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CC Screening of Danish Development Cooperation Programme with Benin

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Title: CC Screening of Danish Development Cooperation Programme with Benin


1
CC Screening of Danish Development Cooperation
Programme with Benin
  • Baastel
  • Copenhagen, 11 June 2008

2
Introduction
  • Context, objective and organization of study
  • Climate Change context in Benin
  • Vulnerability to climate change
  • National context and existing responses
  • Screening  of sector programmes preliminary
    results
  • Main recommendations
  • Avenues for follow up

3
Context, objectives and organization of study (1)
  • Climate Action and Development Programme Improve
    the climate resilience of Danish Cooperation
    Interventions.
  • Climate Screening consist of
  • Evaluation of CC related risks which can impede
    result achievement
  • Identification of adaptation opportunities
  • Action Plan for the implementation of the CCA
    activities identified

4
Contexte, objectives and organization of study (2)
  • Obj. Mission
  • To assist the Danish Embassy in Benin in
    operationalising its support programmes taking
    into account climate change and national actions
    for climate change adaptation (NAPA), and in
    synergy and/or complementarity with other
    agencies
  • Analysis of capacities required to deal with
    climate change adaptation and natural risk and
    disaster management
  • 3 experts from Baastel, 2-9 June 2008
  • Meetings with various stakeholders
  • including the various ministries involved in the
    sector programmes (MH, MTPT, MAEP)
  • Other ministries such as MEPN, MMEE, DPPC, CNDD,
    ABE, ASECNA, ONASA, ABERME, Urban planning, etc
  • NGO (IDID, Nature Tropicale, OFEDI, Bénin 21,
    Jeunesse sans frontière)
  • International Development Partners (AFD, WB, EC,
    BTC, Impetus, GTZ, UNDP),
  • Universities and research institutes (INRAB,
    CIFRED, ISBA)
  • Private or semi-private actors such as SONEB

5
Climate Change Context in Benin
  • CC Vulnerable country (pressure on degraded and
    fragile environment in the North-West)
  • High concentration of population in the coastal
    zone and the Ouémé Valley
  • Results of climate modeling done for the Initial
    national communication predict
  • An increase in temperature from 1 to 2,5 C by
    2100 
  • An increase between 6 and 19,5 of water loss
    through evaporation 
  • An increase in the length of the dry season
    between 1 and 2 months, depending on the
    location
  • A sea level rise of 20 cm by 2030 40 cm by 2070
    et 60 to 70 cm by the end of the 21st century.
  • Other recent studies highlight the increase in
    climate variability.

6
Vulnerability to Climate Change
  • At the national level, the NAPA highlights in
    particular the following increased threats
  • Drought
  • Late and more violent rainfalls and,
  • Floods.

7
Vulnerability to CC (Water)
  • The models suggest the following impacts on water
    resources
  • Exacerbation of the hydrological cycle
    (withnessing phenomena up to now little known in
    the sub-region)
  • Increase in the frequency and intensity of
    floods
  • Increased occurrences of more severe droughts
  • Decrease in ground water tables (alluvial
    aquifers)
  • Degradation of water quality
  • Notable decrease in water resources
  • Decrease in ground water aquifers replenishment
    due to decreased rainfalls
  • Negative impacts on hydropower.

8
Vulnerability to CC (Agriculture)
  • Directs impacts of climate change on agriculture
    relate to
  • Change in crop patterns
  • Change in soil conditions and decreased soil
    productivity
  • Shorter crop cycles and early flowering, due to
    increased temperatures
  • Decreased productivity of agriculture
  • Increased related risks to food security
  • Already, some provinces have shown food shortages
    in the regions most subjected to climate
    variability
  • Exacerbated by the movement of pastoralists and
    their herds (coming from Northern Benin and in
    particular from Niger and Nigeria, leading to
    land conflicts in Benin in some regions.

9
Vulnerability to CC (Roads)
  • One notes the increased vulnerability of
  • Sanitation infrastructures, main roads and feeder
    roads due to more intense and more frequent
    floods
  • These infrastructures were developed on norms and
    standards that have not yet factored in changes
    to local climate
  • The maximum quantity of water that drainage
    systems can accommodate will more and more be
    surpassed by events, with negative consequences
    to be expected
  • In areas with unstable soil, the occurrences of
    land slides will be more frequent
  • In the coastal zone, coastal erosion could be
    exacerbated by predicted sea level rise
  • Already one can see coastal erosion due to other
    factors, which has already led to the destruction
    of several infrastructures in Benin (PALM BEACH
    Hotel, village of Docloboé)
  • Lands have disappeared in the sea
  • Sanitation infrastructures are often overtaken by
    runoff waters
  • Several roads can already be cut off for hours at
    once.

10
National Context and Existing Responses
  • Signatory to UNFCCC and KP
  • Central role played up-to-now by MEPN on climate
    change issues
  • Key documents INC NSAP/CCV Second NC in
    progress NAPA (2008)
  • Limited capacity of government structures at
    various levels
  • DRR System still non-functional
  • NAPA development was done through a highly
    participatory process
  • Challenge Implementation of adaptation measures
    through sectoral leadership

11
National Context and Existing Responses (2)
  • Immediate development needs dominate the agenda
    but have a direct bearing on adaptation capacity,
    for instance
  • 0 sewage in Cotonou, 50 of Benin population
    does not have access to potable water
  • Effective useful life of main roads in Benin is
    rarely above 7 to 10 years
  • Low agricultural productivity, little irrigation,
    food security crisis in 2008, dependency on
    cotton sub-sector, etc

12
PADSEA 2 - WS Sector
13
PASR 2 Transportation Sector
14
PADSA 2 Agricultural Sector
Baastel
15
Main Recommandations
  • Dissemination/awareness raising/training Ensure
    awareness raising and training sessions in
    climate change to stakeholders involved at all
    levels in the three programmes
  • Support the integration of CC related data in the
    long term planning of the Water Directorate
    (DG/Eau)
  • Adaptation to sanitation infrastructures in
    higher risk zones (latrines)
  • Support to a CC and CC impact modeling system at
    the sub-regional level
  • PASEA, PASR, PADSA after the mission
  • PADSEA 2009
  • PADSEA after the mission
  • Embassy or regional funds? after the mission

16
Avenues for future programming
  • Add the CCA theme to the coordination agenda
    between development partners in the agricultural,
    water and sanitation, and transport sectors
  • Seriously consider supporting NAPA projects 1, 3
    and 4 and establish formal links with DANIDA
    programmes in the agricultural sector and the
    water and sanitation sector
  • Develop an implement a rural economy support
    programme within an integrated watershed
    management approach, and including
  • A detailed study on all baseline data required to
    allow the factoring of the impacts of climate
    change in the transport sector
  • Update biophysical, anthropological and
    socio-economic data
  • Support watershed management master plans
  • Promote inter-sectoral coordination
  • Etc.

17
Some Proposals for Follow Up
  • In West Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa
  • look for opportunities to develop modeling and
    training modules on a regional level
  • Bring the adaptation issue to the table with
    international and national partners
  • Support already existing regional initiatives
    looking at climate impacts in various sectors
  • Also focus on  good development  practices.
  • At the Corporate Level
  • Consider adding a climate screening step at the
    appraisal stage for future programmes.

18
Thank You!
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