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WORKING TITLE: Development in a Changing Climate or A Changing Climate for Development World Development Report 2010 A call to action Climate change is one of many challenges facing developing countries… ..but unless it is tackled soon, it will reverse development gains and exacerbate inequalities. “Climate-smart” development is needed and can be achieved. Rich countries must take leadership on climate action now, but we can’t succeed without the active cooperation of middle-income countries. The science is incredibly strong and verified Surface and tropospheric temperatures increasing Atmospheric water vapour increasing Ocean heat content increasing … … sea level rise directly linked and probably cyclone/hurricane intensity Glaciers and snow cover decreasing Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets losing mass with … … Arctic Sea ice extent decreasing—VERY RAPIDLY!!!! Area of seasonally frozen ground decreasing More intense and longer droughts Frequency of heavy precipitation events and floods increasing Extreme temperatures increasing Monsoon patterns changing Unequivocal Why Climate Change is a Serious Development Issue All countries are vulnerable to climate change but the poorest countries and the poorest people within them are most vulnerable. They are the most exposed and have the least means to adapt. People in developing countries are affected at more than 20 times the rate of those in developed countries 4,000 Number affected (Millions) In this decade over 3 billion people in developing countries are likely to be affected by climate related disasters 3,000 Dev'ed CIT 2,000 Dev'ing LDC 1,000 - 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s Source: World Bank analysis based on CREDA data. Climate Change and the Bank Climate Change and the Bank Carbon Finance – – – Prototype Carbon Fund (PCF) in 1999 – capped at $180M Now 10 funds and over $2 billion under management Carbon Partnership Facility (CPF) – go programmatic Engage both buyers & sellers – target $5 billion Clean Energy Investment Framework (CEIF) – A call for the Bank’s engagement in three climate pillars Energy Access Clean Energy for Development Climate Resilient Development (Adaptation) Climate Change and the Bank Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) – Pilot REDD – c. $0.5 billion IDA Replenishment – Argued that increased resources were need to move to climate resilient development – Accept that not all of these initiatives meet the demand that all funding come under the UNFCCC process Climate Change and the Bank Climate Investment Funds – Clean Technology Fund – c. $5 billion for transformational change in currently viable technologies Strategic Climate Fund Pilot Program for Climate Resilience – c. 0.5 billion Forest initiative Renewables initiative Strategic Framework for Climate Change and Development (SFCCD) The SFCCD is about development in the context of climate change Priority of growth, poverty reduction and MDGs Importance of meeting energy needs of developing countries Role of development in helping to adapt to climate risks Resource mobilization in addition to the current ODA levels SFCCD Pillars 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 10 Make effective climate action – both adaptation and mitigation - part of core development efforts Address the resource gap through existing and innovative instruments for concessional finance Facilitate the development of innovative market mechanisms Create enabling environment for and leveraging private sector finance Accelerate the deployment of existing and development of new climate-friendly technologies Step-up policy research, knowledge management and capacity building Sustainable Development @ The World Bank Climate Change Matters for Development 12 Global Fossil Fuel Carbon Emissions Gigatons per Year Stabilizing CO2 concentrations means fundamental change to the global energy and land use systems. 20 Historical Emissions GTSP_750 GTSP_650 GTSP_550 GTSP_450 GTSP Reference Case 15 Fossil Fuel Carbon Emissions Historic & 2005 to 2100 1750-2005 10 5 1850 13 1900 1950 2000 2050 2100 2150 2200 2250 2300 300 GtC GTSP Ref 1430 GtC 750 ppm 1200 GtC 650 ppm 1040 GtC 550 ppm 862 GtC 450 ppm 480 GtC Projected Impacts of Climate Change Stern, 2006 Climate change cannot be tackled without developing countries Development matters to climate change The past…rich countries responsible for about 60% of GHGs stocks The future…half GHGs flows are now from middleincome countries and that share will grow. Costs of controlling emissions rise if we delay; the sooner all countries participate, the lower the total costs The basis for a global deal GHG stabilization costs for 550 ppm target, relative to ‘first best’ Scenario Immediate action by all Global cost non-Annex I share of costs Annex I share of costs $1.00 0.72 0.28 $0.72 $0.28 non-Annex I cost Annex I cost Delayed action for developing countries: 2020 $1.47 0.38 0.62 $0.56 $0.91 2035 $1.69 0.34 0.66 $0.57 $1.12 2050 $2.39 0.28 0.72 $0.67 $1.72 The precautionary principle The case for (in)action is not just about discount rates… Also about irreversibility, tipping points, extreme events and sustainable development – – 50% chance of warming above 2oC even with concentrations at 450 ppm CO2e Above 2oC, real danger of irreversible changes Danger is real, particularly for poorer countries… Objectives and Value Added of the WDR 2010 Objectives Inform development policy: Climate change does represent a changing climate for development Inform climate policy: Unless development realities are integrated into climate change agreements, such agreements will fail Refocus the vision of sustainable development: Increase understanding of how development policy should be designed in a greenhouse world Value added Focus on development Integrate adaptation and mitigation Present evidence that the elements of a deal exist Highlight development opportunities in the changing competitive landscape – and how to seize them Proposed Outline Part I. Climate-Smart Development Policy The land and water challenge - Managing competing demands and creating new opportunities The energy challenges - Managing competing objectives and creating a new comparative advantage Managing human vulnerability - helping people help themselves Where we are headed – crop yield by 2080 Agro-Economic Vulnerability to Future Climate Change Water: More crop per drop" (E. Marris, 3-21-08) Nature, 2008 Emissions Mitigation Scenario Policy Scenario includes a cumulative reduction of emissions of 40% from 2012 to 2100, where limits on fossil fuel usage spurs biomass conversion. INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE Page 27 Source: Gurgel et al. 2007 Part II. Development-Smart Climate Policy An International Architecture for Climate change and Development Harnessing Finance and Market Instruments for Mitigation and Adaptation Harnessing Innovation and Technology Diffusion for Mitigation and Adaptation in billion $ Development public R&D expenditure (in OECD) 270 12 250 11 230 10 210 9 190 8 170 7 150 6 Total R&D (left axis) Source: Doornbosch, 2006 Energy R&D (right axis) 29 The near-term challenge of scale CO2 Storage—550 ppm Stabilization Case 80 Millions of Tons of Carbon per Year 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Monitored CO2 Storage Today 30 2020 (550 ppm) The mid- and long-term the challenge 80 60 7,000 50 CO2 Storage—550 ppm Stabilization Case 40 30 20 10 0 Monitored CO2 Storage Today 2020 (550 ppm) Millions of Tons of Carbon per Year Millions of Tons of Carbon per Year 70 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 Monitored CO2 Storage Today 31 2020 (550 ppm) 2050 (550 ppm) 2095 (550 ppm) Cross cutting themes Adaptation Anticipatory Reactive • Changes in ecosystem composition • Wetland migration • Invasion, extinction and simplification Natural Systems • Construction of house on stilts • Water conservation • Changes in farming practices • Changes in insurance premiums • Purchase of air conditioning • Early-warning systems • New building codes, design standards • Incentives for relocation • Compensatory payments, subsidies • Enforcement of building codes • Beach nourishment Private • Purchase of insurance Public Human Systems Source: Based on Klein 1998: IPCC 2001 Anticipatory Private Natural Systems Public Human Systems Reactive • Manage for resiliency • Conserve gene pools • Manage for change • Changes in ecosystem composition • Wetland migration • Invasion, extinction and simplification • Purchase of insurance • Construction of house on stilts • water conservation • Changes in farm practices • Changes in insurance premiums • Purchase of air conditioning • Early-warning systems • New building codes, design standards • Incentives for relocation • Compensatory payments, subsidies • Enforcement of building codes • Beach nourishment Source: Based on Klein 1998: IPCC 2001 Adaptation and Surprise Complex systems: inherently hard to predict “Data sparse, theory limited, surprise normal” Climate change will interact with multiple stressors in unexpected ways Increasing global prosperity Demographic and Public health challenges Urbanization and Rural-urban migration Coastal vulnerability (floods, storm surge, sea level) Part III Achieving climate-smart decisions Global problem, local action: effective national and community-level actions Getting to decisions - Managing the politics and social-psychology of climate change Getting to good decisions – institutions and information; Adaptive policies and governance Recent “Climate Governance and Development Conference” in Berlin will be a key input Characteristics of adaptive policies: - in-built adjustment mechanisms - interactive decision-making and learning - decentralized (subsidiarity) - encourage self-organization and networks - provision of review mechanisms When two elephants fight… 38 …it is the grass that gets hurt Feedback Sought Storyline & key messages Doom & gloom or vision & opportunity Climate change as an opportunity: REDD, land-based emissions Bottom-up adaptation approaches; top-down incentives Case studies – good and bad HOW TO MAKE IT HAPPEN, AND IN TIME…. Where “IT” is adequate, acceptable and achievable? Can (should) the WDR be neutral to the negotiations? Some other ‘food for thought’ How can the emissions cuts be achieved while leaving space for development and time for technological and lifestyle changes? – – Role of CDM Global 2 tCO2/person cap and trading of these rights Should we keep working for a 450ppm stabilisation (2ºC) while also preparing for a 550+ppm (3 to 4ºC)? Some other ‘food for thought’ Can a momentum for change be sustained in the face of other pressures (e.g. food and finance crises) If there are so many win-wins out there for climate change and development, why haven’t they been taken up already? Some other ‘food for thought’ What is the best role for the WDR with respect to the UNFCCC process and Copenhagen? What constitutes a fair outcome? – – Natural debt of the North v financial debt of the South Within nation equity Is ‘Adequate, Achievable and Acceptable” a more pragmatic approach? Thank you www.worldbank.org/environment World Bank environment website www.worldbank.org/climatechange World Bank climate change website www.carbonfinance.org World Bank carbon finance website www.worldbank.org/climateconsult Global Consultations towards a Strategic Framework on Climate Change and Development for the World Bank Group www.worldbank.org/cif Climate Investment Funds dedicated website www.worldbank.org/EnvironmentMatters Environment Matters 2007 focuses on the immediate necessity for developing countries to begin adapting to climate change www.worldbank.org/devoutreach Development Outreach on climate change www.worldbank.org/idaandclimatechange IDA and Climate Change paper Advisors J. Schellnhuber (PIK) N. Nakicenovic (IIASA) JC. Hourcade (France) G. Heal (Columbia) J. Weyant (Stanford) Zhou Dadi (China) C. Nobre (Brazil) C. Juma (Harvard) N. Adger (East Anglia) S. Huq (IIED) J. Holdren (Harvard) R. Watson (DEFRA, UK Govt)