B. Osman-Elasha
Balgis Osman-Elasha is a Senior Researcher in the Climate Change Unit of the Higher Council for Environment and Natural Resources, Khartoum, the Sudan.
Strategies for sustainable development and climate change adaptation have many common elements, so addressing them jointly can create synergies.
Sustainable development, defined as “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of the future generations to meet their own needs” (WCED, 1987), entails a harmonious integration of a sound and viable economy, responsible governance, people’s empowerment, social cohesion and ecological integrity. Sustainable development does not mean economic stagnation or giving up economic growth for the sake of the environment; it should entail promoting economic development as a requisite for maintaining environmental quality. Economic development leads to increased capacity to address environmental and social problems. Maintaining environmental quality, in turn, is essential for sustainable development.
The link between climate change and sustainable development stems from the fact that climate change is a constraint to development, and sustainable development is a key to capacities for mitigation and adaptation (see Box). It follows that strategies for dealing with sustainable development and climate change have many common elements so that applying them together creates synergies. It also follows that since dealing with climate change exclusively could be very expensive, it has to be factored into the development agenda.
Some definitions from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTIVE CAPACITY Source: IPCC, 2007b. |
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2007a) has reported a warming of approximately 0.7°C over most of the African region during the twentieth century. This warming occurred at the rate of about 0.05°C per decade, with slightly more warming in the season from June to November than from December to May. A temperature rise of about 0.1°C per decade is expected for the next two decades, even if greenhouse gas and aerosol concentrations are kept at year 2000 levels.
IPCC has reported that extreme events, including floods and droughts, are becoming increasingly frequent and severe. Certain regions of Africa are more prone to such extreme events than others. It is probable that the increased frequency of recorded disasters is a result of a combination of climatic change and socio-economic and demographic changes.
Habitats and ecosystems in Africa are under threat from a variety of stresses such as deforestation, land degradation and heavy dependence on biomass for energy, to which climate change is likely to be an additional stress factor |
FAO/CFU000352/R. Faidutti |
Habitats and ecosystems in Africa are currently under threat from a variety of stresses such as deforestation, land degradation and heavy dependence on biomass for energy. In sub-Saharan Africa over 80 percent of the population depends on traditional biomass for cooking (United Nations, 2007). Climate change is likely to be an additional stress factor (Figures 1 and 2).
The key vulnerable sectors identified by IPCC (2007b) include agriculture, food and water. Sub-Saharan Africa is expected to suffer the most not only in terms of reduced agricultural productivity and increased water insecurity, but also in increased exposure to coastal flooding and extreme climatic events, and increased risks to human health.
Africa’s vulnerability to climate change is exacerbated by a number of non-climatic factors, including endemic poverty, hunger, high prevalence of disease, chronic conflicts, low levels of development and low adaptive capacity. The average income per capita in most African countries is lower now than it was 30 years ago. Sub-Saharan Africa is the only region that has had negative annual growth of per capita gross domestic product (GDP), –1 percent between 1975 and 1999, compared with 6 percent for East Asia and the Pacific and 2.3 percent for South Asia. One-third of the people in sub-Saharan Africa suffer from chronic hunger (FAO, 2007). Four in ten people are infected with HIV/AIDS in some African countries (UNDP, 2007). The costs associated with health spending and losses in labour and productivity are greatest in some of the poorest countries; these losses amount to about 5 percent of GDP, or some US$28.4 billion annually, in sub-Saharan Africa (UNDP, 2006). Of the 25 countries in Africa that faced food emergencies in 2003, ten are currently experiencing civil strife and four are emerging from conflicts. Conflicts often divert scarce resources into military budgets and away from development needs, and result in high numbers of internally displaced persons and refugees.
Other non-climatic factors adding to Africa’s vulnerability include heavy dependence on primary products; fast-growing population, leading to pressure on already degraded landscapes; poor governance and weak institutions; low capital investment; lack of access to foreign markets; poor infrastructure; inadequate technology transfer; and continuing high levels of external debt despite debt forgiveness programmes of recent years.
Climate change impacts on Lake Chad, showing a continued decline in lake surface area from 22 902 km² in 1963 to only 304 km² in 2001 |
Climate change impacts on Africa |
Sub-Saharan Africa is expected to suffer the most from climate change in terms of reduced agricultural productivity and increased water insecurity |
FAO/CFU000352/R. Faidutti |
Africa has the world’s lowest CO2 emissions (Figure 3). Climate change is now recognized as an equity issue because the world’s poorest people, those who contributed least to the atmospheric buildup of greenhouse gases, are the least equipped to deal with the negative impacts of climate change. Wealthier nations that have historically contributed the most to global warming are better able to adapt to the impacts. Addressing disparities between developed and developing countries is integral to the success of global climate change mitigation and adaptation.
Sustainable development in Africa cannot be addressed effectively without accounting for the impacts of climate change on agriculture, conflicts and disease patterns, all of which have particular impact on the poor. Sustainable development and adaptation are mutually reinforcing; an important conclusion of IPCC is that adaptation measures, if taken up in the sustainable development framework, can diminish negative impacts from future climate change.
Carbon dioxide emissions per capita, 2000 |
In facing the challenges of climate change, the priorities for African countries are:
These goals require good governance; access to technology; investment in innovation; the involvement and commitment of all segments of society; and international, national and regional cooperation.
Climate-proof development implies extra costs over and above business as usual and a need to assess and address climate risks in national development programmes. This means that additional resources are required. Who will provide them, under what mechanisms and in what time frame are the key questions to be answered.
Bibliography
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Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). 2007a. Climate change 2007: the physical science basis.
Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC. Cambridge, UK, Cambridge University Press.
IPCC. 2007b. Climate change 2007: impacts, adaptation and vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC. Cambridge, UK, Cambridge University Press.
United Nations. 2007. The Millennium Development Goals Report 2007. New York, USA.
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). 2006. Beyond scarcity: power, poverty and the global water crisis. Human Development Report 2006. New York, USA.
UNDP. 2007. Fighting climate change: human solidarity in a divided world. Human Development Report 2007/2008. New York, USA.
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World Commission on Environment and Development (WCED). 1987. Our common future. Oxford, UK, Oxford University Press.