The
International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), working with
policy and research partners in the targeted regions, including Adaptify
and Garama 3C Ltd, has designed a framework and tools that
will enable countries to ensure their efforts to adapt to climate change and
efforts to development work in concert.
IIED
is engaging with governments of Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Nepal, and Pakistan
to test the framework and tools as means to evaluate a range of climate
adaptation activities.
Government
representatives and researchers are joining IIED staff and other partners in
Edinburgh to review the design for the feasibility testing arrangements and
next steps.
Representatives
of the Scottish Government and their advisers will also attend the meeting to
share their own experiences of planning climate adaptation and designing a
monitoring and evaluating framework.
“While
most frameworks for evaluating responses to climate change assume that
adaptation will neutralise harm and allow development to continue as planned,
but this underestimates the real change needed to keep development on track,”
says Dr Simon Anderson, head of IIED’s climate change group.
“As
governments and development partners begin to invest large sums of money in
action to adapt to climate change, it is essential that they focus on
adaptation’s contribution to long term development, and not just spend money on
adaptation projects,” says Anderson. “Unless they can track adaptation and
measure development outcomes there is a risk that funds will be poorly spent.”
The
new framework and tools that IIED and partners have developed will enable
governments and development agencies to assess whether adaptation projects
enhance or compromise development. They will measure how fairly the costs and
benefits of such projects are distributed. And they will help to identify where
to spend future investments.
The
framework and tools – known collectively as the Tracking Adaptation and
Measuring Development (TAMD) Framework – can be tailored to suit individual
country contexts, different sectors and at various scales.
“All
countries need to adapt to climate change, but they need to be sure they do so
in a way that does not harm their social and economic development,” says
project leader Simon Anderson. “The tools we have developed will allow
countries to ensure that adaptation and development work hand-in-hand.
Ultimately this will mean better management and more accountability in how
investments in adaptation are made.”
IIED
developed the TAMD framework with funding from the UK’s Department
for International Development.
The
project’s next steps will include tailoring TAMD to each of the five pilot
countries and testing the framework in them at national and subnational levels.
To
offset the greenhouse gas emissions that arise from people travelling to the
meeting in Edinburgh, IIED will invest in both a direct emissions offsetting
scheme and in projects that help communities adapt to climate change. IIED will
publish a report from the meeting in April.
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