Empowering Local Communities Defends Against Climate Change
Durban, South Africa, 5 December
2011 (IUCN) — The world’s poorest people are on the
frontlines of climate change, with everything to lose and
little to cushion the blow of its far-reaching impacts. A
new position paper by the Ecosystems and Livelihoods
Adaptation Network (ELAN) illustrates how empowering local
communities to pursue sustainable livelihoods while managing
their natural resources can contribute to better adaptation
in the face of climate change.
The paper, titled
Integrating Community and Ecosystem-based Approaches in
Climate Change Adaptation Responses, is part of a
partnership that includes IUCN (International Union for
Conservation of Nature), Care International, the
International Institute for Environment and Development and
WWF (World Wildlife Fund). It asserts that integrating
approaches to adaptation based on promoting human rights and
on restoring and conserving natural resources can offer many
complementary benefits for people and the ecosystems on
which they depend. For example, supporting investments in
nature-based solutions – such as using mangrove barriers
to reinforce sea dykes – can be a cost-effective way to
defend against climate change impacts, increase the
resilience of local communities, and complement existing
adaptation measures to reinforce their sustainability over
the long-term.
“Climate change poses one
of the greatest threats in history to the realization of
sustainable development, as climate hazards are increasingly
impacting vulnerable human communities and
ecosystems,” says Carina Bachofen, IUCN, Global
Coordinator of ELAN. “This paper looks at ways to
better integrate Community-based Adaptation (CbA) and
Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA)—two approaches to
adaptation which, up until now, have been seen as separate
and even antagonistic.”
Given the many similarities in practice between the emerging two adaptation approaches, as well as the scale, complexity and urgency of the challenges climate change delivers, increased collaboration and joint learning between CbA and EbA professionals must be achieved. ELAN partners advocate for EbA and CbA practitioners to work together to integrate these approaches and mainstream adaptation into decentralized development, as well as into conservation and disaster risk management planning processes. For example, conserving and restoring woodlands can protect against landslides and floods triggered by intense rainstorms, while also ensuring that people have continued access to the vital forest products such as fruits and firewood that support their livelihoods
“No single organization can do everything,” says Pascal Girot, Senior Climate Change Advisor for Latin America and the Caribbean, CARE International. “The need for enhanced cross-sectoral partnerships and rapid learning to promote integrated approaches to adaptation must be recognized if we are to enhance adaptation thinking and practice. This entails building on community innovation and sharing successes as well as challenges from experience with adaptation around the world.”
Significant
opportunities exist for professionals from the development
and conservation sectors to generate and share knowledge on
“doing” adaptation differently by integrating
community-based and ecosystem-based approaches to
adaptation—vital for informing planning processes that can
manage climate variability and change. States meeting at the
UN Climate Change Summit in Durban at the end of November
must recognize the need to help people adapt while at the
same time restoring and conserving the structure and
functions of the world’s natural resources.
About ELAN
The
Ecosystem and Livelihoods Adaptation Network is a
partnership between IUCN (International Union for
Conservation of Nature), CARE, IIED (International Institute
for Environment and Development), and WWF (World Wildlife
Fund) that aims to enhance the resilience of poor and
marginalized people to the impacts of climate change by
promoting sound ecosystem management and human rights within
an integrated approach to climate change adaptation.
ELAN promotes knowledge sharing and research and
capacity development to promote ways of helping people adapt
to the impacts of climate change and reduce their risk to
natural disasters. ELAN is creating a global network of
scientists, policy makers and practitioners dedicated to
supporting the integration of sound ecosystem management and
human rights into adaptation policies, plans and programs,
especially in the world’s most vulnerable countries.
www.elanadapt.net
About IUCN
IUCN, International Union for
Conservation of Nature, helps the world find pragmatic
solutions to our most pressing environment and development
challenges. IUCN works on biodiversity, climate change,
energy, human livelihoods and greening the world economy by
supporting scientific research, managing field projects all
over the world, and bringing governments, NGOs, the UN and
companies together to develop policy, laws and best
practice.
www.iucn.org
About CARE International
CARE
International has over 60 years of work experience on
disaster risk reduction, poverty alleviation, natural
resource management, empowerment of women and vulnerable
communities. CARE has recently established its Poverty,
Environment and Climate Change Network (PECCN) an internal
CARE global network of thematic specialists and
practitioners on climate change adaptation and mitigation.
Led by the PECCN Secretariat, they have helped build a
growing portfolio of projects, provided training and
capacity building to CARE International members and
partners. CARE joined the ELAN in 2010.
About
IIED
IIED is an independent international research
organisation with over 40 years of experience in building a
fairer, more sustainable world, using evidence, action and
influence in partnership with others. It specialises in
linking local to global and working with some of the
world’s most vulnerable people to ensure they have a say
in the policy arenas that most closely affect them. Its
climate change group was established in 2001.
About WWF
World Wildlife Fund’s mission
is the conservation of nature. Using the best available
scientific knowledge, WWF-US works to preserve the diversity
and abundance of life on Earth and the health of ecological
systems by protecting natural areas and wild populations of
plants and animals, including endangered species; promoting
sustainable approaches to the use of renewable natural
resources; and promoting more efficient use of resources and
energy and the maximum reduction of pollution. WWF is
committed to reversing the degradation of the planet's
natural environment and to building a future in which human
needs are met in harmony with
nature.