Above Photo: The dialogue on climate adaptation took place in Rotterdam, Netherlands just weeks before the COP26 UN climate change conference in Glasgow, to hammer out a clear call to action. Peter Dejong/AP Photo.
More than 50 officials convening in Rotterdam call for November’s COP26 climate talks to treat adaptation as ‘urgent’.
On the heels of last month’s warning from the UN climate science panel that extreme weather and rising seas are hitting faster than expected, leaders have called for more money and political will to help people adapt to the new reality.
At a dialogue in Rotterdam convened by the Global Center on Adaptation on Monday, more than 50 ministers and heads of climate organisations and development banks called for November’s COP26 climate talks to treat adaptation as “urgent”.
In a communique, they said adaptation – which ranges from building higher flood defences to growing more drought-tolerant crops and relocating coastal communities – had not benefitted from the same attention, resources or level of action as efforts to cut planet-heating emissions.
That has left communities worldwide “exposed to a climate emergency unfolding faster than predicted”, they said.
“Adaptation can no longer go under-prioritised,” they added. “It is imperative for COP26 to launch an acceleration in adaptation efforts to enable the world to keep pace with this most profound and far-reaching emergency.”
They warned that the COP26 summit, to be hosted in the UK, would not succeed unless it made advancing adaptation efforts an equal priority with cutting carbon emissions.
‘The impacts are massive’
The Rotterdam meeting – attended by former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, UN climate chief Patricia Espinosa and International Monetary Fund head Kristalina Georgieva – heard from representatives of African nations, small island developing states and other climate-vulnerable countries.
They spoke of how communities are struggling with unusually severe flooding, droughts and storms, as well as the COVID-19 pandemic, setting back hard-won development gains and uprooting people into city slums or even across national borders after finding it impossible to survive on their land.
“We are now living in the eye of the storm. Adapting the world to our climate emergency is essential for our safety, even as we tackle a global pandemic,” Patrick Verkooijen, CEO of the Global Center on Adaptation, told the opening of the dialogue.
“Millions of lives and the safety of communities around the world are already at stake,” he added.
Akinwumi Adesina, president of the African Development Bank, told Al Jazeera that Africa is experiencing “a lot of problems” due to climate change such as droughts, floods and cyclones.
“The impacts are massive. Africa loses today $7-15bn a year in terms of climate change, and if that doesn’t change it’s going to be about $50bn by 2040,” Adesina said.
“It’s never too late [to bring about change]. What Africa needs is to mobilise resources … to allow rebuilding of infrastructure, to make it more climate resilient, and to make sure that we have better systems that can resist many of the challenges we have today.”
Lack of cash
The senior officials attending called for an urgent increase in international funding to help finance adaptation efforts in poorer nations, which have long suffered from a lack of cash.
UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina J Mohammed highlighted the need for “massively scaled-up investment in adaptation and resilience”, which she said was “absolutely critical for those at the front lines of the climate crisis”.
She noted that only about a fifth of climate finance has been channelled to adaptation efforts and “only a fraction” of the estimated $70bn that developing countries need now to cope with the effects of global warming is being provided.
Richer countries are under pressure to earmark half of their climate finance for adaptation.
But more than a decade after they pledged to put funding for adaptation and emissions reductions on an equal basis, the adaptation share remains stubbornly low, partly because much of it needs to be given as grants not loans.
UN climate chief Espinosa said on Twitter Monday that at least 125 of 154 developing countries had started work on national adaptation plans.
The good news is that at least 125 of 154 developing countries have already initiated work on their NAPs, but much more support is needed for the elaboration and implementation of the plans.
— Patricia Espinosa C. (@PEspinosaC) September 6, 2021
Both she and former UN head Ban, who chairs the Global Center on Adaptation, said much larger amounts of funding were needed to put those plans into practice.
Georgieva, who chaired Monday’s meeting, said the IMF was discussing with its member countries channelling some of the money they received from a recent allocation of special drawing rights into a new “Resilience and Sustainability Trust” to help vulnerable nations undertake reforms to tackle climate change.