State of the Nationally Determined Contributions: Enhancing Adaptation Ambition

Endnotes

  1. 1To conduct the analysis before the end of the donor agreement, the authors determined this cutoff date in order to complete their research within the period of the grant, as outlined within the scope of work. There was a short extension to the cutoff date for three countries— Canada, Ethiopia, and Zambia—that submitted replacements for their updated NDCs in July 2021, shortly after the June 30 cutoff. The authors decided to include these replacements in the analysis over the old updated NDCs, but they stopped doing so after the end of July. However, the authors continued to analyze additional NDCs submitted past the cutoff date, which are available for review on the Climate Watch platform, www.climatewatchdata.org/ndcs-explore?category=adaptation..
  2. 2Based on work by Mechler et al. (2018), we also draw a distinction here to distinguish between the capitalized term Loss and Damage to refer to political debates under the UNFCCC versus lowercase losses and damages to refer to observed impacts and projected risks from climate change.
  3. 3The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) defines transformative adaptation as actions “seek[ing] to change the fundamental attributes of systems in response to actual or expected climate and its effects, often at a scale and ambition greater than incremental activities. It includes changes in activities, such as changing livelihoods from cropping to livestock or by migrating to take up a livelihood elsewhere, and also changes in our perceptions and paradigms about the nature of climate change, adaptation, and their relationship to other natural and human systems” (Noble et al. 2014). The authors used the IPCC framework in tandem with previous WRI work on transformative adaptation in the food and nutrition security critical system to create a working definition of transformative adaptation actions based on the IPCC definition. The authors consider actions to be transformative if they seek to create systemic change through an expansion in scale, address changes in the overall system, include innovation, or include a shift in location in response to climate change (Carter et al. 2018). More details on the development of the transformative adaptation component can be found in Appendix A.
  4. 4Based on work by Mechler et al. (2018), we also draw a distinction here to distinguish between the capitalized term Loss and Damage to refer to political debates under the UNFCCC versus lowercase losses and damages to refer to observed impacts and projected risks from climate change.
Start reading