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Ecosystem Based Adaptation – Measuring Effectiveness. Ali Raza Rizvi Global Programme Manager EbA IUCN - International Union for Conservation of Nature June 9, 2014. Contents.
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Ecosystem Based Adaptation – Measuring Effectiveness Ali Raza Rizvi Global Programme Manager EbA IUCN - International Union for Conservation of Nature June 9, 2014
Contents Focus of this presentation is mainly on the evidence from the field i.e. lesson learned from the field-based projects in developing countries • Mapping Results of IUCN EbA Projects • Lessons Learned – Knowledge Gaps & Way Forward
EbA in IUCN • IUCN has been involved in 45 Ecosystem based Adaptation related projects in 58 countries throughout the world in the last five years.
Tools/Methodologies Employed • Climate Resilience Evaluation for Adaptation Through Empowerment (CREATE) • Toolkit for Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation of the capacity to adapt to climate change (TOP-SECAC) • Community-based Risk Screening Tool – Adaptation & Livelihoods (CRiSTAL) • Promoting Local Innovations (PLI) • Analysis of Vulnerability and Resilience to Climate Change (AVCA) • Participatory Rapid Assessment (PRA) • Participatory Learning Appraisal (PLA) • Poverty Assessment Toolkit
Tools & Guidelines Produced • Climate Resilience Evaluation for Adaptation Through Empowerment (CREATE) • Promoting Local Innovation for community adaptation • Resilience Assessment of Coral Reefs • Framework for impact monitoring of Marine Protected Areas • EbA Approach - IWRM/Governance • Principles to integrate EbA Approach into Project Planning • ToTmodules on: water governance, risk and water management, livelihoods, ecosystem-based adaptation (Spanish) • Field notebook explaining the link between climate change and ecosystems (Spanish) • Community Environmental Action Planning (Botswana, Namibia and South Africa) • Catalogue of Good Practices for Adaptation to Climate Risks (Burkina Faso) • Toolkit for Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation of the Capacity to Adapt to Climate Change (French) • Guidelines for the development of water infrastructure in West Africa
Methodologies & Tools – In Process • Resilience Analysis Protocol (Mangroves For the Future) • Identifying and Measuring EbA Benefits (Holistic Approach to Governance for EbA, Coastal/River Basins) – Central America • Participatory Plan of Action (Gender Responsive Climate Change, Drylands. League of Arab States (Jordan & Egypt) • M&E tool for Improved livelihood and Resilience against Drought (Water for Livestock, Drylands, Kenya) • Guidelines and standards on climate resilience in the four NAPA sectors for subsequent up-scaling - Laos • A guide on climate financing in Laos • Guidelines for integrating climate change adaptation approaches in trans-boundary ecosystem management (Kenya-Uganda) • A Framework Methodology for Integrating Climate Change Vulnerability Assessments: Species Distribution Models and Traits-Based Assessments (Togo, Mali Chad, Sierra Leone, Gambia)
Methodologies & Tools – In Process • Link between climate change, protected areas and communities (West Africa) • Use of planning tools and simple monitoring and evaluation by the rural communities for climate adaptation (French) • Gender and Climate Change Manual – Jordan • Participatory Planning Cycle Framework (Social, Ecological, Agricultural climate resilience) Egypt, Morocco, Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine – MENA Region • Adaptation Resilience Framework – MENA Region • Operational Framework for EbA • Compendium of VIA Tools and Methodologies • Cost Benefit Analysis /RoI for local decision making • Set of No Regret Action for Specific Ecosystems – incl. Low Regret • EbA M&E incl. EbA Indicators for Specific Ecosystems
Learning and Reflections • Baseline data is essential to demonstrate achievement of indicators. • All projects, as per their context, must have appropriate and strategically defined set of tools and approaches incl. working definitions of concepts and terminology. • Most importantly, an integrated tool (or set of tools) that addresses not only communities’ vulnerabilities but also those faced by local biodiversity and ecosystems.
Learning and Reflections • Vulnerability Assessment – either very narrow focused, mainly on perceptions or too broad and time consuming • Should be based on • Project objectives • Available resources • Integrated vulnerability tools • Need to have phased approach • Rapid appraisal of vulnerabilities • In-depth assessment of prioritized issues
Learning and Reflections No-Regrets • Early in a project, set of no-regrets measures is an important means of building trust and a very efficient first step in a long-term adaptation strategy. • No Regret could lead to • maladaptation • adverse impacts on local biodiversity and ecosystems • ad hoc livelihood activities • conflict
Learning and Reflections • Conservation sector mostly lacks competencies for inclusive and rights based approaches – gender as a sprinkle; questionable choice of beneficiaries; equity issues – No Harm Policy is a Must! • Going beyond no-regret options, at times, is a big challenge. • All projects must have indicators that measure effective adaptation from an early stage of project implementation
Learning and Reflections • EbA is one area where strong synergies can be developed between adaptation, mitigation, Disaster Risk Reduction, and Loss & Damage. • Adaptation cannot be achieved through working in one area/sector or in a limited timeframe; it’s an ongoing process that must cut across all sectors. • There is a crucial need to design and implement interventions which demonstrate additionality and not business as usual.
Thank You! • Photos by Kimsreng, IUCN Cambodia