Title: NAMIBIA INITIAL NATIONAL COMMUNICATION
1NAMIBIA INITIAL NATIONAL COMMUNICATION
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- Presented to the UNFCCC at
- COP 8
- by
- Joseph McGann
2Ministry of Environment and TourismREPUBLIC OF
NAMIBIA
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5NATIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Physical Geography
- Arid country on Atlantic coast of southern Africa
- Borders South Africa,Botswana, Angola and Zambia
- Total area 824,268 sq. km.
- Altitude sea level to2,606 m.
6NATIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Physical Geography
- Annual average rainfall range 25 mm in southwest
to 700 mm in north east - Mainly in summer
- Vegetation type - woodland, savannah and low
growth forest limited by rainfall - Landscape mainly desert (Kalahari and Namib) and
exposed bedrock
7NATIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Demography
- Estimated population 1.9 million (2001)
- Population growth rate 2.6 (2001)
- Females - 51.3
- Life expectancy 43 years (HIV factor)
- Population density 2 persons per square
kilometer - At least thirteen distinct ethnic groups
8NATIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Economy
- Lower middle income
- GDP growth av. 4.1 (1994 2000)
- GDP per capita N8,300
- Government, mining, manufacturing and agriculture
are major components of GDP - Highly skewed income distribution
- Unemployment - 35
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10NATIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Land Use
- Approximately 70 of population practice
subsistence farming on approximately 41 of the
land (State owned communal areas) - Less than 1 of population own 44 of the land as
commercial farms - Approximately 2 of land is used for mining
- Approximately 14 in protected or conservation
areas
11NATIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Mineral Resources
- Mineral resources include uranium, copper, gold,
diamonds, zinc and off-shore natural gas - Mining contributes 13 of GDP (2000)
12NATIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Water Resources
- Water scarcity is severe limitation to
development - Mainly ephemeral rivers
- Perennial rivers are at northern and southern
borders - Wetlands and other water bodies tend to be
temporary
13NATIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Agriculture
- Mainly livestock production and dry-land crop
production (commercial) - Subsistence farming maize, pearl millet,
sorghum, small livestock and fruit - GDP contribution - 5 (2000)
- Irrigated crop
- Wetlands and other water bodies tend to be
temporary
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16NATIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Fisheries
- Based on exploitation of cold Benguela Current
- Depleted stocks due to uncontrolled
pre-independence fishing - GDP contribution - 5 (2000)
- More than 80 catch is exported
- Aquaculture being developed
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18GHG INVENTORY
- In a nutshell
- Insignificant contribution to global GHG
emissions - Estimated to be net sink but degree is uncertain
(due to bush encroachment) - Total CO2 emission equivalent is 5,614 Gg
- Uptake (sink) is 5,716 Gg CO2 equivalent
19IMPACTS AND VULNERABILITY
- Predicted Impacts (global IS92a scenario)
- Sea level 30 to 100 cm rise by 2100
- Warming of Benguela current could impact
negatively on stocks - Evaporation - will rise by 5 per degree of
warming even with unchanged rainfall
20IMPACTS AND VULNERABILITY
- Predicted Impacts
- (Based on global IS92a scenario)
- CO2 Emissions - will triple by 2100
- Temperature - mean annual and monthly maximum and
minimum temperatures will increase by 2 to 6 C - Rainfall - highly uncertain but range from
increase of 30 mm to decrease of 200 mm below
current annual average
21IMPACTS AND VULNERABILITY
- Vulnerability
- Water - most vulnerable. Absolute water scarcity
by 2020 without CC - Agriculture stock losses and reduced crop yield
due to drought. Food supply/security vulnerable - Fisheries/marine changes in ocean current
(Benguela) could affect upwelling and marine
resources
22IMPACTS AND VULNERABILITY
- Vulnerability
- Biodiversity/ecosystems - endemic species most
vulnerable if ecosystem boundaries shift. Local
species could be lost - Health increase in malaria, respiratory
infections, diarrhoea and other waterborne
diseases. Predicted changes could extend area of
malaria infection. Drought increases risk of
shortage of clean drinking water
23POLICIES AND MEASURES
- RATIFIED THE UNFCCC 5/1995
- ACCEDED TO CONVENTION 8/1995
- PARTY TO RIO AND OTHER ENVIRONMENT CONVENTIONS
- POLICIES IN PLACE TO PROTECT ENVIRONMENT
24POLICIES AND MEASURES
- ADVISORY COMMITTEE ESTABLISHED IN 1997
- COUNTRY STUDY COMPLETED IN 1999
- NATIONAL CLIMATE CHANGE COMMITTEE ESTABLISHED
3/2001 - COORDINATOR APPOINTED 10/2001 TO OVERSEE INC
PREPARATION
25RESEARCH SYSTEMATIC OBSERVATIONS
- CONTRIBUTES TO GLOBAL OBSERVATIONS
- REGULAR DATA COLLECTION ON ENVIRONMENTAL
PARAMETERS - PARTICIPATES IN REGIONAL AND GLOBAL CLIMATE
CHANGE RESEARCH - ENVIRONMENTAL OBSERVATIONS AND MONITORING
NETWORKS ESTABLISHED
26PUBLIC AWARENESS AND TRAINING
- PUBLIC AWARENESS/ENVIORNMENTAL AWARENESS PROGRAMS
(Govt./NGOs) - PUBLIC EDUCATION INITIATIVES UNDERWAY
- ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION AND DATA COLLECTION
UNIT IN MET - FORMAL AND INFORMAL TRAINING OF STAFF IN GOVT.,
COMMUNITIES AND NGOs
27FINANCIAL AND TECHNOLOGY NEEDS
- VERY VULNERABLE WITH INADEQUATE FINANCIAL AND
TECHNOLOGICAL RESOURCES FOR ADAPTATION - AS NON-ANNEX 1 PARTY NAMIBIA IS ELIGIBLE FOR
SUPPORT TO MEET OBLIGATIONS UNDER CONVENTION
28FINANCIAL AND TECHNOLOGY NEEDS
- ESTABLISH CLIMATE CHANGE OFFICE
- Support for focal point/capacity building
- Coordinate data and information collection
- Data distribution and public awareness
inventories - Coordination with other conventions
- DEVELOP STRATEGY ACTION PLAN
- Policy development and integration in national
development - Strategy and action plan for national program
implementation
29FINANCIAL AND TECHNOLOGY NEEDS
- RESEARCH AND MODELING TO REDUCE UNCERTAINTY
- Future climate trends
- Improved observation systems
- Agricultural production models
- Carbon balance in land use and bush encroachment
changes - Dynamics of Benguela current ecosystem
30FINANCIAL AND TECHNOLOGY NEEDS
- ADAPTATION PROJECTS IN HEALTH, AGRICULTURE,
COASTAL AND WATER MANAGEMENT AND PUBLIC EDUCATION - Malaria control programs
- Improved cropping/farming systems
- Drought tolerant varieties testing
- Development/use of heat resistant livestock
breeds - Protection against sea level rise
- Ecosystem management
31FINANCIAL AND TECHNOLOGY NEEDS
- MITIGATION PROJECTS IN ENERGY AND FORESTRY
- Use of gas-fired power generation
- Efficient lighting and use of solar and other
alternate energy sources - Improved cooking stoves and reduction of charcoal
use - Expansion of rail network infrastructure
- Appropriate aforestation or re-forestation
- Agro-forestry
32CONCLUSIONS
- Contribution to global GHG is negligible
- Arid country with high reliance on natural
resources, agriculture and tourism - Highly vulnerable with little capacity for
adaptation - Party to Convention but requires support for full
participation