Developing
countries hardest hit by Climate Change
The poorest people in the world’s poorest countries will
suffer the earliest and the most from climate change, according
to this year’s edition of the World Bank’s annual environmental
review, Environment Matters.
The report says that, due to their geographical location, low incomes,
and low institutional capacity, as well as their greater reliance
on climate-sensitive sectors like agriculture, the poorest countries
and people (those least responsible for climate change and least
able to cope with it) are suffering earliest and are poised to suffer
most. But adapting to climate change can also serve to meet the
development objectives of countries.
According to a press release from the World Bank, this year’s
Environment Matters focuses on the immediate necessity for developing
countries to begin adapting to climate change. The bank’s
top climate change and environment experts, and other contributors,
give frank assessments of what is currently known (and not known)
on key subjects linked to adaptation, including climate variability,
biodiversity, social dimensions, and water security, and makes concrete
recommendations for the way forward.
“Climate action is development action,” said Katherine
Sierra, World Bank Vice President for Sustainable Development. “We
are moving forward aggressively with our client countries to implement
adaptive measures that improve the local environment, increase resilience
to current and future climate variability and to natural disasters,
and foster the dissemination of innovative technologies.”
According to the publication, climate change will provide opportunities
to revisit current development practices. The report shows that
with additional resources, climate change can be a stimulus to assist
the transition to improved practices in land management, energy
production, coastal protection, and so on, especially in the poorest
countries.
The recent replenishment by donor countries of the International
Development Association (IDA) – the part of the World Bank
that helps the world’s poorest countries by providing interest-free
loans and grants – saw funding commitments rise by 42 percent
to $14 billion per year. This was partly in response to the World
Bank’s submission that climate change will increase the resources
needed to maintain levels of benefits to those countries that depend
on it. According to the report, comprehensive climate risk management
in IDA projects will likely be the largest source of funding for
adaptation in least developed countries in the immediate future.
The publication further emphasizes that climate change – and
developing countries’ adaptation to it – is a critical
challenge that must be integrated into core development strategies.
Environment Matters highlights: Access to clean, reliable energy
sources is a core element of increasing climate resilience; Climate
change may bring back water security challenges to countries that
for a hundred years have enjoyed reliable water supplies and few,
if any, water shocks.
The Bank Group is currently developing a Strategic Framework
for Climate Change to be presented to its Development Committee
at Annual Meetings in October 2008. The Bank is also committed to
reducing the carbon footprint of its own operations through the
use of energy efficiency measures, renewable energy, and carbon
offsets. Working with its partners, clients, and all sectors of
society to turn the challenge of climate change into an opportunity
for development leading to an inclusive and sustainable globalization
is the challenging task ahead.
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