.


It is clear that the benefits of avoiding slow onset losses outweigh the costs of repairing damage once it is done. For many small island developing states, action is required now, before the costs become prohibitive.


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For further information contact: Dr. Murray Simpson, author, murray.simpson@caribsave.org

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Tourism Sector in Barbados

At a few degrees above the equator, Barbados is perfectly positioned as a tropical paradise.

The sun, surf and coral sand beaches are an easy sell that draws more than half a million visitors to the island each year. This could all change if what is now seen as a sunny, relaxing clime becomes too hot for comfort or if the beaches disappear under rising sea levels.

These changes are some of the possibilities CARIBSAVE detailed in its 2010 economic assessment on the impacts of climate change on the tourism sector in Barbados.  A report commissioned by United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean.


Tourism is the mainstay of Barbados’ economy and the industry is expected to grow in the country and throughout the region. The sector contributes about 12 percent directly to the economy and employs more than 13,000 people.  And its real impact is much wider, touching the water, energy and agriculture sectors, to name a few. Therefore, any threat to the industry as a whole presents grave dangers to the jobs and livelihoods of people working throughout the tourism chain.


And climate change presents such threats. Sea levels are rising, temperatures are increasing and rainfall patterns are shifting.

Consequently, the report specifically investigated the diverse effects global climatic shifts are likely to have on the island and its tourism-driven economy. The main issues that emerged were damage to coral reefs, destruction of land and property due to sea level rise and “tourist mobility” - travellers heading elsewhere as the destination becomes less attractive.

The researchers also looked at a range of options the island and its people could invest in, to offset the potentially devastating losses. The options offered relatively high benefits compared to the costs involved and would be straightforward to implement. They included better reef monitoring systems to provide early warnings of bleaching events and artificial reefs for encouraging the growth of coral and fish habitat.  Both would protect the marine ecosystem and thereby the beaches.

Tourism is at the heart of the Barbadian economy and central to the challenges shaped by climate change. Similarly, CARIBSAVE is at the heart of efforts to ensure that Barbados retains its natural beauty and ability to sustain itself as an island tourism destination.

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For further information contact: Dr. Murray Simpson, lead author of the study, murray.simpson@caribsave.org

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Climate Change and Sea Level Rise Impacts in the Caribbean & Pacific

The island communities of the Caribbean and Pacific contribute less than 1 percent to global greenhouse gas emissions but these countries are expected to be among the earliest and hardest-hit by climate change in the coming decades.

Their relative isolation, small land masses, concentrated coastal infrastructure and populations, small economies and dependency on natural resources makes them particularly exposed to extreme events and climate change impacts. These threats are compounded by a lack of technical expertise and finance.

But just how big are those threats and where are they likely to be felt the most? The United Nations Development Programme and funding bodies in Britain and Australia commissioned CARIBSAVE to catalogue those threats and impacts in a comprehensive study of the Caribbean, with added analysis for the Pacific islands.

The report was divided into two major phases. In the first, high-resolution climate models were overlaid on the Caribbean region to map likely sea level rises if average global temperatures were to increase by 1.5 degrees Celsius and 2 degrees Celsius. The results gave a clear overview of the potential effects on vital resources like coral reefs and water supplies.

In the second phase, CARIBSAVE researchers quantified the cost of those upheavals to key sectors of the economy, putting a price on replacing lost environmental benefits like fresh drinking water. It drove home the need to bind detailed climate modeling into the decision-making process and to refine the ways these islands calculate the damage bill.

The reports revealed that the type of impacts of each scenario would be largely the same for all of the island communities but the scale of the fallout would vary dramatically. For example, a larger share of the population and infrastructure of Antigua and Belize would be susceptible to flooding from storm surges than in other places because of their proximity to the coast.

Decision-makers and many members of the general public are well aware that climate change threatens to transform their lives but there is little effective they can do without this kind of granular analysis. These reports not only provide the data and projections, they contain a raft of recommendations that all can use as a springboard for adaptation.

There is no doubt that the impact of sea level rises will affect every aspect of island communities. Unless there is targeted protection for life along coasts and careful planning of future infrastructure, island communities in the Caribbean and the Pacific will struggle to adapt to the tide of environmental change.

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PHASE ONE: AN OVERVIEW OF MODELLING CLIMATE CHANGE: IMPACTS IN THE CARIBBEAN WITH CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE PACIFIC REGION

This report, commissioned by the UNDP Sub-Regional Office for Barbados and the OCES and the UK Department for International Development (DFID) with support from Australia’s International Climate Change Adaptation Initiative; presented an overview for all CARICOM Member States of the risks from climate change, with a section on common threats of climate change for the Pacific island countries. It focused on climate change projections for the Caribbean region under +1.5°C and +2°C global warming scenarios, the implications of ice sheet melt for global sea level rise (SLR), the projections and implications of SLR for the Caribbean region, evaluation of the differential impacts of +1.5°C and +2°C on coral reefs, water resources and agriculture in the Caribbean, with additional analysis for the Pacific Islands.

Below are the outputs for Phase I:

An Overview of Modelling Climate Change: Impacts in the Caribbean Region with contribution from the Pacific Islands: Full Document | DOWNLOAD

An Overview of Modelling Climate Change: Impacts in the Caribbean Region with contribution from the Pacific Islands: Summary Document | DOWNLOAD

An Overview of Modelling Climate Change: Impacts in the Caribbean Region with contribution from the Pacific Islands: Key Points Document | DOWNLOAD




PHASE TWO: QUANTIFICATION AND MAGNITUDE OF LOSSES AND DAMAGES RESULTING FROM THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE: MODELLING THE TRANSFORMATIONAL IMPACTS AND COSTS OF SEA LEVEL RISE IN THE CARIBBEAN

This report, commissioned by the UNDP Sub-Regional Office for Barbados and the OCES, builds on the scientific foundations of Phase I and focuses on the recommendations, prioritised by the CARICOM Task Force on Climate Change and Development to be undertaken as soon as possible: (1) improving climate change modelling for making informed decisions, and (2) improving predictions of impacts on key sectors and assessing adaptation measures. Specifically, this report provides a detailed and vigorous assessment of the losses and damages associated with sea level rise impacts on the population, ecosystems and key economic sectors in CARICOM nations.

Below are the outputs for Phase II:

Quantification and Magnitude of Losses and Damages Resulting from the Impacts of Climate Change: Modelling the Transformational Impacts and Costs of Sea Level Rise in the Caribbean: Full Document | DOWNLOAD

Quantification and Magnitude of Losses and Damages Resulting from the Impacts of Climate Change: Modelling the Transformational Impacts and Costs of Sea Level Rise in the Caribbean: Summary Document | DOWNLOAD

Quantification and Magnitude of Losses and Damages Resulting from the Impacts of Climate Change: Modelling the Transformational Impacts and Costs of Sea Level Rise in the Caribbean: Key Points and Summary for Policy Makers | DOWNLOAD

 

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Barbados - Second National Communication

Barbados has been a signatory to the world’s key climate change convention for two decades - signing up is just the start. Each country that commits to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) must prepare detailed reports on how they are putting the agreement into practice.


These reports, or National Communications, describe the range of socio-economic factors that influence a country’s vulnerability and capacity to adapt to climate change, from education and technology to financial resources and public awareness. In addition, the report provides an inventory of greenhouse gas emission sources and describes the efforts under way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It’s a highly demanding technical assessment and requires the skills and experience of expert researchers.

In 2011, Barbados’ Ministry of Environment and Drainage enlisted consultancy Environment Gain Ltd (Engain) from the UK – who then partnered with CARIBSAVE – to prepare the country’s Second National Communication report on progress made towards the convention’s goals.


The report draws on a wide range of public and private sources for data and information to ensure that the final document has the thoroughness the topic deserves. CARIBSAVE is responsible for reporting on how Barbados can adapt to the impacts of climate change and cut emissions to minimise environmental shifts.


Because of their international profile, these documents are some of the most important tools communities have to bring national climate change concerns to the attention of international policymakers and help identify where a country needs assistance. The documents are also the main reference point for national-level stakeholders interested in climate change.


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Barbados ratified the UNFCCC on 23 March 1994 and the Kyoto Protocol on 7 August 2000. Parties to the UNFCCC must submit national reports on their implementation of the Convention to the Conference of the Parties. Barbados submitted its First National Communication (FNC) Report in November 2001 with the aid of technical and financial support from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Global Environment Facility (GEF). The report included information on national circumstances, vulnerability assessment, financial resources and transfer of technology, and education, training and public awareness. This project will result in the submission of the Second National Communication in 2013.


The Ministry of Environment and Drainage (MED) of the Government of Barbados secured the services of Environmental Gain Ltd (Engain) to produce a Second National Communication (SNC) that will provide a greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions inventory for Barbados and information on the mitigation of, and adaptation to, expected climate change impacts in the country. Engain have partnered with Aether of the UK and The CARIBSAVE Partnership to complete this important report.


The project consists of six (6) main components:




  • National Circumstances

  • GHG Inventory

  • Programmes on Adaptation

  • Mitigation Measures

  • Other Gaps

  • Constraints/Gaps


Compilation of the report requires the collation of data and information from a large number of organisations, both public and private, to ensure the SNC provides the best possible information. In addition, reporting on and assessing climate change mitigation options and adaptation strategies will require the active involvement of a wide number of people and organisations, and this activity should continue after the compilation of the SNC.


The National Communications are one of the most important tools for bringing climate change concerns to the attention of policy makers at the national level through highlighting and disseminating climate change concerns. Climate change is a complex issue, which has inevitable consequences for all spheres of the environment and subsequently the economy.




 

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Agriculture and Tourism in Jamaica

Agriculture and tourism are the old and the new of the Jamaican economy and have two crucial features in common: they’re both critical sources of income for the island and they are both on the front line of climate change.

As temperatures, sea levels and storm intensity rise, tourism and agriculture will be under assault and the ways that worked in the past will not be guarantees of prosperity in the future. Farmers may face lower yields, more crop failures and greater numbers of pests, while tourism operators may contend increased beachfront erosion, higher prices for imported food and infrastructure damage from flooding and storms.

In 2010, the Institute for Environment and Development with Oxfam enlisted CARIBSAVE to look at how climate change is likely to impact on tourism and agriculture and how that fallout affects socio-economic development, poverty and gender relations.

The researchers found that because tourism and agriculture are integral to the livelihoods of tens of thousands of Jamaicans, they are also central to any effort to adapt to climate change. However, the sectors differ in several key ways: tourism contributes about 5.8 percent of gross domestic product and directly employs around 80,000 people, whereas farming makes a similar contribution to the economy but employs many more people - about 230,000, most of whom are the poorest in the country.

Each sector has the potential to support the other as Jamaica tries to plan for and fortify itself against the effects of climate change. Stronger links between the two, such as greater use of local food in tourist resorts, can reduce tourism’s reliance on imports and raise incomes for Jamaican farmers. That kind of interdependence gives each party an interest in the other’s future, making otherwise separate needs, such as water supply, common.

The study also concluded that an understanding of the different roles men and women play in Jamaica is essential to any plans for the future. Labour is often defined along gender lines, exposing women and men to different risks and opportunities.

Temperatures are already on the rise in Jamaica and rainfall is varying from year to year. It’s a dynamic set of factors that will influence agriculture and tourism in disparate ways but in similar amounts - capitalising on this is the best survival strategy on offer.

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Sustainable Tourism Indicators

European Tourism Indicator System for Sustainable Management of Tourism Destinations


The tourism industry has long based its growth on visitor numbers but these rarely give the full picture. Data like visitor arrivals and room occupancy give a quick snapshot of a resort’s economic health but don’t show the full scope of an industry’s impact on the environment or local communities.


In 2012, the European Commission enlisted INTASAVE, the University of Surrey and Sustainable Travel International to come up with a series of measures that destinations could use to monitor the sustainability of tourism in their area.


The project - officially known as “A Study on the Feasibility of a European Tourism Indicator System for Sustainable Management at Destination Level” - is part of the European Commission’s drive to make the tourism industry more competitive and improve social, environmental and economic sustainability.


The first step in the project was to analyse the pros and cons of existing indicator systems. The lessons learned from this exercise were then fed into the development of a refined set of indicators, with a manual outlining a system to use for their implementation. This system and the revised indicators were then tested at workshops across Europe to see if they would be useful for every type of tourism destination, from ski centres to beach resorts.


The result is the European Tourism Indicator System, a set of, ready-to-use core measures to help all those connected with tourism at a destination build up an accurate picture of what is really going on. So for the first time sectors like waste disposal, utility companies, local planners, business owners, tourist authorities and others can come together to look at this picture and decide together on how they would like it to evolve.


As Malcolm Bell, from Visit Cornwall said: “The European Tourism Indicator System enables destinations to develop the tourism they want, rather than the tourism they end up with.”


The system was officially launched by the European Commission in Brussels in February 2013. Destinations across Europe are now adopting it to feed back into a revision planned for 2015, and the system is expected to continuously evolve.


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European Union Indicators for Sustainable Management at Destination Level
A Europe-wide feasibility study and implementation of a system of indicators and toolkit for national and local stakeholders funded by the European Commission.


 




 

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Climate Change & Tourism Policies of SIDS, LDCs and Vulnerable Economies

Tourism is more than just visiting places of interest on a map. For small island states and less-developed economies in regions like the Caribbean, it sustains the lives of vast numbers of people and offers hope of a way out of poverty for many more.

But tourism is also highly vulnerable to the risks of long-term changes in the climate. The industry relies on holiday destinations having good weather to draw visitors, and changes to this delicate environmental balance can disrupt whole ways of life. In some cases, it can threaten a country’s political and economic foundations.

At the same time, tourism contributes to climate change, accounting for about 5 percent of carbon dioxide emissions, in large part due to air travel.

It’s essential then that governments integrate tourism into their decisions on climate change policy and aim to achieve a delicate balance between economic benefit and environmental impact.

In 2011, the British government’s Commonwealth Secretariat invited INTASAVE to contribute to a high-level discussion and prepare an analytical report on climate change and tourism policies in small island states, least developed countries and vulnerable economies.

The report is both specific and wide-ranging in one. It examines the role international tourism plays in social and economic development of these communities and the extent to which factors like rising sea levels, warming ocean temperatures, soil changes and more frequent forest fires will threaten the infrastructure supporting the industry.

The study also suggests action that governments in these countries can take to head off potential losses and identifies the gaps in knowledge and skills that prevent them from taking those steps. Every country faces its own set of challenges but there are precedents that each can use to adapt to and minimise the impact of climate change. Communities must also work together to reduce competition for increasingly scarce resources like water if entire populations are to navigate a course through the changing climate.

Smaller, vulnerable economies can improve their prospects of survival by sharing knowledge, skills and resources on a regional basis. It’s the most cost-effective way of tackling the issue and one that Caribbean countries, particularly members of the Caribbean Community, are already embracing.

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Culture of Climate Change Index; Temperature Fluctuations for 27 Countries

The Culture of Climate Change Index accounts for a variety of factors and a wide range of data that set a benchmark for 27 countries to see how far each is along the road to sustainability.


Sponsored by the British Council (China), the index is a combination of soft and hard information that incorporates factors as diverse as public awareness and civil society to average surface temperatures and energy consumption.


INTASAVE provided the critical temperature data for each of the countries, spanning the globe from Australia to Sudan to Venezuela. These numbers are essential if the index is to have a solid foundation of climate science evidence on which to base later comparisons.


Using triangulated methodologies, INTASAVE’s researchers calculated and plotted mean average temperature fluctuations across each country over a five-decade period. It was a vast task that revealed significant variations in temperature in all but one of the countries over the study period.


Numbers are not solutions but they serve as important guides for measuring a country’s impact on the environment. The data provided and index, as a combined analysis, can also give impetus to action and point to models that other countries might follow to improve sustainability.


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Socio-Economic Climate Change Risk and Vulnerability Assessments and Methodologies (SECCRVAM)

Some of the first climate change questions any community has to answer, is when and how to react to clear and present dangers and when and how to anticipate the threats that are to come.

Over the years, researchers and practitioners have crafted a wealth of increasingly sophisticated formulae - called risk and vulnerability assessments - for helping societies answer those questions.

The assessments aim to define where communities and nations are most exposed to the expected changes and why these systems are likely to be vulnerable. It’s a combination of causes and consequences on which individuals and policymakers alike can plan their future.

Over the past two decades, the methods and tools of these assessments have mushroomed as interest and urgency around climate change has grown. But this diversity of approaches raises its own question: just which method is the most effective?

In 2012, INTASAVE was enlisted by Adapting to Climate Change in China (ACCC) to survey the vast field of assessment methodology and report back on which ones worked best where and why, and in particular which would be most useful for China's communities and their developing country partners. The project was called SECCRVAM – Socio-Economic Climate Change Risk and Vulnerability Assessment Methodology Report.

In all, 28 of the most widely used methods were compared and contrasted using nine major criteria. The INTASAVE researchers examined the range of approaches – from top-down to bottom-up – to see how they shaped up on factors such as stakeholder engagement, costs and data requirements, among others.

The overall conclusion was that no one method is suitable for all countries and all contexts – the choice depends on conditions on the ground and the best approach is a combination of methods. The study also revealed the gaps and limitations of each method and a holistic incorporation of top-down and bottom-up methodologies.

Four approaches emerged from the pack with a number of common strengths. They proved to be the most flexible, broadly applicable, detailed, affordable and successful. These were:

  • The UK’s Climate Change Risk Assessment; for national scale (top-down) vulnerability assessments

  • The Community-based Vulnerability Assessment (CBVA) Framework; for community- and organization-level (bottom-up) vulnerability assessments

  • The UKCIP Adaptation Wizard

  • The UKCIP Business Areas Climate Assessment Tool (BACLIAT)


For communities with scarce resources, the future depends on knowing what is susceptible and why and those answers depend upon the right research methods being applied and the most suitable analyses for each situation, this is what SECCRVAM provides.

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This project is providing recommendations and a completed step by step guide for the implementation of a socio-economic climate change risk assessment methodology; as well as reviewing and assessing the current work on socio economic scenarios submitted by the China ASS funded by the Adaptation to Climate Change in China (ACCC) initiative conducted by DFID-China.

 

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China and South-South Scoping Assessment for Adaptation, Learning andDevelopment (CASSALD)

Developing countries and small islands face huge challenges from global warming and climate change and few countries face greater impacts than China. All countries, particularly those in the developing world, can learn from the Asian giant’s experience and share each other's knowledge to assist one another.

INTASAVE’s goal with the China and South-South Scoping Assessment for Adaptation, Learning and Development project, or CASSALD, is to identify where and how 10 developing countries in three regions can use China’s knowledge of adaptation in their own communities. It also sets out how resources in China can best be channeled to those countries to make a difference and how South-South countries can help each other with adaptation to climate change.

China’s history of lifting millions of people out of poverty gives it a high level of respect in development work. It has an important role to play in global development and has much to offer in terms of practical knowledge and technical expertise such as weather forecasting, disaster prediction, sustainable agriculture and water conservation. It is also a growing source of conservation technology and training.

INTASAVE’s partner and donor in the project is Adapting to Climate Change in China (ACCC), an innovative research initiative that links climate research with policy and development at the highest levels.

Partnerships of this kind are essential if developing countries and their people are to flourish in an ever-changing natural environment. No one country has the resources to stand alone and no one nation is an island from the others’ actions. International exchanges can also steer partners clear of strategies that haven’t worked, conserving scarce resources and saving valuable time.

Over the life of this initial project, INTASAVE identified priority countries for exchanges and the ties between development and adaptation. It mapped out ways each partner could plug gaps in knowledge and analysed their relationship with China, now and in the future. The research was undertaken in Angola, Ethiopia, Kenya, South Africa, Rwanda, Bangladesh, Nepal, Indonesia, Grenada and Jamaica, spanning sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and the Caribbean.

The end result was a 12-point list of recommendations in which international development agencies could promote cooperation between China and the global South. Underpinning all recommendations is the need for every project to be driven by verifiable demand and with a long-term outlook and perspective.

For further information contact: admin@intasave.org or murray.simpson@intasave.org


OVERVIEW

The overarching aim of Phase 1 of the China and South-South Scoping Assessment for Learning and Development initiative is to identify key opportunities and avenues for South-South learning and climate compatible development and how to best channel resources to share China's and developing countries' experiences of integrating climate adaptation into the development process. This project is being implemented in ten (10) countries across three regions including Africa (Angola, Ethiopia, Kenya, South Africa, Rwanda); Asia (Bangladesh, Nepal, Indonesia) and the Caribbean (Grenada, Jamaica). Final outputs from Phase 1, including the Full Report and Country Reports follow details on the project below.

BACKGROUND

The project Adapting to Climate Change in China (ACCC) is an innovative policy research initiative focusing on linking climate change research with policy making and development. ACCC started in June 2009 as a collaboration between UK, China and Switzerland; it is funded by DFID China, the Swiss Agency for Development Cooperation, DFID Research and the UK Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC). ACCC is building on the results of a long standing collaboration between UK and China in the area of climate change adaptation. The main national institutional partner is the Chinese National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) which is responsible for the formulation of Five Year National development plans and has also the mandate to coordinate climate change actions both in adaptation and mitigation.

CONTEXT

Climate change is a global problem with the need for collective action. Whilst the global element to action has traditionally been seen as emissions targets and mitigation ambition, how each country adapts to the impacts of climate change is also a trans-boundary issue. When done well, successfully replicating and learning from other’s adaptation experience can rapidly accelerate a country’s capacity to effectively adapt. Conversely, maladaptation poses the risk of aggravating tensions around resources and borders and can undermine a country’s mitigation efforts. For this reason, adaptation cannot remain a national issue and can be greatly enhanced by international sharing, particularly between developing countries who share similar challenges and contexts.

China has an important role to play in global development, climate resilience and South-South cooperation. Numerous Chinese ministries are working with developing countries on climate compatible development through adaptation strategies, science and technological advances across a range of sectors. During its 11th Five-Year Plan period, China established 121 assistance programmes for climate change implementation that provided capacity building to over 207,000 personnel. The 12th Five-Year Plan includes provisions to assist other developing countries even further to address climate change.

At COP 17, on 5 December 2011, Xie Zhenhua, NDRC Vice Minister and head of the Chinese delegation, announced 4 major areas of investment through South-South collaboration:



  1. Adaptation: help developing countries that are most vulnerable to extreme weather to develop weather forecasting, disaster prediction capacity, and improved early-warning capacities;

  2. Promotion of climate change adaptation technology, including sustainable agriculture assistance, and technology to help needy countries with drought resistance, water conservation, and biodiversity;

  3. Dissemination and donation of technology in energy conservation, water conservation, and renewable energy to small island developing states and least developed countries;

  4. Continuation of capacity building programs for developing countries that need it. In the next 3 years, China plans to continue to carry out a series of capacity building activities in climate change and train 1,000 officials in developing countries.

The project ‘China and South-South Scoping Assessment for Learning and Development’ (CASSALD) focuses on addressing climate adaptation needs and potential for south-south learning in 10 developing countries.

AIM

To identify key opportunities and avenues for South-South learning and climate compatible development and how to best channel resources to share China's and developing countries' experiences of integrating climate adaptation into the development process.

OBJECTIVES
  1. Identify priority countries and regional and national partners in the 'south' regions

  2. Identify how development and adaptation are linked in the selected countries

  3. Establish a framework for a learning-centred approach across regions and countries for south-south learning and collaboration with China on climate compatible development

  4. Identify and evaluate the 'gaps' and 'needs' of each country and region in relationship to their existing needs, practice and experience

  5. Examine, analyse and report the regions' and countries existing relationships with China and their potential to work with China on climate compatible development

  6. Establish and recommend how international development agencies (ACCC-DFID-China) can engage with these countries to best channel resources most effectively

SCOPING ASSESSMENT


Framework for Assessment
  • national adaptation strategies and capacity

  • main actors and responsibilities

  • adaptation mainstreaming into decision-making processes

Needs assessment
  • climate impacts and priorities

  • external input needs and benefit of Chinese engagement

  • operationalising international sharing


Attitudinal assessment
  • political will to act on climate change and political drivers

  • Development priorities

  • policy makers information sources

  • perspectives on working with China

Existing links evaluation
  • Chinese contacts and context

  • South-South learning underway

OUTPUTS

Final outputs from Phase 1, which include the Final Report, Executive Summary and Country Reports (Appendices) are available for download from the INTASAVE Asia-Pacific website.



Global Islands' Vulnerability Research, Adaptation, Policy andDevelopment (GIVRAPD) Project

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Farming has long been a mainstay of St Lucia’s economy but for one grower living in the hills of Soufrière there’s no telling how long it can be a source of income. Climate change is altering the environmental balance, tipping life on the land into even greater uncertainty.

“You don’t know when to plant and when to not plant. When you’re waiting for rain, you’re not getting rain. When you’re waiting for sun, you’re not getting sun,” the farmer says.

Townspeople are also still struggling with the fallout from environmental disasters years after severe storms have made their deadly sweeps through the region.

“For me, around here it’s not safe anymore. When it’s raining I leave. For me, it hasn’t stopped,” a survivor of 2010’s Hurricane Tomas says.

But the residents of Soufrière are not alone. Half a world away, islanders in communities across the Indian Ocean are facing similar environmental upheavals and working out ways to cope with them. Each community has much to learn from the others and GIVRAPD – the Global Islands’ Vulnerability Research Adaptation Policy Development research project – makes that sharing possible. GIVRAPD is a unique project that overcomes great physical distances to tie together the experience of four small island communities – two in the Caribbean (St Lucia and Jamaica) and two in the Indian Ocean (Mauritius and Seychelles).

It’s just one more way that INTASAVE is helping developing countries access resources and knowledge elsewhere in the global South.

Over two years, researchers will catalogue the vast range of socioeconomic, governance and environmental conditions that make island towns and villages particularly vulnerable to climate change. Through dozens of interviews with residents, the team will define the risks ahead and what stands in the way of adaptation. Whether its agriculture, fishing or tourism, researchers will look for the specific factors that determine whether those economies have a future.

The team will also chart the likely changes in the environment and, together with a cross-section of community representatives, map ways residents can continue to earn a living in the long term. The broader goal is to give townspeople the information they need to make their own decisions.

In addition, the team will investigate the viability of weather-related micro-insurance as a safeguard for low-income residents against disastrous losses.

The project, funded by the Climate Development Knowledge Network, is being led by INTASAVE in partnership with the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment at Oxford University. Contributions will also come from four other universities, including the University of Mauritius and the African Climate and Development Initiative based at the University of Cape Town.

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For more information contact: admin@intasave.org and see the website: www.givrapd.org

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The project is designed to utilize a common community-based vulnerability assessment (CBVA) framework to integrate scientific and local knowledge from comparative 'learning sites'. The aim is to understand the multi-scale socioeconomic, governance and environmental conditions that shape vulnerability and capacity to adapt to climate change within and between small and medium sized coastal communities. The objectives are to address key data and knowledge gaps, develop and evaluate practical local adaptation and climate compatible development (CCD) portfolios, facilitate the mainstreaming and scaling-up of adaptation and CCD, establish scientific and professional networks and build capacity. More information on the GIVRAPD project is available on the project website: givrapd.org.

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Monday 15 July 2013

VACANCY: Administration Officer

The INTASAVE Partnership and CARIBSAVE are seeking a capable and self-motivated individual for the position of Administration Officer to provide efficient administrative support to a dynamic technical and research team at the Caribbean Regional Headquarters in Barbados.

The Terms of Reference for the position is available below.


Please submit your application complete with a covering letter and Curriculum Vitae to Judi Clarke, Regional Co-ordinator at judi.clarke@caribsave.org. When submitting your application please quote reference “Application for Administration Officer” in the subject title of the email.


Closing date for applications is Wednesday, 18th December 2013.


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Tuesday 11 June 2013

INTASAVE-CARIBSAVE – Mission

six-core-themes-graphic

The INTASAVE Partnership & CARIBSAVE is a global not-for-profit organisation with offices and operations in Africa, Asia-Pacific, China UK-Europe and the Caribbean (CARIBSAVE). 

Mission


Supporting and enhancing livelihoods, economies and environments around the world: in an era of global environmental change and economic restructuring, providing innovative, dynamic and evidence-based solutions, through six thematic areas:


  • Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation: Enhancing the understanding of the effects of climate change, and developing and implementing strategies to reduce vulnerabilities and increase the resilience of countries, ecosystems, economies and communities

  • Society and Livelihoods: Reducing poverty, building capacity, enhancing livelihoods and working with gender differentials and vulnerable groups through participatory engagement with communities, governments and the private sector

  • Green Growth and Blue Economy: Assisting and fostering sustainable environments and economies by partnering with communities, governments and the private sector in the incorporation of low-carbon development and effective terrestrial and marine resource management

  • South-South Cooperation, Knowledge Exchange & Development:Working to create and exchange knowledge and good practice across south-south countries, regions and networks to develop capacity and capability to achieve climate resilience and sustainable development

  • Climate Governance & Legislation:  Partnering with governments, regional institutions and key stakeholders, to support the formulation and implementation of national, regional and global climate change policies and programmes



Vision


A world that responds to the opportunities and challenges of a changing climate and provides an equitable and sustainable future for all.

Values


People, Partnerships and Professionalism

 

Thursday 6 June 2013

South-South Summit, Beijing - July 2013

South-South Summit: Climate Change Adaptation: Policy, Practice and Legislation


A milestone climate change conference took place in July 2013 in Beijing with participants endorsing the new Guiding Principles for Climate Change Adaptation: South-South Cooperation, Practice, and Legislation, a landmark guide for future policy, legislation, implementation and cooperation on climate change adaptation in the global South.

The three-day International Conference on Climate Change Adaptation: Policy, Practice and Legislationdrew 150 leading policymakers, legislators, experts and representatives of multilateral agencies from China and 35 developing countries to Beijing to explore major opportunities for China and developing countries to work together to make their countries and communities more resilient to the impacts of climate change. Conference participants also had the opportunity to learn of China's achievements in planning for and responding to climate impacts.

The conference was organised by the Adapting to Climate Change in China (ACCC) project in partnership with The Global Legislators’ Organisation (GLOBE International) and The INTASAVE Partnership & CARIBSAVE.

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“[We] wish for a continuing successful relationship through triangular cooperation as China meets its South-South Cooperation commitments and international commitments on climate change.”


Madam Huang


Director of the International Cooperation Division of the Climate Change,
Department of China's NDRC*


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Conference Outcomes



  • Every participant gave their unqualified support to the conference’s landmark document, Guiding Principles for Climate Change Adaptation; South-South Cooperation, Practice and Legislation and their support for another conference in 2014.

  • GLOBE International will take the Guiding Principles to the 2nd GLOBE Climate Legislation Summit in Bogota, Colombia, in October, where they will be discussed and endorsed by legislators from over 60 countries.

  • The INTASAVE Partnership has announced a joint initiative to continue to build on this work with China, the UNFCCC, and developing countries around the world.

  • The INTASAVE Partnership will establish a high-level international advisory board and will also hold an annual event on South-South Adaptation: Policy, Practice and Legislation taking place in South Africa in 2014.


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"Although the impacts of climate change are local and varied, there is much we can learn from each other about how to approach our response. That is why we have developed a set of Guiding Principles that will help legislators and policymakers to ensure that the response is as effective as possible and learns the lessons from others' experience."


Hon. C.T. Frolick, MP


National Assembly of South Africa


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About the "Guiding Principles"


The Guiding Principles provide concrete recommendations for the future direction of climate change adaptation, a synthesis of good practice and ways to strengthen responses by working together.

The primary points of the document are:

  • There is a strong need for anticipatory adaptation, underpinned by a risk management approach, solid monitoring and evaluation, and scaled up knowledge platforms to inform future work;

  • Adaptation requires a broad range of practice, policy, and legislation that builds on responses from and engagement with all stakeholders. Responses will include those that use traditional knowledge;

  • Public funding continues to be important but so too is an enabling environment for private sector involvement. This will include Public-Private-Partnerships, private investment, corporate responsibility and climate-compatible business practices;

  • South-South Cooperation should provide opportunities to share lessons learnt and to contextualise these to national and subnational circumstances;

  • Developed countries have an important role to play in encouraging and enabling South-South cooperation, in line with existing international commitments, to support the efforts of developing countries.


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The principles are based on an agreed need to establish a principled and flexible model of climate change adaptation in order to pursue the goals of increasing the resilience and adaptive capacity of societal and ecological systems. The principles reflect the four stages of successful adaptation: planning, implementation, evaluation and dynamic refinement.

[vc_separator el_position="first"] [vc_cta_button title="DOWNLOAD" href="http://intasave-caribsave.intasave.net/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2013/09/ACCC-International-Conference-on-Climate-Change-Guiding-Principles.pdf" color="btn-info" size="wpb_regularsize" icon="none" target="_blank" position="cta_align_right" call_text="Download the South-South Bejing Conference - Guiding Principles doc (PDF)"]

[vc_cta_button title="DOWNLOAD" href="http://intasave-caribsave.intasave.net/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2013/09/ACCC-International-Conference-on-Climate-Change-Adaptation-Report.pdf" color="btn-info" size="wpb_regularsize" icon="none" target="_blank" position="cta_align_right" call_text="Download the South-South Bejing Conference report (PDF)"]

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Dr Murray Simpson CEO

http://youtu.be/pNpejDNUjvA

Dr Murray Simpson, CEO, talks about climate change in the Caribbean.

Some Key Facts

Micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises contribute an estimated 90% of employment and 70% of the GDP of Caribbean countries.

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The cost for Latin America to adapt to a 2°C warmer world from 2010-2050 could cost between US$16.8 – US$21.5 billion per year (World Bank, 2009).

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According to the World Resources Institute Caribbean coral reefs alone generate between US$3.1 and US$4.6 billion across the Caribbean annually from fisheries, tourism and shoreline protection.

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Studies have shown that the biomass of fish inside a reserve can increase by between 2 to 21 times from its original level

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Half the world’s population lives within 100 km of a marine shoreline.

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  • 80% of the human activities that threaten coasts occur on the land

  • 50% of the world’s coasts are threatened by development

  • 40% of coral reefs have been lost or degraded

  • 80% of monitored beaches are eroding


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Now you don’t know when to plant and when not to not plant. When you’re waiting for rain, you’re not getting rain. When you’re waiting for sun, you’re not getting sun. The weather [changed].


Farmer


St Lucia


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Marine protected areas account for less than 0.05% of coasts & oceans[vc_separator el_position="last"] Sea level rise will continue for centuries after 2100, even if global temperatures are stabilized at 2.0 °C or 2.5°C[vc_separator el_position="last"] Caribbean countries, as a group, contribute only small amounts to global greenhouse gas emissions, however, seven of the fifteen countries still generate 100% of their electricity from fossil fuels.[vc_separator el_position="last"] Belize and Dominica produce more than 30% of electricity from renewable energy (mainly hydro) and Suriname produces 95% of its electricity from hydro.[vc_separator el_position="last"] Already some 300,000 deaths per year are being attributed to climate change and this is expected to rise to half a million per year globally by 2020[i].[vc_separator el_position="last"] In the Caribbean, tourism resorts would be at risk of flooding from just a 1 metre rise in sea-level[ii] and many more would have their infrastructure eroded.[vc_separator el_position="last"] 26 out of the Caribbean region’s 73 airports would be at risk from inundation with a 1 metre sea level rise[iii].[vc_separator el_position="last"] In Africa, between 25 and 40 per cent of mammal species in national parks in sub-Saharan Africa will become endangered as a result of climate change.[vc_separator el_position="last"]

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  • Optimum beach tourism conditions for European tourists are 27oC to 32oC


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  • The Caribbean accounts for just 0.2 per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions while having 0.6 per cent of the world’s population


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  • About 40,000 solar home systems are being installed per month in Bangladesh


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  • Around 30,000 solar home systems are installed every year in Kenya


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  • The likely costs to the Caribbean’s tourism sector from global inaction on climate change could range from US400 million to US$2billion by 2025 (Bueno, Herzfeld, Stanton, & Ackerman, 2008).


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  • In the Caribbean more than half of the population lives within 1.5 km of the shoreline (Mimura et al., 2007).


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  • Most of Barbados’ infrastructure, government, health and commercial facilities lie along various portions of the 97 km coastline which include low-lying and highly erodible shore areas that are particularly susceptible to sea level rise.


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[i] Global Humanitarian Forum (2009) Human Impact of Climate Change: The anatomy of a silent crisis.  www.ghf-ge.org/human-impact-report.pdf .  (Accessed 15 June 2011)

[ii] Rahmstorf, S. (2007) A semi-empirical approach to protecting future sea-level rise. Science 315 (5810), 368-370.

[iii] Simpson, M.C., Scott, D., Harrison, M., Silver, N., O’Keeffe, E., Harrison, S., Taylor, M., Lizcano, G., Rutty, M., Stager, H., Oldham, J., Wilson, M., New, M., Clarke, J. , Day, O.J., Fields, N., Georges, J., Waithe, R., McSharry, P. (2010) Quantification and magnitude of losses and damages resulting from the impacts of climate change: Modelling the transformational impacts and costs of sea level rise in the Caribbean. United Nations Development Programme, Barbados.


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