Local Communities Aren’t Just Climate Victims. They’re Climate Adaptation Leaders
“Poor and vulnerable” is a common refrain in climate change stories.
It’s a phrase used with good reason, to highlight how climate change
disproportionately affects the disenfranchised. Economically,
politically and socially vulnerable communities feel climate impacts first and hardest. They have fewer resources to protect themselves against floods and droughts. Climate change can exacerbate the effects of poverty, widening the chasm between rich and poor.
Yet this refrain only tells part of the story—and what it leaves out is key to accelerating successful climate change solutions.
Beyond “Poor and Vulnerable”
Despite their frequent portrayal as victims, communities vulnerable to
climate change are sometimes the most active and innovative in adapting
to it. While they face significant barriers like scant funding, a lack
of technical skills, and political and economic discrimination,
communities are adapting in spite of these challenges, relying on deep
wells of local knowledge and trust. Tapping into these existing,
grassroots-level solutions—learning from them, leveraging their
successes and scaling them up—can help accelerate adaptation globally.
“The poor know best what they need,” said Sheela Patel, chair of Shack/Slum Dwellers International (SDI),
a global network of community-based organizations of the urban poor
operating in 33 countries. “I believe that they have a serious stake in
whatever development investment the world, their city, their country,
has to make. And yet they rarely have the opportunity to participate in
design or delivery. They’re always treated as beneficiaries.”
Patel is one of 32 commissioners of the Global Commission on Adaptation,
which aims to raise the visibility of climate adaptation challenges and
solutions. The Commission is preparing a flagship report that will make
the case for prioritizing adaptation from the local to global level.
Empowering locally led adaptation is one of many “action tracks” the
Commission will pursue to overcome the climate change challenge.
Women in India engage in climate-smart agriculture. Photo by Prashanth
Vishwanathan/Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security
Learning from Local Actors
There’s no shortage of examples of innovative, locally led adaptation solutions. Floating gardens in Bangladesh, which prevent crops from being destroyed during monsoon season. A warning system in Kirinyaga County, Kenya that helps local businesses and the county government better prepare for floods. A People’s Plan in the Philippines, where residents in informal settlements design their own climate-resilient housing.
In India’s Maharashtra state, a group of women farmers decided to buck
the trend of growing only a few cash crops, which kept failing in their
water-scarce region. Working with Swayam Shikshan Prayog,
a local grassroots women-led organization, they decided to instead grow
a diverse mix of vegetables, millets and pulses—water-efficient crops
that the farmers can both sell and keep to feed their families. This
agricultural transformation has boosted yields, improved livelihoods and
has since been expanded to hundreds of other farms in the region.
A woman carries firewood in Mahasrashtra, India. Photo by Azhar feder/Wikimedia Commons
The women involved in the project are now considered a “resilient
resource” in their communities, said Prema Gopalan, executive director
of Swayam Shikshan Prayog. They bring practical knowledge and solutions,
rooted in the physical and cultural environment of their communities.
The women of Maharashtra were climate vulnerable because they live in a
vulnerable place, Gopalan said, not because the women themselves where
inherently more endangered. In fact, “they’re basically untapped
potential” in the fight against climate change, she said.
Financing Locally Led Climate Adaptation
Supporting locally led adaptation is a critical component of accelerating adaptation action globally.
It’s a big challenge, one that requires
working across national and local governments, civil society
organizations, and international and public financing bodies. Ensuring
adaptation funding reaches local communities—and that local communities
have a say in where and how those funds are spent—is key. Currently,
complicated bureaucracies, institutional constraints and limited
organizational capacity often block adaptation funds from flowing to
local communities. Funding and decision-making about funding tends to
stay at the national level. And in general, adaptation receives far less
funding than what’s really needed. Recent estimates show that public financing for adaptation is about $23 billion, while annual costs of adaptation could range from $140-300 billion by 2030.
Communities in the Philippines have
banded together to upgrade drainage systems and clean up riverbanks to
control flooding. Photo by Jörg Dietze/Flickr
But there are bright spots here, too. Some East African countries have successfully piloted devolved climate finance approaches,
which create new public management systems that funnel money and
decision-making to the local level, while forging connections between
local communities and government. Elsewhere, civil society organizations
are helping track climate-related spending to
connect available funds to local priorities. It’s important that
adaptation solutions don’t just land on the poor and vulnerable, but are
co-created in an effective, empowering way.
Maria Theresa Carampatana is president of Homeless Peoples Federation Philippines,
a national network of urban poor community organizations and savings
groups affiliated with Shack/Slum Dwellers International. In her work
with informal settlements, she’s seen communities band together to save
for upgraded drainage systems, and clean up their local riverbanks to
help control flooding. These communities are already implementing
adaptation solutions—even though they might not call their work
adaptation. That’s why it’s so crucial to empower locally led action.
People living in poverty are not problems to be solved, Carampatana said. “They are part of the solution.”
(Source: World Resources Institute).
(Source: World Resources Institute).
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