Stories Behind the Adaptation Commitments in the Nationally Determined Contributions of Cambodia, Rwanda, Colombia, and Fiji

5. Reflections for Future Actions

Based on findings from the four study countries, the authors have the following reflections.

For Country Governments

  • National governments can help ensure that the adaptation NDC development process is well resourced and designed. A comprehensive and inclusive process will require time and additional costs to coordinate diverse stakeholders. Public feedback on the document can help improve gaps and accountability to citizens. National governments can benefit from ongoing and formalized participation by a diverse set of stakeholders in adaptation NDC and other adaptation decision-making.
  • An important element of this process is ensuring that the needs of the most vulnerable are addressed. This often implies ensuring that local voices at the front lines of climate impacts can inform national decision-making through direct participation during updating. It also means ensuring that strong vertical coordination efforts are able to identify the needs of vulnerable people. In adaptation decision-making, equitable participation and influence by women and men, including representatives of marginalized groups, can help build capacities and create the conditions for inclusive implementation.
  • The iterative nature of NDC development provides ongoing opportunities to use evidence and improve capacities, often by aligning with ongoing processes such as the NAP process. The lead agencies involved in drafting the adaptation NDCs often play a facilitative role to help sector stakeholders identify key priorities. The formalization of a prioritization process with clear methods, tools, and linkages with other planning processes can help increase transparency and trust between different stakeholders.
  • Although countries have been using the results of their latest national communications to drive the prioritization process, they could also consider creating robust and updated climate risk assessments at the country level. These assessments can lead to consistency in use of information across various reports to the UNFCCC and, more importantly, for planning purposes.

For the UNFCCC

  • The UNFCCC could consider further work to map out the objectives and information needs for different adaptation instruments under the Paris Agreement—such as the adaptation communications, NAP, and the national communications—in line with the Enhanced Transparency Framework. Such a mapping could help advance the objectives of the Glasgow–Sharm el-Sheikh Work Programme on the Global Goal on Adaptation by aiding countries to avoid information duplication and effectively determine and communicate needs. This mapping could then help countries decide how to structure their adaptation NDCs as well. Where possible, this mapping could also include tools from other technical organizations supporting implementation of adaptation actions related to the NDCs.
  • The Adaptation Committee could explore how its forthcoming guidance on adaptation communications could be used to guide Parties in the development of adaptation NDCs. This is especially relevant if Parties intend to use their NDC as their adaptation communication.

For Bilateral and Multilateral Donors

  • National governments face financial, technical, and capacity barriers to the implementation of their adaptation NDCs. Development actors, such as bilateral and multilateral donors, could support national governments to improve alignment with other adaptation plans and policies, including NAPs. Actors that provide technical support for NDC development can play a critical role in ensuring that NDCs are aligned and reflect other ongoing adaptation planning and policy processes in a country.
  • The fact that NDCs are updated at least every five years means that they create an opportunity to track national priorities and implementation over time. Donors could consider supporting the further development of M&E systems for adaptation NDCs aligned with existing national M&E systems. Understanding what works and what does not across all adaptation processes and feeding that information back is important for improving practice. Civil society organizations could also receive support to track and monitor adaptation NDC implementation.
  • Recognizing the challenges faced by countries in mobilizing adaptation resources, donors can also help national governments create and sustain resource mobilization plans or platforms to catalyze and leverage funds from a wide range of sources for the adaptation NDCs as part of the NDC implementation plans. Successful resource mobilization for the implementation of the NDCs can help improve trust and buy-in across all levels of government and society on the adaptation NDCs.
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