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Climate change has emerged as one of the biggest
environmental challenges facing the world. Twenty years ago
at the United Nations, Gro Harlem Brundtland, Norway's former
Prime Minister and former Director-General of the World Health
Organization, first drew global attention to the threats posed
by climate change to the earth and its inhabitants.
Speaking at the 15th session of the UN Commission on Sustainable
Development in May 2007, Ms. Brundtland-one of three Special
Envoys on Climate Change appointed by the UN Secretary-General
in April-made clear that there can no longer be any doubt
about human-induced climate change and its likely impact on
the planet.
Today there is broad international scientific consensus that
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from human activity, particularly
fossil fuel use and deforestation, have increased the concentration
of these gases in the atmosphere. As a result, according to
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the
earth's mean surface temperature has warmed by 0.75º
Celsius over the past century, and 11 of the last 12 years
(1995-2006) have been among the 12 warmest years since 1850.
Based on projected GHG trends, temperatures could rise by
another 2ºC to 5ºC, or perhaps even more, by 2100.
Increases of this magnitude are expected to have widespread
negative impacts on human welfare and natural ecosystems,
including wide-ranging economic, ecological and social effects.
Climate change is likely to increase the prevalence of vector-borne
diseases, such as malaria and dengue fever, and may increase
the intensity of severe weather events. It is likely to lead
to an increase in water levels and serious flooding, and at
the same time cause water scarcity in arid regions. Climate
change is expected to irreversibly damage some natural resources
and ecosystems. Overall, climate change is projected to deliver
a devastating combination of adverse impacts for the world's
poor, both because of geography and low income, making adaptation
to climate change much more difficult. While developing countries
have contributed the least to the problem, they are expected
to bear the brunt of the impact of climate change, which threatens
to jeopardize many of the developmental gains that have already
been achieved.
While there is overwhelming scientific evidence that climate
change is happening and that GHG emissions caused by human
activity is a significant and probably dominant cause, there
is still a great deal of uncertainty in relation to the likely
speed of climate change. For example, how fast is global warming
going to occur-is it going to be on average and on current
trends of 2ºC more or 5ºC more by the end of the
twenty-first century? There is also a debate on the strength
of the link between carbon gas emissions and temperature change:
should we try to keep carbon intensity to 450 or 500 parts
per million if we want to keep average temperature change
to below 2ºC by the end of the century?
Beyond the scientific debate on speed and causal links, there
is also an economic debate focusing on the cost-benefit analysis
of policies to mitigate climate change. The 2006 Stern Review
on the Economics of Climate Change provides a comprehensive
economic analysis of the costs of policy actions and investments
now, compared to the net benefits from such actions in the
future. Some of the underlying assumptions regarding the rate
at which we should trade-off current costs against future
benefits are being challenged. How strongly do we value the
welfare of our grandchildren, for example? Some are very optimistic
about the progress of technology and world growth, and believe
this will make future generations much richer, allowing them
to more easily adapt to climate change a few decades from
now (financing, massive relocation, water desalination, dams
and storm resistant cities, for example).
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Others may believe that a global catastrophe will destroy the
world anyway, so it does not make sense to think a great deal
about the very long-run. It also appears there are differences
in how people value biodiversity. For a variety of these and
other reasons, some find that too much weight is being given
to the future, compared to our immediate lives today. This "trade-off"
between then and now depends on intrinsic value judgments (the
extent to which one values the survival of certain species or
the degree to which one values the welfare of future generations),
as well as on projections about technology and income (the more
optimistic one is on technology that may be discovered to "fix
things", the greater risks one may be willing to take).
Therefore, it is likely that the debate will continue over the
appropriate parameters for cost-benefit analyses of climate
change policies. But uncertainty over the precise impact of
climate change and the debate on the appropriate discounting
of the future should not obscure the following facts:
Climate change is happening now, and it is and will have effects
within our lifetimes.
There is a chance that climate change will accelerate in ways
that are not easily predictable and many of the induced changes
will be irreversible.
While climate change is a global phenomenon, its impact on countries
and communities will be very different, with developing countries
likely to be the most adversely affected.
Some communities will be affected very strongly and very negatively
within the next two to three decades; for some countries, climate
change could have catastrophic effects.
The focus of the United Nations Development Programme is tackling
poverty and supporting countries in their efforts to advance
sustainable human development. In light of the disproportionate
impacts climate change is expected to have on the poorest countries,
UNDP is working with developing countries on climate change
adaptation and mitigation measures that can reduce the vulnerability
of poor countries and expand opportunities for sustainable livelihoods.
On the mitigation front, UNDP has promoted energy efficiency
and the use of technologies, particularly renewable energy,
that emit fewer greenhouse gases. The approach has included
strengthening governance and policy frameworks to create an
environment conducive to adopting and promoting technologies.
Energy efficiency offers the most cost-effective means of reducing
the emissions intensity of developing economies and of making
a positive contribution to economic efficiency and energy security.
It also helps to buy time for countries to develop energy technologies
that make less contribution to climate change.
Over the past 15 years, UNDP has mobilized $2.7 billion to fund
more than 400 large-scale and 1,000 small-scale energy and climate-related
projects, mainly through the Global Environment Facility (GEF)
and leveraged co-financing. But traditional sources of financing
will clearly be grossly inadequate for the task at hand. Therefore,
the UNDP mitigation strategy also focuses on increasing the
ability of countries to gain access to the rapidly emerging
carbon market, in particular, the Clean Development Mechanism
(CDM), which has become a multi-billion dollar source of funding
for sustainable development.
To date, UNDP has implemented CDM-capacity development activities
in more than 20 countries. It recently established the MDG Carbon
Facility, an innovative means of harnessing the vast resources
of the carbon market to bring long-term sustainable development
to a larger share of the world's population. The Facility aims
to increase the portfolio of projects to enable a wider range
of developing countries to gain benefits from the CDM, and will
promote projects that yield long-term sustainable development
benefits, even beyond the reductions in GHG emissions.
Although mitigation programmes will be important in developing
countries, UNDP recognizes that adaptation will need to be the
main focus of assistance in the coming decade. At present, the
funds available for adaptation initiatives are woefully inadequate.
Much more needs to be done to provide sufficient resources to
the poor to enable them to adapt and cope with climate change.
UNDP has assisted 29 countries to formulate their National Adaptation
Programmes of Action, and 100 countries to prepare their National
Communications for submission to the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change. It has also been actively engaged
in innovative adaptation projects across a range of sectors
and countries-to date, 16 projects involving 40 countries have
been advanced, with a total funding of around $150 million.
The key target areas are water-resource management, coastal
zones, disaster-risk management, public health and food security.
While UNDP has greatly increased its climate change programme
activities in recent years, and will continue to do so, one
agency alone will not be able to meet the rapidly growing needs
of the poorer developing countries. A key UNDP objective is
to work closely with other UN agencies and partner organizations
to deliver a comprehensive package of technical assistance services
to countries, which draws on the specialist skills of all UN
agencies and ensures that countries receive appropriately targeted
assistance. A significant first step in this process has been
the development of a formal Climate Change Partnership between
UNDP and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which
aims to combine their climate change experience and expertise.
Its first two major joint activities are a $1.2-million, seven-country,
CDM-capacity development programme in sub-Saharan Africa to
help the region gain access to the carbon market, and a multi-country
adaptation project to reduce climate risks and vulnerability.
It is clear that climate change represents a major challenge
for the world community. UNDP is determined to play its part
in meeting this global challenge. |