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  • 2010-2014  (9)
  • 1945-1949
  • Agrawala, Shardul  (9)
  • Paris : OECD Publishing  (9)
  • Basingstoke [u.a.] : Palgrave Macmillan
  • Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press
  • Cham : Springer International Publishing
  • 1
    Language: French
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (80 p.) , 21 x 29.7cm.
    Parallel Title: Parallele Sprachausgabe National Adaptation Planning: Lessons from OECD Countries
    Keywords: Environment
    Abstract: Depuis la publication de la première stratégie nationale d’adaptation par un pays de l’OCDE en 2005, les activités de planification nationale de l’adaptation au changement climatique se sont multipliées. Le présent document propose un panorama de ces activités dans les différents pays de l’OCDE et met en exergue un certain nombre d’enseignements nouveaux qui se dégagent de leur expérience. L’analyse met à profit trois principales sources d’informations : une étude des communications nationales à la Convention-cadre des Nations Unies sur les changements climatiques (CCNUCC), trois études de cas nationales (Mexique, Angleterre et États-Unis) et les résultats du Forum sur l’adaptation au changement climatique tenu en 2012 à l’invitation de l’OCDE. Elle montre que 26 pays de l’OCDE ont élaboré ou sont en train d’élaborer des cadres stratégiques nationaux pour l’adaptation, et que 17 d’entre eux ont également produit des plans d’adaptation nationaux détaillés ou y travaillent. Les pays ont beaucoup investi pour constituer un socle de connaissances de plus en plus perfectionné, afin d’étayer leurs mesures d’adaptation et de renforcer leurs capacités en la matière. Les gouvernements nationaux ont généralement adopté des mesures visant à assurer une prise en compte systématique de l’adaptation dans leurs activités et dans les dispositifs réglementaires, et mis en place des mécanismes de coordination pour que des dispositions soient prises dans l’ensemble de l’administration. Les collectivités locales et les régions ont également joué un rôle important dans les efforts d’adaptation, même si la mise en place de cadres de coordination systématique entre les autorités nationales et infranationales a moins bien progressé. L’élaboration de stratégies et de plans est relativement récente et leur mise en oeuvre en est encore aux premiers stades. Les études de cas et l’atelier de l’OCDE ont néanmoins permis de constater que les pays doivent relever trois grands défis au moment de mettre en application leurs stratégies et leurs plans : surmonter le déficit d’informations sur le climat et l’insuffisance des capacités correspondantes, mobiliser un financement adéquat et mesurer l’efficacité des interventions d’adaptation. Il sera primordial de s’attaquer à ces difficultés pour faire en sorte que les avancées en matière de planification se traduisent par de meilleurs résultats.
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  • 2
    Language: French
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (45 p.) , 21 x 29.7cm.
    Parallel Title: Parallele Sprachausgabe Adaptation and Innovation: An Analysis of Crop Biotechnology Patent Data
    Keywords: Agriculture and Food ; Environment
    Abstract: L’innovation dans les technologies liées à l’atténuation et à l’adaptation sera capitale dans la lutte contre le changement climatique. Elle peut permettre de réduire le coût de l’action des pouvoirs publics et offrir de nouvelles opportunités au secteur privé. Cependant, la plupart des débats sur l’innovation portent sur l’atténuation, au détriment de l’adaptation. Le présent document se fonde, pour une étude de cas sur l’activité d’innovation, sur les biotechnologies agronomiques. Le secteur agricole, déjà sollicité pour répondre à la demande d’une population mondiale en augmentation, est en effet considéré comme particulièrement vulnérable face au changement climatique. Innover pour améliorer les espèces végétales et développer des variétés plus résistantes aux incidences du changement climatique est l’une des nombreuses possibilités d’adaptation qui s’offrent à l’agriculture. Le présent document n’a pas vocation à prôner ou décourager le recours aux biotechnologies, mais fournit des estimations sur le degré d’innovation dans ce domaine et sur les tendances qui se dégagent.
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  • 3
    Language: French
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (58 p.) , 21 x 29.7cm.
    Parallel Title: Parallele Sprachausgabe Private Sector Engagement in Adaptation to Climate Change: Approaches to Managing Climate Risks
    Keywords: Environment
    Abstract: La planification, le financement et la mise en oeuvre des mesures d’adaptation au changement climatique suscitent de par le monde un intérêt croissant. Jusqu’à présent, c’est surtout le rôle du secteur public qui a focalisé l’attention, le secteur privé étant principalement envisagé en tant que source de financement et d’investissements. En revanche, il a été assez peu question de la réaction du secteur privé aux risques et aux débouchés du changement climatique. La présente analyse vise donc à mieux comprendre le rôle du secteur privé. Dans ce document, on analysera les progrès accomplis par le secteur privé sur le front de l’adaptation au changement climatique, à partir d’éléments issus de seize études de cas relevant de différentes branches d’activité. Ce travail sera complété par une analyse générale des mesures d’adaptation à l’échelle de l’ensemble du secteur privé, à partir des réponses au questionnaire du Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) de 2009. Les études de cas contiennent des éléments sur le niveau de sensibilisation des entreprises aux risques et aux points de vulnérabilité potentiels au changement climatique, sur les progrès qu’elles ont pu accomplir dans l’évaluation des incidences spécifiques à leur activité du changement climatique et des réponses possibles, et sur les mesures et les stratégies d’adaptation qu’elles ont mises en oeuvre pour maîtriser ces risques. On examinera également dans quelle mesure les entreprises tirent parti des nouveaux débouchés amenés par le changement climatique. Ce travail met en lumière les facteurs qui peuvent motiver les entreprises à prendre des mesures d’adaptation et définit les éléments communs susceptibles d’influer sur la capacité des entreprises à agir pour l’adaptation, sur leurs motivations à agir et leur perception de la nécessité de l’adaptation. On cherchera à comprendre comment ces facteurs peuvent favoriser ou freiner l’adaptation, et on évaluera les rôles que peuvent jouer les pouvoirs publics pour éliminer les obstacles à l’action, pour encourager l’engagement du secteur privé et l’inciter à investir pour l’adaptation.
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (40 p.) , 21 x 29.7cm.
    Series Statement: OECD Environment Working Papers no.40
    Parallel Title: Parallele Sprachausgabe Adaptation et Innovation : Une analyse des données sur les brevets dans le domaine des biotechnologies agricoles
    Keywords: Agriculture and Food ; Environment
    Abstract: Innovation in technologies that promote mitigation and adaptation will be critical for tackling climate change. It can decrease the costs of policy measures and provide new opportunities for the private sector. However, most discussions of innovation have focused on mitigation, while little attention has been paid to innovation for adaptation. This paper uses agricultural crop biotechnology as a case study of innovative activity. The agricultural sector is considered to be particularly vulnerable to climate change, in addition to facing the pressures of meeting the demands of a rising world population. Innovation in plant breeding to develop crop varieties that are more resilient to climate change impacts is one of several possible adaptation options for agriculture. This paper neither advocates nor discourages the use of biotechnology, but focuses on providing estimates of the level and trends of innovation in this field.
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Pages: 50 p. , 21 x 29.7cm
    Series Statement: OECD Environment Working Papers no.38
    Keywords: Environment ; Development
    Abstract: In the context of scaled up funding for climate change adaptation, it is more important than ever to ensure the effectiveness, equity and efficiency of adaptation interventions. Robust monitoring and evaluation (M&E) is an essential part of this, both to ensure that the prospective benefits of interventions are being realised and to help improve the design of future interventions. This paper is the first empirical assessment of M&E frameworks used by development co-operation agencies for projects and programmes with adaptation-specific or adaptation-related components. It has analysed 106 project documents across six bilateral development agencies. Based on this, it identifies the characteristics of M&E for adaptation and shares lessons learned on the choice and use of indicators for adaptation. This analysis has found that Result Based Management, the Logical Framework Approach and the accompanying logframe are the most common M&E approaches used for adaptation. In applying these approaches, the long-term perspective of most adaptation initiatives means that it is particularly important to clearly differentiate between outcomes, outputs and activities. In addition, M&E frameworks for adaptation should combine qualitative, quantitative and binary indicators. The baselines for these indicators should include the effects of future climate change, particularly for projects with long-term implications, such as investments in infrastructure. Significant challenges remain in relation to dealing with shifting baselines, attribution and time lags between interventions and outcomes.
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Pages: 56 p. , 21 x 29.7cm
    Series Statement: OECD Environment Working Papers no.39
    Keywords: Environment
    Abstract: There is growing international interest in the planning, financing and implementation of adaptation to climate change. However, the discussion to date has primarily focused on the public sector’s role, with the private sector viewed primarily as a source of funding or financing. Relatively little attention has been paid to how the private sector is responding to the risks and opportunities from climate change. In this context, this analysis aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of private sector’s role. This paper examines the private sector’s progress in adapting to climate change by considering information from sixteen case studies, drawn from a range of industries across the private sector. This is complemented by a high-level analysis of broader private sector adaptation based on responses to the 2009 Carbon Disclosure Project questionnaire. The case studies provide insight into companies’ awareness of potential climate risks and vulnerabilities, their progress in assessing specific impacts on their businesses and possible ways to respond to them, and their implementation of adaptation measures and strategies to manage these risks. The analysis also examines how companies are taking advantage of new business opportunities arising from climate change. The paper explores companies’ motivations for implementing adaptation measures, and establishes common factors which can affect companies’ capacities to adapt, their incentives for action, and their perspectives on the need to adapt. The analysis considers how these factors can both encourage and impede adaptation, and assesses potential public sector roles for eliminating barriers to action, encouraging engagement and incentivising private sector investment in adaptation.
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Pages: 38 p. , 21 x 29.7cm
    Series Statement: OECD Environment Working Papers no.24
    Keywords: Environment
    Abstract: National governments and development agencies have invested considerable effort in recent years to develop methodologies and tools to screen their projects for the risks posed by climate change. However, these tools have largely been developed by the climate change community and their application within actual project settings remains quite limited. An alternate and complementary approach would be to examine the feasibility of incorporating consideration of climate change impacts and adaptation within existing modalities for project design, approval, and implementation. Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA) are particularly relevant in this context.
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Pages: 84 p. , 21 x 29.7cm
    Series Statement: OECD Environment Working Papers no.23
    Keywords: Environment
    Abstract: Financing for adaptation is a core element in the ongoing international negotiations on climate change. This has motivated a number of recent global estimates of adaptation costs. While important from an agenda setting perspective, many of these estimates nevertheless have a number of limitations. They are typically static (i.e. estimated for one specific year), do not differentiate between investments in various types of adaptation or quantify the resulting benefits, and are delinked from policies and investments in greenhouse gas mitigation.
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  • 9
    Language: English
    Pages: 20 p. , 21 x 29.7cm
    Series Statement: OECD Environment Working Papers no.15
    Keywords: Environment
    Abstract: Much of the current policy debate on adaptation to climate change has focussed on estimation of adaptation costs, ways to raise and to scale-up funding for adaptation, and the design of the international institutional architecture for adaptation financing. There is however little or no emphasis so far on actual delivery mechanisms to channel these resources at the sub-national level, particularly to target the poor who are also often the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. It is in this context that microfinance merits a closer look. This paper offers the first empirical assessment of the linkages between microfinance supported activities and adaptation to climate change. Specifically, the lending portfolios of the 22 leading microfinance institutions in two climate vulnerable countries – Bangladesh and Nepal - are analysed to assess the synergies and potential conflicts between microfinance and adaptation. The two countries had also been previously examined as part of an earlier OECD report on the links between macro-level Official Development Assistance and adaptation. This analysis provides a complementary “bottom-up” perspective on financing for adaptation. Insights from this analysis also have implications for OECD countries. This is because microfinance is also being increasingly tapped to reduce the vulnerability of the poor in domestic OECD contexts as well and may therefore have the potential to contribute to adaptation. The paper identifies areas of opportunity where microfinance could be harnessed to play a greater role in fostering adaptation, as well as its limitations in this context. It also explores the linkage between the top-down macro-financing for adaptation through international financial mechanisms and the bottom-up activities that can be implemented through microfinance.
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