Title: INTEGRATED ASSESSMENT IN THE PHILIPPINES
1AN INTEGRATED ASSESSENT OF IMPACTS, ADAPTATION
AND VULNERABILITY IN WATERSHED AREAS AND
COMMUNITIES IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Juan M. Pulhin Ekawati S. Wahyuni
2Objectives of the Presentation
- To briefly discuss
- Overview of the research project
- Analytical and methodological gaps before the
workshop - Proposed analytical and methodological tools to
address gaps and influence decision makers being
targeted by the project
3Overview
- Watersheds and their importance in the
Philippines - critical to economic development and
environmental protection - More than 70 of the total land area lies within
watersheds - 421 principal river basins, 18 of which are major
basins with drainage areas of more than 140,000
ha
4- gt 1.5 M ha of agricultural lands derive
irrigation water from watersheds - Hydropower major energy source
- 18-20M people living in uplands
5 Project objectives
- Assess the impacts of climate change to water
resources, forest ecosystems, and social systems
of the watersheds - Conduct integrated vulnerability assessment of
natural and social systems in the watershed
areas - Develop adaptation strategies for natural water
resources, forests ecosystems and social systems - Promote stakeholder participation in the research
process - Contribute to peer reviewed literature and
- Help build capacity of local scientists to
conduct integrated assessment studies.
6Research Methods
- Study will focus on a watershed each in the
Philippines (Pantabangan watershed) and Indonesia
(Tulang Bawang Watershed). - Stakeholders will be involved at various steps of
the research process - Local communities will also be able to
participate in impact assessment and adaptation
planning
7General Conceptual framework of the study
(Original)
GMC Climate Scenario
National Climate Scenario
Land use and cover Change in the Watershed
Impacts on water, forests and communities
Adaptation Assessment
Vulnerability Assessment
8Research Framework at the Watershed Level
9Expected Outcomes
- results will be useful to national policy makers
as well as watershed planners in SE Asian
countries - enable local communities in watershed areas to
adapt to climate change
10ANALYTICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL GAPS BEFORE THE
WORKSHOP
- Balancing top-down with bottom-up analysis to
make assessment more robust - Engaging the stakeholders participation in the
research process - Promoting the use of the research outputs by
decision makers
11ADDRESSING ANALYTICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL GAPS
- Balancing top-down with bottom-up approach
- Revised research framework to incorporate current
coping strategies and vulnerability assessment - Methods Assessment of current vulnerability and
adaptation strategies of relevant stakeholders - Tools Stakeholder/Institutional Analysis, PRA
techniques (time lines, focus group discussions,
seasonal calendar, wealth ranking, in-depth
interviews)
12General Conceptual framework of the study
(Revised)
GMC Climate Scenario
National Climate Scenario
Land use and cover Change in the Watershed
Impacts on water, forests and communities
Current Vulnerability Assessment
Climate Variability/ Extremes and Current Coping
Mechanisms
Future Vulnerability Assessment
Future Adaptation Assessment
13ADDRESSING ANALYTICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL GAPS
- Engaging the stakeholders participation in the
research process - Method Multi-spatial, Multi-level Stakeholder
Analysis/Involvement - from on-site and downstream communities and
institutions to the regional and national
agencies/groups, to the policy makers at the
various stages of the research process (Scenario
building, present and future vulnerability and
adaptation assessment/planning) - Tools Various tools on SA and Participation,
- Multisectoral consultation,
Facilitation - Methods
14ADDRESSING ANALYTICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL GAPS
- Promoting the use of research outputs by
decision makers - Wide range of decision makers involved in the
project from the de facto resource users to the
policy makers - Challenge build awareness and interest on
climate change in different sectors in the
process of conducting the research - Approach Move from a laboratory-oriented to a
more stakeholder-oriented, advocacy type of
research
15ADDRESSING ANALYTICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL GAPS
- Promoting the use of research outputs by
decision makers - Tools Various tools on SA and Participation,
- Multi-sectoral consultation, IEC
tools - Specifics (other than those mentioned already)
- Development of IEC materials such as posters,
website, etc. - Presentation of project concepts/outputs in local
and national seminars/for a/symposia, etc. - Incorporation of climate change topics in
existing university courses or development of new
courses and student researches - Use of spatial analysis (GIS) to better
communicate research results - Bringing research results in the halls of the
Congress.
16CONCLUSION
- Both the research process and outputs are
important to influence decision makers - If stakeholders are aware and involved, the
likelihood that they will use the research
outputs/results increases - In climate change assessment, the challenge is
to put more human dimension and local
perspectives into the modelers equation
17Thank you!