In-Country Scenarios
At left, Akosombo Dam turbines in Ghana, by Talata M. At right, rice paddies in Vietnam, by Eric Baker.
Scenarios and the World Resources Report
The use of scenarios is not new; many institutions, from private corporations to the military, use them in planning exercises to help ensure preparedness for a range of future eventualities. For the World Resources Report 2010-2011, we used scenario exercises because the tool is well suited both to the topic of climate adaptation decision making and to our goal of research transparency.
Why We Chose Ghana
- Major developing country.
- Active civil society.
- Stable government.
- Broad awareness of climate change.
- Future of a key sector—electricity generation—is susceptible to climate change impacts.
- Active support by our partners.
Rather than use scenarios as planning exercises, we employed them to learn about how officials make decisions when confronted with choices that involve significant future consequences.
We didn't want to know what decision was made as much as we wanted to know how and why it was reached. What were the critical forces, pressures and constraints that officials had to contend with as they weighed key facts and an uncertain future?
These innovative scenario exercises, produced in collaboration with the Consensus Building Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, were designed with a dual purpose: to provide insight into how adaptation decisions are made that could provide useful lessons for officials in other countries, and to give participants experience in negotiating skills and in the use of scenario planning for their own national needs.
Ghana and Vietnam
Working with our partners at the World Bank and UNDP, we chose Ghana and Vietnam to stage scenarios in November and December 2010. Public officials, and national institutions, including universities and NGOs in both countries became co-sponsors of the research.
Based on significant background research, we devised hypothetical scenarios for each country that were both realistic and probable, and that participants would easily regard as decisions they could likely face.
For a more detailed description of the scenario exercise in Ghana, click here, and for more details on Vietnam, click here.
General Conclusions
While it is both difficult and risky to generalize from a limited set of events, there are certain conclusions that became evident from the scenario exercises. We highlight them below, with the goal of pointing out issues and challenges that are common to the countries whose officials are on the front lines of climate change impacts:
Why We Chose Vietnam
- The Mekong Delta is the most vulnerable delta in the world, susceptible to sea level rise and increases in extreme weather events.
- The Delta is the heart of the country's agriculture sector, vital to its economy; Vietnam is the 2nd biggest exporter of rice. The agriculture sector is highly vulnerable to changes in climate.
- A significant developing country in SE Asia.
- Government has already decided on what level of sea level rise to use for planning purposes.
- It may sound self-evident, but economic development is the key issue in developing countries. Meeting the pressing, legitimate and basic needs of citizens is primary for most governments. Right now, the equation adaptation=development is not how this challenge is viewed.
- Governments are aware, to one degree or another, of climate change and its potential impacts. They are less certain about those impacts will affect their country or areas of their country, especially in the long term. That is as much a function of the inadequacy of information and the ability to make long-range predictions of useable accuracy.
- Factoring climate change risks into current and future planning, to the extent it requires significant new expenditures, is a big barrier. Developing countries see climate change adaptation now as a cost, not a benefit, and that colors much of their planning and decision making. The scenario exercises showed how long term risks are widely discounted or, in some cases, dismissed as yet "another study."
- A key challenge to international aid agencies and donors is to create the incentives so that climate change adaptation is seen as critical to national planning and policy, that it can provide opportunities to countries, and not merely another claim on scarce resources. This is a critical point: some officials see the requirement of adaptation as a necessity, however unwelcome or unfair. Others see it as yet another burden, the benefits of which are not immediately obvious, but the costs of which are quite clear.
- The issue of fairness is the backdrop to virtually every discussion of adaptation. "We didn't cause this problem; why do we have to pay to avoid the consequences?" summarizes that attitude. How officials and other players react ranges widely: for some, it just another reality that must be dealt with---they are very matter of fact and don't dwell. For others, it gnaws, as if that constant focus may somehow result in some redress in the form of significant financial assistance.
Research
Expert Perspectives on...
- Does climate change require new approaches to making decisions?
- How can we balance today’s pressing needs with long term risks?
- How can development agencies help vulnerable countries adapt effectively?
- Must we fundamentally change course to conserve ecosystems in a changing climate?
- How can information for adaptation decision making be collected and disseminated so as to advance integration of climate risks into plans and policies and be useful for those who need it most?
- What types of information are needed for adaptation decision making?
- Thought leaders explore how to meet both today’s development challenges and tomorrow’s climate risks.
- How can national-level governments learn from the private sector and encourage investment and decision making to promote the public good in a changing climate?
- How can civil society best support, and hold accountable, national-level governments in their efforts to integrate climate change risks into planning and policy-making processes?
Case Studies
- Controlling Yangtze River Floods: A New Approach
- Building Resilience to Extreme Weather Events: Index-Based Livestock Insurance in Mongolia
- Namibia: Combating Land Degradation with Tools for Local-Level Decision-Making
- Nepal: Responding Proactively to Glacial Hazards
- Increasing Food Security: Mali's National Meteorological Service Helps Farmers Manage Climate Risk
- Indonesia: Managing Peatland Fire Risk in Central Kalimantan Province
- Mangrove Restoration and Rehabilitation for Climate Change Adaptation in Vietnam
- Bangladesh's Comprehensive Approach to Disaster Management
- Rwanda: Ecosystem Restoration and Sustainable Hydropower Production
- South Africa: Ecosystem-Based Planning for Climate Change
- China's Agricultural Development: Adaptation in Action
- Brazil: Fire and Flood Responses in the Amazon
In-Country Scenarios
Decision-Making In Depth
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