State of the Nationally Determined Contributions: Enhancing Adaptation Ambition

5. Reflections for Further Action

Based on the findings from our assessment, we propose the following actions for consideration by country governments, bilateral and multilateral donors, and the UNFCCC with regard to the adaptation components of NDCs.

For Country Governments

  • Though different countries will take different approaches, they should consider the adaptation component of their NDCs as part of a wider suite of harmonized instruments for advancing adaptation action at the national level. Instead of viewing the adaptation NDC as a stand-alone or parallel planning document, countries should strengthen its links with other plans and processes. Improved links with the NAP process, which is a much more comprehensive planning instrument, could help countries advance implementation. The adaptation NDCs, together with the adaptation communications, could provide more international visibility for adaptation.
  • Countries can develop the adaptation component of their NDCs in line with their needs and priorities. However, they should ensure that the adaptation NDCs are strategically aligned with other adaptation instruments of the Paris Agreement (Dale et al. 2020). Attempts at such strategic alignment can help determine how best to structure the adaptation NDC and identify the type of information necessary to enable implementation at the scale and speed required. Countries can already consider how to include adaptation as part of the ETF and consider how ongoing adaptation MEL efforts can support the development of adaptation NDC implementation tracking as part of the Paris Agreement.
  • Countries should consider engaging a wide variety of stakeholders during the development of the adaptation NDCs, including local and indigenous groups, women, youth, and the elderly. Inclusion of such groups could help make the priorities more inclusive and focused on reducing vulnerabilities.

For Bilateral and Multilateral Donors

  • The NDC priorities could influence the development of donor country strategies. Compared to other critical systems, the number of actions under cities and urban areas, locally led adaptation, adaptation financing, and human health is low in both the first and updated NDCs. This suggests that in addition to investments in high-profile sectors such as food and nutrition security, nature-based solutions, and water, donors could consider investing at scale in integrating climate adaptation into less traditional climate adaptation sectors as well.
  • Under the Paris Agreement, both the ETF and the biennial transparency report’s adaptation section (Rai et al. 2019) provide opportunities to link national adaptation MEL systems with systems to track NDC implementation progress. Developing-country governments could benefit from guidance and tools for tracking adaptation NDC implementation and linking it with ongoing national MEL efforts. Donors could consider making investments to link national adaptation MEL systems with national reporting requirements to the Paris Agreement as part of improved transparency and accountability efforts.
  • Donors should support developing countries to develop investment and implementation plans for the prioritized adaptation actions in the NDCs. For example, donors could help developing countries to develop and apply country-led and nationally appropriate indicators and baselines as well as cost estimation methods for priority actions. These priorities also should be integrated into ongoing national development and adaptation planning processes such the NAP.
  • As climate change impacts intensify, donors should help national governments improve their comprehensive risk management approaches for addressing climate change–related losses and damages. This could include supporting the integration of climate risks into disaster risk reduction and management activities, supporting the establishment of early warning systems for multiple hazards, and promoting risk transfer mechanism such as insurance. Donors could also support the use of different climate scenarios to calculate noneconomic and economic losses and damages.
  • Identifying pathways—the sequence of flexible actions—to create transformative adaptation actions across many sectors, identifying ways to improve innovations, and linking such approaches to long-term plans and strategies will become critical as countries strengthen resilience (Carter et al. 2018). Donors can play an important role in funding country-level research to catalyze conversations and build the capacity of national institutions to drive this agenda. Countries lack an agreed definition of transformative adaptation, which is a barrier that improved support could help overcome.

For the UNFCCC

  • The Paris Agreement has a growing number of instruments for reporting and communicating information about adaptation, such as adaptation communications, NDCs, NAPs, biennial transparency reports, and national communications. However, the kind of information that should be included in each of these instruments remains unclear. The Adaptation Committee is already developing supplementary guidance, mapping out the information needs of the adaptation communications. At the same time, this guidance could map out the information needs of the other instruments and provide guidance on the links between them. This work could help countries to structure their information for different adaptation instruments and remove duplication. Ultimately, countries need to decide for themselves how they see the different instruments. The secretariat could facilitate this decision by providing examples of how different countries have approached and structured different instruments.
  • As countries enhance their NDCs, the regular annual synthesis reports of NDCs by the secretariat (paragraph 30 of Decision 1/CMA.3) provides an opportunity to update the information on adaptation and thereby indicate what has changed since the previous round of NDCs. If possible, the secretariat could consider displaying the information from the adaptation component of the NDCs, enabling wider outreach and learning. By promoting transparent and easy-to-update information through an accessible platform, the secretariat could provide crucial support to increase adaptation ambition.
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