Title: Climate Change in Southern Africa
1Climate Change in Southern Africa selected
impacts, responses and the road to Copenhagen
Dr Emma Archer (www.csir.co.za/nre) Dr Mark
Tadross (www.csag.uct.ac.za)
2Introduction
- Comments - climate change explained and observed
- Then look at the projections for Southern Africa
- Thinking around adaptation and response
- The road to Copenhagen, and strategies in South
Africa and SADC Nairobi Declaration (May-June
2009) - Chris climate change implications for the water
sector (example of vulnerable sector others
include health, human settlements, disaster
management, biodiversity ecosystem services,
agriculture, marine and coastal)
3The greenhouse effect
- Greenhouse gases act like panes of glass in a
greenhouse - Allow short wave energy to pass through them
- Trap longer-wave heat radiation that is radiated
back to the atmosphere from the earths surface
(changes to atmosphere radiative forcing)
4So far collective picture of a warming world
IPCC AR4 WG1
- Global average surface temperature has increased
over 20th century by about 0.6 C - Climate change already occurring e.g. temp
raises in parts of SADC - What of the future?
5Southern Africa predictions - temperature
- All of Africa is likely to warm during this
century (IPCC WG1, 2007, Ch 11, pg 866) - Warming likely gt global annual mean warming
throughout the continent and in all seasons - Drier subtropical regions warming more than
moister tropics
6Significant hydrological changes
June-July-August
December-January-February
IPCC AR4 WG1, Christensen et al
Based on regional studies assessed in IPCC
Chapter 11 Precip increase in gt 90 of
simulations Precip increase in gt 66
simulations Precip decrease in gt 66 of
simulations Precip decrease in gt 90 of
simulations Precip decrease likely Precip
increase likely
Sectors vulnerable to climate risk ?
7Priorities in impacts adaptation
- The flaws of a sectoral approach multi-sector
strategies (e.g. intra-departmental coordination
on water-health-livelihoods link in both
causation and adaptation strategies) - Acknowledging the challenge of complex
emergencies/multiple stressors (e.g. cholera
outbreak summer 2008/9) - Win-win strategies (e.g. corridor and landscape
planning as an adaptation strategy) - Link to overall thinking on policy on climate
change and environment in Africa multiple
synergies and the MEAs (more shortly) - Understanding thresholds and progressive
exceedances (households, institutions, management
systems, ecosystems) - Root adaptation in what is currently done to cope
with climate variability (from the communal
farmer to the mining house)
8How South Africa SADC are tackling climate
change
- Beyond communication dissemination of climate
risk science to real sectoral multi-sectoral
impact - Second National Communication on Climate Change
(led by SANBI www.sanbi.ac.za) - Global Change Grand Challenge including Global
Change Bureau, ACCESS, COE on Sustainability and
Global Change, SAEON, Risk Vulnerability Atlas - Adaptation and other climate change units at Dept
Water Environment - Units at Dept Water Environment key focus on
concrete strategies across departments, including
water, health, disaster management, agriculture
(planning commission in Office of the Presidency) - Work in SADC coupling climate change capacity
building to existing SADC early warning and
disaster management processes
9Towards Copenhagen COP15
- Hopes in international climate negotiation that a
new, international climate change agreement for
the post-2012 period will be agreed in Copenhagen
in 2009. - Again, we are already committed to a certain
amount of change, even with great progress in
Copenhagen
10Nairobi Declaration on African Process for
Combating Climate Change (May-June 2009)
- Common African negotiating position on a
comprehensive international Climate Change regime
beyond 2012 - ensure that African common position basis
for negotiations by African group during
negotiations for post2012 regime takes into
account Africa priorities (SD,poverty reduction
and MDGs attainment) - Develop a comprehensive framework of African
Climate Change Programmes (coordination
coherence in implem and review of climate change
initiatives SD plans in Africa _at_ all levels
common approach to engaging international
community) - Support Africa to increase economic
competitiveness - low carbon development - Urge dev countries to set ambitious emissions
reductions targets (2020 - _at_ least 40 below 1990
levels 2050 80 95 below 1990 levels) - Common approach to engaging with the
international community in developing solutions
to tackle the challenges posed by climate change
- Agreement on the modalities for submitting the
outcomes of the Special Session to the African
Union at its summit to be held in July 2009
11Africa priorities for increased support under
future climate regime
- Adaptation
- Capacity building
- Research
- Financing (improved geographical distribution of
CDM projects expansion of eligible categories to
benefit from carbon credits other post-2012
incentives to incl sustainable land use possible
fund establishment to reduce emissions through
sustainable land-management practices incl
forest conservation, sustainable forest
management, avoidance of deforestation,
afforestation and sustainable agriculture) - Technology devt transfer (just mentioned)
- Incl support for South-South transfer of
knowledge - Including indigenous knowledge systems
Annex IV Conceptual framework for African
climate change programmes UNEP/AMCEN/12/9
12Sobering realities on the way forward to conclude
- Joanne Yawitch (Water Environment DDG)
comment on UNFCCC negotations in Bonn - confident will come out of Copenhagen with an
architecture of what the Climate Change regime
will look like (although picture post G8 not
encouraging) - very confident that one will get a second Kyoto
commitment period, with new numbers - less optimistic that the financial framework
for developing-country support would be finalized
Christy van der Merwe, Engineering News, June
11th 2009