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Information needs for adaptation decisions Department for International Development Yvan Biot, Su-Lin Garbett-Shiels, Annika Olsson, Nicola Ranger February 2014 DECISION MAKING Who and what? •Whose decisions? – Citizens – Business – Governments – International system •What do they need to know? – Do we need to do something urgently? – Can we do something sensible now to prepare ourselves for the future? – What can we just let happen? Context matters! •Business concerns1 – Direct physical impacts on the investments themselves – Degradation of critical supporting infrastructure – Changes in the availability of key natural resources – Changes to workforce availability or capacity – Changes in the customer base – Supply chain disruptions – Legal liability – Shifts in the regulatory environment – Reductions in credit ratings 1: Higgins, P., 2014: Climate Information Needs for Financial Decision Making DFID AND UK AID Context •International Development Act – Generate lasting benefits to current and future population •Instruments – Multilateral environmental agreements – International Climate Fund – Climate smart development – Research and innovation Environmental Protection 3 Research 3 Humanitarian Assistance 11 Economic 24 Water and Sanitation 4 Social Services 5 Education 11 Government and civil society 23 Health 17 Why it matters Map of DFID priority countries 2013 1: Map of Vulnerability to Climate Change 1 Source: Maplecroft climate change vulnerability index 2012 How it affects our business 1. Reduced long-term effectiveness of DFID interventions, if long-term risks are not accounted for. E.g. without action, climate change will erode gains in poverty alleviation and progress against the MDGs 2. Reduced value for money of DFID’s long-lived investments, such as infrastructure, if they need to be retrofitted or replaced prematurely. 3. Higher long-term costs, where DFID or partners need to retrofit or adjust programmes later. Acting now is often cheaper and easier in the long-term 4. Adverse outcomes, where DFID’s interventions are maladaptive, inadvertently committing people to greater and difficult-to-reverse risks down the line. 5. Human costs of delay: adaptations, like building capacity, can take time to implement, so there is a rationale for starting now. After: Ranger et al., 2013: Building resilience to changing times – internal document MAKING DECISIONS … Decision point 1: policy and resource allocation •International – Multilateral spend (Green Climate Fund): additionality, prioritisation, VFM – Loss and damage future liabilities? •Bilateral – country budgets •Sectoral – food, water, energy, towns, disaster management Decision point 2: country portfolios Challenges to growth environment: damage to infrastructure, disruption to public services, reconstruction costs, unstable macroenvironment Strain on political stability and potential conflict Erosion of natural capital: ecosystems, fisheries, forests, biodiversity, ecosystem services Changing global environment: more volatile commodity and energy prices; strain on humanitarian system; changing trade patterns Reduced productivity in some sectors, such as agriculture; and rising damage to assets Risk to human capital Increasing risks of food and water crises, humanitarian crises, health impacts, children removed from education, strain on social protection Source: DFID “Changing with the times”, June 2012. DFID Internal document Decision point 3: project decisions • Theory of change – what might happen to our beneficiaries if the climate changes • Options identification - what options look good in the short and longer run? • Options appraisal – which option will offer a good rate of return? • Monitoring and evaluation – track hazard data alongside outcome/impact indicators Prioritising 1. The intervention directly or indirectly affects resilience OR 2. The outcomes of the intervention are sensitive to weather e.g. Infrastructure, WASH or food security e.g. social protection programme AND Intervention with longterm effects Difficult to reverse/retrofit intervention or its effects High stakes (costs or number of people/assets at risk) Ranger, N. and Garbett-Shiels, 2014: Safeguarding development investments from climate change risks. Forthcoming ABOUT UNCERTAINTY Wicked ! •Wicked problems – Unclear evidence – No consensus about desired outcome •So what? – Linear evidence into policy process doesn’t work for wicked problems … – More than one ‘optimal’ solution After Roger Pielke, 2007: The honest broker: making sense of science, policy and politics There’s more than the weather to talk about … Exposure Sensitivity CLIMATE SIGNAL 𝐸𝑥𝑆 𝑅=𝐻𝑥 AC VULNERABILITY CONTEXT Risk Hazard Adaptive Capacity We have tools to deal with uncertainty! Ranger et al., 2010: Adaptation in the UK: a decision making process. Grantham – LSE, London Iterative adaptation 1 2 3 Watkiss, P., 2014: Early value for money adaptation. Forthcoming Evidence on Demand working paper TOWARDS A TYPOLOGY OF NEEDS Elements •Three time horizons – Now – 2020’s – 2050’s protection against extreme event disaster risk reduction adaptation to trends •Four types of questions – Weather/climate information – Implications – state – Implications – business – Analysis •Caveat – context Weather / climate Implications State Implications – business Analyses Immediate Early warnings, seasonal Weather forecasts Nature, geogr spread Key assets – roads, food, water, energy, transport, owns People at risk How will my business be affected? Monitoring for insurance payouts 2020’s - DRR Decadal forecasts Trends and P(extremes) Nature and geogr spread Sectoral impacts – food, water, energy, transport, towns Global hotspots – conflict, food security Humanitarian needs Probabilities of catastrophic failure Probability profiles hum assistance and risk insurance 2050’s – adaptation Climate scenarios Trend and P(extremes) Likelihoods of upper/lower? Upper and lower scenarios Nature and geogr spread Sectoral impacts – food, water, energy, transport, towns Global hotspots – conflict, water security, food security Humanitarian needs Development of new catastrophic failure New market opportunities Evolving probability scenarios hum assistance and risk insurance Attribution additionality in climate finance TAKE HOME MESSAGES • Climate science is important for national and international policy • And it will probably become useful some day also to help us adapt … • But to be useful it will have to start from the bottom up – – – – Understand who’s doing the asking Understand the nature of the questions asked Understand context critical asset /flows Where and how decisions are made … • And work with others! • Relevant time horizons: immediate, 2020’s (DRR), 2050’s (adaptation) • Don’t worry too much about uncertainties • But don’t make life even more difficult for people than it already is … • Priorities: food, water, energy, towns, transport infrastructure, disasters; who will be most vulnerable – regional / socio-economic group; attribution Thank you