State of the Nationally Determined Contributions: Enhancing Adaptation Ambition

2. Framework for Assessing Enhanced Adaptation Ambition

The assessment framework, described in detail in Appendix A and used to analyze the adaptation components of NDCs, comprises four sections:

  • Elements of adaptation communications: The first section is based on guidance from the UNFCCC found in the annex to Decision 9/CMA.1 for the development of the adaptation communications. The adaptation communication is a different instrument than the NDC but is explicitly linked to NDCs in the Paris Agreement through Article 7.11. Its guidance is still relevant for assessing the NDC adaptation components. In fact, the adaptation component of the NDC can serve as the adaptation communication if a country wishes.
  • Critical systems and sectors in adaptation priorities: The second section of the framework categorizes the priority adaptation actions in the NDCs using categories developed by the Global Commission on Adaptation’s Adapt Now report (Bapna et al. 2019): food and nutrition security, nature-based solutions, water, cities and urban areas, infrastructure, disaster risk management, and financing adaptation. The authors added human health, locally led adaptation, and an “other” category to the list of Adapt Now critical system categories. The “other” category was added to capture hard-to-categorize priorities (Bapna et al. 2019). Each adaptation action was also categorized using traditional economic sectors and subsectors to help cross-reference them with the Adapt Now categories. 
  • Losses and damages: The third section assesses how countries referenced losses and damages4 from climate change in their NDCs. Losses and damages from climate change are part of the Paris Agreement (UNFCCC 2015a) and refer to averting, minimizing, and addressing losses and damages associated with the adverse effects of climate change, including extreme weather and slow-onset events. The questions for this section were based on the work plan of the UNFCCC’s Warsaw International Mechanism on Loss and Damage (WIM Excom 2019b). They include mention of Loss and Damage (L&D) as well as economic and noneconomic costs. The framework also checks whether the NDCs mention slow-onset events, displacement and climate migration, and comprehensive risk management and insurance. 
  • Transformative adaptation: The final section identifies transformative adaptation priorities. The questions for assessing this were based on WRI’s work on transformative adaptation (Carter et al. 2018, 2021; Ferdinand et al. 2020) that identified transformative adaptation actions in the food and nutrition security thematic area in the first NDCs. The authors broke down transformative adaptation as actions that seek to create systemic change through an expansion in scale, through innovation, or through a shift in location in response to climate change (Carter et al. 2018). Though there are connections between transformative adaptation and efforts to minimize, avert, and address losses and damages from climate change, this assessment did not identify overlaps between the two.
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