State of the Nationally Determined Contributions: Enhancing Adaptation Ambition

6. Conclusion

Countries are at different stages of adaptation planning and implementation. Yet a majority of them have included an adaptation component in their NDCs, which is evidence that adaptation is an important area of focus, on par with mitigation. The work program on the Global Goal on Adaptation in Glasgow has also raised the need for all countries to consider adaptation (UNFCCC 2021c).

Most countries have used their NDCs to communicate a list of prioritized adaptation actions in line with their needs and capacities. The NAP process has influenced the articulation of these adaptation priorities in many countries. Even when there is no final NAP document, the NAP process includes many activities that can help advance adaptation action.

Because countries have flexibility in deciding how to include adaptation in their NDCs, the adaptation information they include is of different types and different scales. Each country presents adaptation information based on its own needs and concerns through its NDC. The Paris Agreement provides little guidance to countries on how to structure the adaptation component, in contrast to mitigation. This creates difficulties in conducting cross-country comparisons of the adaptation components of the NDCs.

Although countries have made significant progress in adaptation planning and implementation, there are areas that need additional work. More work is required to ensure that adaptation priorities are investment and implementation ready. This is critical for raising finance and addressing implementation capacity gaps. Countries will also need to decide how they will track the implementation of the adaptation components of the NDCs. This will require developing-country governments to develop timelines, baselines, indicators, and costs for the prioritized adaptation actions as well as to align national-level monitoring and evaluation activities with NDC implementation tracking. Donors can target resources to help developing-country governments undertake or strengthen these processes.

Countries may not wish to overload the NDCs with all the elements of adaptation that are needed for a comprehensive response, such as that taken in NAPs and national plans and budgets. The NDCs should reflect and provide strategic priorities on adaptation, and the NAP and other instruments may be used to implement the adaptation NDCs.

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