State of the Nationally Determined Contributions: Enhancing Adaptation Ambition

4. Key Findings

Our assessment found that countries have developed more detailed adaptation components in their updated NDCs compared to their first NDCs. They consulted more government agencies and ministries, as well as different stakeholder groups, to develop their adaptation components. A high-level political body also approved most updated NDCs for submission to the UNFCCC. This has helped increase domestic awareness about and commitment to the goals in the updated NDCs. However, more attention to some elements of this assessment framework does not necessarily mean that these elements have been well addressed in the updated NDCs. The framework assesses major trends across the NDCs but cannot make assessments about the quality or adequacy of the different activities to respond to impacts of climate change.

The authors found that the adaptation components of updated NDCs made more references to other national plans and policies and were better aligned with them. Along with an increase in references to the NAP process, many countries’ NDCs also refer to their national development plans and climate change policies and include sectoral and subnational plans and policies in relation to advancing adaptation actions. More countries also refer to other international processes, such as the SDGs and the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction.

The analysis shows that when countries include impact, risk, and vulnerability information, they use information from national documents such as the national communications to the UNFCCC. When countries have completed their national communications, they are able to draw on the latest vulnerability and impact information to develop their adaptation NDCs. Other sources of information that countries have used include national-level assessments conducted as part of different adaptation planning, such as the NAP process. This information increasingly reflects the severity of climate impacts that countries are experiencing and the need for more efforts to advance adaptation actions.

The prioritized adaptation actions in the first and updated NDCs cover all the systems that the Global Commission on Adaptation identified as being critical for adaptation. Compared to the first NDCs, the updated NDCs have more prioritized actions related to critical systems such as water, food and nutrition security, and advancing nature-based solutions. Other critical systems, such as infrastructure, cities and urban areas, human health, adaptation finance, and locally led adaptation, also receive more attention in the updated NDCs (see Figure 4). Although most of the assessed countries have increased the number of prioritized adaptation actions in their updated NDCs, a few countries actually have fewer priorities than in their first NDCs.

Only a few prioritized adaptation actions include baselines, targets, indicators, and costs. The number of updated NDCs including indicator frameworks and targets for the actions has increased, though the numbers are still low. The information on costs, in particular, seems limited because countries are not clear on the calculation methods they use. References to integrating climate adaptation into national budgets are also limited. This suggests that countries need to do more work to develop costing methodologies and align them with other ongoing initiatives to integrate climate change risks into their national budgets in order to develop robust cost estimates. These are important elements of creating realistic and feasible NDC implementation and investment plans.

The number of countries including information on their adaptation MEL activities has increased but remains low. Some countries also detail how they will track the implementation and financing of their NDCs and communicate that information to the UNFCCC. Countries will need to coordinate and align these two activities as implementation of the adaptation component of the NDCs gathers pace.

The updated NDCs reflect improvements in the integration of gender equality as well as the integration of local knowledge and indigenous concerns. Many more countries now include equal participation and influence in decision-making by women and men, and allocation of resources and benefits addresses gender inequality as part of adaptation plans. Indigenous groups are referred to in more NDCs, but the analysis shows that many countries did not conduct consultations with indigenous and local groups during the development of the adaptation NDC. However, other national adaptation planning processes may have facilitated participation of diverse groups.

Many countries are still not clear about how to design actions to contend with losses and damages. Some countries have reported economic losses and damages from past climate disasters. A few countries have mentioned noneconomic costs, slow-onset events, and efforts to address migration and displacements as a result of climate change in their updated NDCs. Comprehensive management of climate impacts and risks (involving averting, minimizing, and addressing losses and damages) by improving early warning systems, increasing access to insurance, and better integrating climate change into disaster risk management practices seem like promising ways to incorporate the issue.

Countries have not planned for transformative adaptations that change underlying system dynamics and respond to increasing shocks and stresses from climate change. The authors were able to identify actions that addressed some elements of transformative adaptation, such as scaling adaptation actions and addressing underlying system properties, incorporating innovations, and shifting the location of actions in response to climate change. However, countries need to clarify how they can achieve transformative adaptation. Moreover, there were no strong links between inclusion of potentially transformative actions in a country’s NDC with the ways to avert, minimize, and address losses and damages from the adverse impacts of climate change.

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