WP 7: Urban policies and governance
Transcript of WP 7: Urban policies and governance
RAMSES PROJECT Grant Agreement n° 308497
WP 7: Urban policies and governance
D7.2: Typology of the tools available to policy-makers
and assessment of their efficiency
Reference code: RAMSES – D7.2
Authors: Nicole de Paula Domingos (UVSQ), Charlotte da Cunha (UVSQ), Kari De Pryck
(UVSQ), Yorghos Remvikos (UVSQ), François Gemenne (UVSQ)
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Programme for Research, Technological Development and
Demonstration under Grant Agreement No. 308497 (Project RAMSES).
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Project Acronym: RAMSES Project Title: Reconciling Adaptation, Mitigation and Sustainable Development for Cities Contract Number: 308497
Title of report: D7.2: Urban policies and governance Reference code: RAMSES – D7.2 Short Description: This research explores urban adaptation by analyzing three main approaches that can assist local leaders to implement adaptation measures to climate change: grey, green and soft measures. The paper argues that adaptation is not a straightforward affair and requires thus a context-oriented approach both in terms of policy prescription and evaluation. In this case, the study places special emphasis on the need of a package of measures to be implemented holistically with significant attention to “soft” options, mainly social empowerment and participatory tools of multiple stakeholders, as successful enablers of an effective adaptation plan. Authors and co-authors: Nicole de Paula Domingos (UVSQ), Charlotte da Cunha (UVSQ), Kari
De Pryck (UVSQ), Yorghos Remvikos (UVSQ), François Gemenne (UVSQ)
Partners owning: UVSQ Contributions: ICLEI Made available to: Public
Versioning Version Date Name, organization
0.1 23/12/2015 UVSQ
0.2 03/06/15 UVSQ
1.0 03/07/15 UVSQ, ICLEI
Quality check Internal Reviewers: Jürgen Kropp (PIK), Alberto Terenzi (ICLEI), Gemma García (TECNALIA)
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Table of contents
1.EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ........................................................................................................................................... 5 2. INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................................................................... 6 3. URBAN ADAPTATION-‐ THE NEED TO COPE WITH SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC COSTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE 9 3.1 Identifying pathways for an effective adaptation planning ...................................................... 14 3.2 Studying adaptation needs-‐ a starting point ................................................................................... 15 3.3 Evaluating adaptation options-‐ the need of a context-‐oriented approach ........................ 17 3.4 Social empowerment and learning as success factors of an adaptation plan ................... 21
4. MONITORING AND EVALUATING ADAPTATION-‐ OPPORTUNITIES AND GAPS AROUND THE NOTION OF EFFICIENCY ............................................................................................................................................................... 27 4.1 Initial lessons from the Stakeholders Dialogue and fieldwork in New york, Bogota and Bilbao ........................................................................................................................................................................ 34
CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................................................................. 40 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................................................................ 42
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List of Abbreviations
AF – Adaptation Fund
BAU – Business as Usual BC3- Centre For Climate Change (Bilbao)
CDM– Clean Development Mechanism
EU – European Union
EEA – The European Environmental Agency EIA – Environmental Impact Assessment GEF– Global Environment Policy GEO – Global Environmental Outlook GHG – Greenhouse Gas ICLEI– International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives IEA – Integrated Environmental Assessment IPCC – The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
NAPA – National Adaptation Programmes of Action
NFIP – National Flood Insurance Programme
PMU– Municipal Emergency Plan (Bilbao) UN/ISDR – United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction UNDP – United Nations Development Programme UNEP – United Nations Environment Programme UNFCCC – United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
URA– Basque Water Agency
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1.Executive Summary Urban adaptation is both a challenge and an opportunity for the cities of the 21th
century. This report is a first step for local authorities and experts interested to learn
about essential questions that must be asked before and during the process of
conveiving an adaptation plan at the city level. It discusses grey, green and soft
measures and recommends that a context-oriented approach must be prioritized. This
means that, ready-made tool-kits for adaptation can be useful to orient cities in their first
steps towards a more comprehensive plan, but they could be counterproductive if not
tailored to the local context.
Based on the result of the 2nd Stakeholders Dialogue, organized by the RAMSES project
in Copenhagen in May 2015, and on preliminary interviews and a vast review of the
recent academic literature on urban adaptation, the report offers some concrete insights
focusing on the cities of New York, Bilbao and Bogota. It recommends to local authorities
to place special attention on “soft” measures, notably social empowerment and
participatory tools for multiple stakeholders who can act as successful enablers of an
effective adaptation plan.
On its final part, the report shows that measuring successful adaptation-planning
remains a challenge and much of adaptation actions are so far reactive, deriving from
the need to compensate damage caused by natural disasters (i.e. floods, landslides,
tsunamis, earthquakes). Quantified assessments of adaptation measures do not
represent a general rule and various cities have developed successful adaptation plans
using qualitative data and information from historical experience and knowledge as a
base for decision making, suggesting that scientific uncertainty is not necessarily a
barrier to action on adaptation planning. Shifts in perception and behavior, together with
leadership remain essential aspects of successful resilient cities and, despite remaining
challenges for defining, measuring and planning effective adaptation, the analysis of
some case studies indicates significant advancements on such tasks.
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2. Introduction Climate change is an unprecedented threat in human history for its complexity and long-
term impacts. As a fundamental challenge of the 21st Century, decision-makers must be
prepared for bold decisions in a context of uncertainty.
This is especially true for cities, which, by 2030, will host around 60% of the global
population and, as engines of global growth, urban centers pose both solutions and
challenges for our society. As the heart of economic dynamism of several developed
countries and emerging economies, cities account for around 80% of global economic
output (The New Climate Economy 2014). On one hand, some of the world's largest
metropolitan economies are responsible for 41% of global GDP with only 14% of the
global population (Floater et al. 2014). On the other hand, cities are also drivers of
energy demand and greenhouse gas emissions (GHG), accounting for around 70% of
both at the world level (IEA 2012). Nowadays, urban centers in large emerging countries
have already reached the same levels of emissions as large European and North
American cities, being Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin the best examples (Sugar,
Kennedy, and Leman 2012). Given these rapid growing urban centers which can both
deliver growth but also consume a critical amount of scarce resources, investment
choices in the next two decades are crucial for determining whether a low-carbon city is
in fact possible and sustainable.
Estimated cost of adapting to climate change for the world's cities is estimated at $70
billion to $100 billion per year and cities are expected to bear 80 percent of global costs
of adapting to climate change impacts (Sugar, Kennedy, and Leman 2012). What is
problematic, however, is that most of available research related to effectiveness of tools
and methods of climate adaptation remain fragmented and mainly targeting international
development projects, particularly in the areas of: water resources and quality;
agriculture; public health; disaster risk reduction; coastal zone development and natural
resource management (Bours, McGinn, and Pringle 2014 and World Bank 2010) While
most of these topics are essential parts of an adaptation strategy, systematic studies
about processes and tools that influence decision-making at the sub-national level
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remain overlooked. “Who knows what?” and “who needs to know what?” for an effective
adaptation planning are important questions that deserve to be explored further.1
This is pertinent considering that decision makers must work on long-term policies but
must deal with short-term expectations from its constituencies. For example, fighting
urban sprawl and social segregation are challenges that remain vital for effective action
against climate change. With growing climate related hazards and rapid urbanization,
risks of flooding, drought, water scarcity, sea level rise, storms, landslides and heat
waves are more and more frequent. What is even more problematic is that these
challenges affect urban citizens in an unequal way, putting into evidence social and
gender inequalities (Moser and Sattherthwaite 2010). To manage the negative effects of climate change, cities must develop mitigation and
adaptation strategies. However, despite the importance of both axes, scholars and policy
makers have been paying less attention to adaptation. It is illustrative that several
multilateral development banks, together with the International Development Finance
Club (IDFC), released in 2015 common frameworks for tracking mitigation finance, but
are still working on means to track adaptation (World Bank 2015). One important
consequence of this relative negligence is a lack of a cohesive understanding of tools
and approaches to adaptation, as well as weak instruments to measure it. One of the
main reasons for these shortcomings relates to the broad definition of adaptation itself,
and the fact that it relates to a wide set of actions ranging from global policy to individual
behavior change. This gap is alarming notably because there is clear evidence that
climate change threatens development efforts and the livelihoods of billions of people.2
In this context, the questions of what works and what doesn't in terms of adaptation-
planning are yet to be better understood. Important for this research is that climate adaptation is “fundamentally political” and,
consequently, involves cascading decisions across a large number of agents, including
individuals, firms and civil society, public bodies and international organizations (Javeline
1 See for example the editorial of a special edition of the Global Environment Change 15 (2005) 75-76. 2 See: Third United Nations World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction 2015)
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2014; Adger, Nigel, and Tompkins 2005). This implies a special focus on decision-
making procedures, institutions, social empowerment and governance. 3 In addition,
effective adaptation is the one that promotes a long-term perspective on urban
development and a change in “business as usual” (BAU) regarding social and economic
choices. This is because climate vulnerability is driven by socio-economic factors and
building good adaptation strategies means, to a large extent, improving human health,
well-being, economic conditions, and education. Thus, to well adapt, a city must use all
kinds of resources, such as natural capital, financial resources, cognitive capacity, social
behavior and institutional innovation. Hence, decisions on adaptation cannot be isolated
from decisions linked to demographic, cultural and economic changes that are also
interrelated to technological transformations, global governance, social conventions and
economic fluxes (Adger, Nigel, and Tompkins 2005). This process, however, is
particularly complex for urban planners, who must not only opt for effective but also for
efficient decisions. That is, they usually need to consider the notion of cost-effectiveness
and cost-benefit when prioritizing decisions. Nevertheless, in a recent survey done by
ICLEI on an analysis of urban adaptation strategies of early movers in Europe, it was
found that “only Copenhagen used cost-benefit analysis in the prioritization of adaptation
actions within its strategy, while Malmö and London planned to carry out cost-benefit
analyses but wanted to concentrate on specific aspects such as eco-system services or,
as is the case for London, flooding. This indicates that while the ‘economic case’ for
adaptation is often cited, cities may be unsure of how best to gather or present
appropriate data" (Terenzi and Wigstrom 2013). This argument suggests that, despite its
importance, economic profitability alone is an insufficient criterion for effective decision
making due to imperfect markets, major transaction costs and problems related to
coordination and planning (Terenzi and Wigstrom 2013).
The present research puts into evidence that institutional innovations that allow the
adoption of new solutions and social empowerment are as important as technical
developments themselves. In this sense, it is argued that the notion of multiple benefits
must complement the notion of economic efficiency for effective decision-making. The
3 The analysis of these themes is the goal of work package 7 "Urban Governance" of RAMSES Project. For an overview of all work packages, see: http://www.ramses-cities.eu/about/research-work/
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advantage in focusing on the notion of resilience is that it seeks to avoid a determinist
approach based exclusively on impacts (De Pryck et al. 2014).
The analysis is divided in three main parts. The first presents an overview of the social
costs that cities have to bear due to climate change. The second discusses the
importance of a context-oriented analysis regarding vulnerabilities and risks. It explores
options for appraising adaptation planning emphasizing the participatory tools and social
empowerment as “success factors” and analyses how adaptation planning can be
monitored and evaluated, while cautioning for existing shortcomings linked to the notion
of efficiency. Before the conclusion, the final section highlights the continuous need for
measures that could engender deep transformations in the way cities conceive their
development strategies towards a low-carbon future and provide some initial lessons
from the examples of New York, Bogota and Bilbao.
3. Urban adaptation- the need to cope with social and economic costs of climate change
Today, the idea that inaction will cost more than action when it comes to climate change
is well known (Stern 2006). This is even more relevant for cities in the perspective of
unstructured and fast pace growth, which must go beyond the businesses-as-usual
scenario in order to avoid unmanageable and ongoing social and economic costs. The
table bellow gives examples of such argument.4
Ongoing social and economic costs deriving from business-as-usual
scenarios Examples
The growing need to invest in infrastructure as an attempt to provide basic urban infrastructure and services.
OECD and IEA estimate that around US$50 trillion is required for investments in transport, building energy efficiency, telecommunications, water and waste infrastructure over the next 15 years.
4 The information in this table was collected in the New Climate Economy 2014 report.
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The Boston Consulting Group calculates an infrastructure investment shortfall of over US$1 trillion per year (mainly related to transport needs to cope with urban sprawl).
Growing financial welfare costs related to traffic congestion.
Congestion costs the city of Buenos Aires 3.4% of its GDP; 2.6% in Mexico City and 1% in the EU.
Escalating economic and social costs due to air pollution
Air pollution is estimated to be the top environmental cause of premature mortality by 2050. In Beijing, motorized transport (including air pollution and congestion) is already estimated at 7.5-15% of GDP. OECD estimates that the social costs of road transport in OECD countries; China and India combined are US$3.5 trillion per year (including the value of health impacts and lives costs).
Lock-in of inefficiently high levels of energy consumption
Cities are vulnerable to volatility of energy prices especially because of rapid urban sprawl (a study with 50 cities worldwide shows that almost 60% of growth is related to this phenomenon).
Increasing social exclusion The combination of urban sprawl and motorization are related to the growing o slums and gated communities.
A wide range of other economic and social costs
Includes: - Costs related to road safety, divided communities; - Low levels of physical activity and its health implications; - Reduced ecosystem services; - Risks to food security.
One of the main problems with these social and economic costs is the consequent
growth of GHG emissions. For example, materials used for infrastructure are carbon-
intensive and, if developing countries match their infrastructure according to current
global level, only the infrastructure materials would cost around 470 billion tones of CO2
emissions by 2050 (The New Climate Economy 2014). Most importantly, inefficient
urban development could lock in higher emissions for decades and centuries. Under
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business-as-usual scenarios (BAU), emissions from the transport sector could almost
double by 2050 (The New Climate Economy 2014). With these figures in mind, there is a
clear reason to foster a new mental map for urban development. In this map, all cities
would have to save energy, reduce carbon emissions, efficiently manage natural
resources and waste, invest in smart infrastructure, expand green areas, build disaster
risk reduction strategies and improve channels of communication with citizens regarding
resilience and its benefits. In sum, cities will have to lead a new growth vision that is
compatible to a low carbon society.
However, despite the growing concern with climate change, cities face considerable
uncertainty about how and where to start their adaptation planning. According to Terenzi
and Wigstrom (2013), at the European level there is a higher level of awareness on
adaptation to climate change and about 70% of the cities that took part in the EU Cities
Adapt survey have begun working on adaptation, while 22% plan on doing so and only
8% of the cities report that they have not started, nor have they planned starting working
on adaptation yet. In Europe, one can argue that large cities tend to be “early movers”,
while small ones remain more dependent on external support in terms of financial and
technical issues to develop an adaptation plan. Specific barriers include: • Difficulty to secure funding specifically for adaptation measures and human resources
allocation; • Communicating the importance of pursuing adaptation to elected officials; • Gaining political commitments from local politicians and business partners; • Lack of data, specially in Asia, Africa and Latin America; These barriers converge with the ones encountered by European cities, which also
indicated the difficulty to allocate budget resources after the Euro crisis; lack of multilevel
governance interface; lack of long term political commitment; lack of good practice
examples and peer-to-peer exchange possibilities. Overall, this suggests that cities still
believe that there is insufficient support for adaptation planning and that networks,
funding and, adaptation guidance could be a valuable asset in this task.
Adapting to climate change essentially means three things. First, strengthening
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infrastructure and ecosystems to reduce vulnerabilities in the context of climate change,
and to reduce the risk of spill over effects. Second, building the capacities of social
agents to anticipate and develop adaptive responses, while maintaining supportive urban
systems. Third, addressing the institutional factors that could constrain effective
responses to climate hazards (Tran et al. 2014). In this perspective, adaptation actions
serve for many purposes and attributing them specifically to climate change is a difficult
task. Fully embedded in broader social and economic reasons, they are part of a large
set of development policies. Considering that unintentional adaptation can harm
purposeful adaptation, it becomes clear that the integration of actions on adaptive
capacity (notably related to institutional aspects) and actions that implement operational
decisions on adaptation across sectors, remain key to achieve effective adaptation in
practice (Tran et al. 2014). At the same time, there is no unique method or set of tools that could be pre-defined. For
example, the report State of the World Cities 2012/2013 suggests that so far the notion
of prosperity has been narrowly defined due to an excessive focus on economic growth
that ignores vital dimensions, notably quality of life, adequate infrastructures, equity and
environmental sustainability (UN-Habitat 2013).5 It is important to consider that policy style has a major importance when determining
successful adaptation. Institutions are central pieces of the puzzle that investigates why
some of them promote adaptation, while others slow down this process. Policy style
embeds structural and cultural features and can be defined as “a pattern within
policymaking, and having to do with the way problems are solved vis-à-vis the
relationship between government and other actors" (Lampis 2013, 1882). Given that
climate change became a crosscutting issue for public policy, such analysis is essential
for understanding the adaptation governance. One central assumption is that
governance plays a central role in predicting whether a policy goal, such as improving
adaptation to climate change, can be meaningfully achieved according to the
5 With the goal to overcome this gap, that report proposes a new tool for policy makers named City Prosperity Index, which is accompanied by a conceptual matrix (Wheel of Prosperity). The goal is to advocate by local leaders the need to enhance urban policies towards an expansion of and consolidation of rights to the “commons” as a path to prosperity.
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understanding of institutions that policies will be embedded in. From this perspective,
one central task of local leaders is to ensure that adaptation actions will be
“mainstreamed” into existing sectoral policies (UNEP 2013, 30). As a polysemic concept, adaptation is a complex phenomenon to be analyzed and can
be evaluated through numerous aspects, such as formal and informal institutional
arrangements, the availability of financial resources, land-use regulations and fiscal
policies, the political power balance among local groups and the relationship existing
between global and local economic and political interests (Lampis 2013). It is thus the
interplay of these elements that should be evaluated when exploring adaptation,
meaning the analysis of what works in the short, medium and long run at a local context,
as well as its “complex web of conflicting interests and social process” (Lampis 2013).
Considering that the overarching goal of adaptation is, in fact, to enable a more resilient
city; tools and measures to boost adaptation planning usually range from a complex
package of public policies, ranging from private investment to technical, institutional (to
coordinate different types of actors), regulatory and financial measures (World Energy
Council 2010).
Resilience must be conceived as a package of actions tailored according to the local
context. As adaptation, resilience is also a polysemic concept, which has evolved
considerably in the last decades. For instance, in the 1970s, Holling, suggested
“resilience determines the persistence of relationships within a system and is a measure
of the ability of these systems to absorb changes of state variables, driving variables,
and parameters, and still persist” (Holling 1973, 17). Resilience has also been identified
as a tool to anticipate and therefore plan for the future in a manner that takes into
account the effects of climate change and other natural disasters (Gallopín 2006;
Carpenter et al. 2001). From the literature, eight aspects of the notion of resilience could
be highlighted (Da Cunha, Plante, and Vasseur 2011):
1. Absorption capacity; a resilient system can absorb shocks and rebuild itself.
2. Adaptive capacity of behaviors; individuals, groups and organizations should be able to maintain a positive attitude towards unexpected hazards and manage significant changes in their environment.
3. Recovery capacity; refers to the ability of individuals and groups to come back to the
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“initial” state following extreme events.
4. Innovation capacity; refers to social and technological skills able to cope with new conditions of a system after an unforeseen hazard.
5. Capacity of self-organization; requires a strong psychological capacity for improving their own protection and the protection of their environment in the context of rising risks.
6. Learning process; refers to the ability to learn from past events and improve the capacity to anticipate, innovate and adapt in terms of behavior.
7. Anticipation capacity; refers to the ability of planning for hazards, including in terms of resources and capacity-building in advance.
8. Acceptance and management of risk uncertainty; this principle could be defined by a conscious response to a significant uncertainty of risk.
With these considerations in mind, the next sections will explore some fundamental
aspects of an adaptation plan in the urban context emphasizing the importance of a
context-oriented approach.
3.1 Identifying pathways for an effective adaptation planning Developing an adaptation strategy passes in general through two main tasks. First, the
analysis of expected impacts of climate change (with and without adaptation) and,
second the analysis of the potential capacity to prevent, moderate and adapt to these
impacts. Because relative costs of some options could be high and long term policies are
desirable, cost-benefit (weighing the costs of implementing adaptation measures against
its expected benefits) and cost-effectiveness analysis (the lowest-cost way to achieve
the desired goal) are common methods used to support decision making (UNEP 2013).
However, they remain insufficient for an effective implementation of an adaptation plan
and several other elements must complement decisions on this matter. This is because
adaptation planning does not evolve in a linear manner. Despite such lack of linearity,
some toolkits provide a useful starting point for cities that intend to develop an
adaptation plan. The one named AdaptME, for example, is a reference for establishing
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an idealized6 cycle in which cities can plan step-by-step how to create an adaptation
strategy (Pringle 2011).
Five-stage adaptation planning: essential questions7
Identifying adaptation needs: - What impacts may be expected under climate change? - What are actors’ vulnerabilities and capacities? - What major decisions need to be addressed? Identifying adaptation options: - How can the specific risks and opportunities that were identified be addressed? - There may be several options available to achieve the desired goals. Appraising adaptation options: - What are the pros and cons of the different options, and which best fit the adaptation actors’ objectives? Planning and implementing adaptation actions: - After an option is chosen, implementation can begin. - The focus here is on practical issues, such as planning, assigning responsibilities, setting up institutional frameworks, and taking action. Monitoring and evaluation of adaptation. - As measures are implemented, the process is monitored and evaluated to ensure it goes as planned, identify any problems, document the outcomes achieved, change course as needed, and draw lessons from the experience.
3.2 Studying adaptation needs- a starting point Climate change is demanding numerous actions from cities, which are challenged by a
growing number of hazards, particularly related to heatwaves, floods, sea level rise,
water scarcity and droughts. Floods are dangerous as they can destroy infrastructures,
trouble the economy and cut off fundamental services (i.e. Energy, transport, clean
water). Heatwaves have an impact in public health, reduce human productivity, constrain
social life and put infrastructures at risk. When combined with droughts, food security
can be affected, as well as water availability, causing numerous economic and social
pressures, including greater social disparity. These challenges, however, do not affect
6 These stages are called "idealized" as "real-world" adaptation is rarely a linear process. It requires thus constant refinement during its development, as it will be discussed throughtout this paper. 7 (Bisaro et al. 2014)
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cities equally. Hence, there is need for an analysis of vulnerability assessments tailored
to the local context. This is important because impacts depend not only on the exposure,
but also on the capacity of the city to cope with hazards. The concept of vulnerability is
central to complement traditional risk analysis focusing primarily on natural hazards
(“Vulnerability of People and the Environment: Challenges and Opportunities.
Background Report on Chapter 7 of the Fourth Global Environment Outlook (GEO-4)”
2007). Vulnerability, in the context of climate change, is a function of the degree to which a
system is exposed: people's sensitivity and their adaptive capacity. People living in the
areas of natural disasters are an example of high exposure to risk, but adaptive capacity
varies from city to city, community-to-community, availability of resources, and social
values. Adaptive capacity tends to be higher when individuals are ready to cooperate
within the community and are able to be involved in decision-making. Such capacity
decreases considerably in areas of conflict, when they are forced to migrate or live in
areas with low law enforcement (Bizikova et al. 2009). This includes the ability of
individuals to cooperate within households, but also with neighbors and with the
community leaders and their involvement in decision-making. Overall, understanding the
vulnerability requires the identification of the main sensitivities to the previously identified
impacts in the context of the existing adaptive capacity. The following questions could
guide this phase of analysis (Füssel and Klein 2006): 1. How often do the identified impacts, including disasters, hit the community? Is the
incidence growing?
2. Based on the trends, drivers and pressures, what are the main causes of vulnerability?
3. What coping strategies exist for each identified impact? How effective are these coping strategies?
4. What are the capacities that are lacking to address the identified impacts? 5. Which organizations/institutions, if any, support existing coping strategies or promote
new strategies?
When responding to these questions, it is essential to consider that cities are embedded
in a broader “urban ecosystem”, in which surrounding rural and peri-urban areas must be
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taken into account, since they are responsible for the provision of ecosystem services,
such as water, food, waste disposal, flood regulation, cultural and recreational values,
used by the urban centers (UNEP 2009). On the other hand, often information and
precise data at local scale is lacking, and the evaluations of vulnerabilities and impacts
must take into account certain uncertainties. UNEP, for example, offers a training that
assists in this initial phase of evaluations that uses the Methodology for the Preparation
of GEO Cities Reports (UNEP 2009). This methodology applies the D-P-S-I-R matrix
(Driving Forces, Pressures, State, Impacts, Responses), which provides means to
understand urban trends and prepare for an integrated environmental assessment
(Bizikova et al. 2009). What is essential to be retained is how cities function, notably
“the structure of social inequality of the city, the main factors that determine space
occupation, the local institutional organization with emphasis on those public institutions
set up to protect the environment, and the mechanisms for social participation in the
development of public policies, among other things" (Bizikova et al. 2009, 8).
Driving forces relate to societal processes that promote activities that have a direct
impact on the environment, such as population trends, consumer behavior and
production, scientific and technological innovation, economic demand, markets and
trade, resource distribution patterns, institutional and socio-political frameworks and,
value systems. Example of pressures, include: emissions of pollutants or waste, land
use changes, and resource extraction (Bizikova et al. 2009). Overall, understanding
vulnerability requires determining sensitivities to identified impacts based on adaptive
capacities. Physical and social systems must be assessed in order to determine the
most appropriate adaptation options.
3.3 Evaluating adaptation options- the need of a context-oriented approach It is more and more evident that the transition to a low-carbon city is imperative. But what
have been the main solutions that cities have been applying to become more resilient?
Climate change has been affecting cities in different ways, but heat, flooding, water
scarcity and droughts have been at the top of concerns for their strategic value and
direct impact into the quality of life in urban areas. Under the scenario of future acute
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vulnerabilities, adaptation options are usually classified in three different ways (European
Environment Agency 2012). First, “grey” infrastructure approaches, which correspond to physical interventions with
the support of engineering solutions to make the city more resilient to extreme events.
Considering that in some large emerging countries, notably in India, most of the
infrastructure is yet to be build, green technology has been attracting investors and
policy makers, particularly in the building, transport and waste sectors (European
Environment Agency 2012). Scaling up these solutions is even more important knowing
that emissions from emerging economies are rapidly pairing with those of developed
countries and the key drivers for this increase are population growth, income growth,
local temperatures, industrial composition, design and technology, and market failures
(Floater et al. 2014). Historical path dependencies show how energy consumption and
GHG patters in cities with similar per capita income and climate are comparable given
past policy decisions that have shaped urban form, transport system and building energy
efficiencies. For example, in the building sector, solutions include improved practices
and design that can enhance insulation, heating and cooling systems, as well as
allowing the adoption of renewable energy. Investments in the early stages of the low-
carbon transition can be appealing to local decision makers, indicating that climate
change must be part of development strategies. If investments equivalent to 1.7% and
9.5% of annual city-scale GDP were made at the global level, it is estimated that they
could generate a reductions equivalent to 10-18% of global energy-related GHG
emissions in 2025 (Gouldson et al. 2014). However, despite ongoing initiatives towards a
low-carbon and climate-resilient infrastructure, there is still a need to increase the scale
of change, notably in the transportation sector. According to the New Climate Economy
(2014), in a short-term perspective, between 2015-2020, global infrastructure needs,
including building and transportation vehicles, are approximately 6.7 trillion USD/per year
under BAU. Incremental costs of low-carbon infrastructure are estimated to be between
70 to 450 US billion dollars per year. Considering the technical and financial inter-
dependency between infrastructure systems, such investments are expected to generate
a “virtuous cycle of low-carbon growth" (Kennedy and Corfee-Morlot 2013).
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Second, “green” infrastructure approaches are the ones that can make the city more
resilient through the use of, for example, networks of greenways, open spaces,
greenbelts, urban greening, cultural landscapes, urban open spaces, ecological
networks, agricultural land, and natural systems aiming at provisioning services (food,
water, timber, and fiber), regulating services (regulation of climate, flood, disease,
wastes and water), cultural services (recreational, aesthetic, and spiritual benefits), and
supporting services (soil formation, photosynthesis, and nutrient cycling) (Abunnasr
2013; Stubbs 2008). The goal of green infrastructures is to achieve sustainability through
the maintenance of “nature” that can, at the same time, improve wellbeing and the
environmental conditions of urban areas.
Third, “soft” approaches are those that facilitate the implementation of “grey” and “green”
measures and include the design and application of policy procedures, such as: land-use
controls, information dissemination, economic incentives to reduce vulnerability and
measures that try to avoid maladaptation. As it will be discussed later, these measures
can be perceived as “success factors” for an effective implementation of an adaptation
plan. To provide some examples of adaptation measures, the problem of heat is illustrative.
With greater temperatures the concern is that cities will increase the use of air
conditioning and, consequently, increase GHG emissions. Insulation of buildings is the
first priority to keep rooms cool and to reduce the use of energy consumption. Thick and
well-designed walls, small windows, double glazing, as well as public spaces that
provide shade and natural isolation are called passive measures and should be
prioritized. Following this, the use of green infrastructure is another manner to cope with
the effect of heat islands and provide multiple benefits, including the creation of areas for
recreation, filtering air, draining and storing water. Vegetation, in particular, provides
thermal balance effects during the day and, at night, helps with the production of fresh
and cool air (European Environment Agency 2012; Kazmierczak and Carter 2010). In the
case of heat, soft measures are essential. Awareness of the local population on how
they can reduce sensitivity to heat with a focus on the most vulnerable (i.e. elderly,
children, disabled); a heat action plan coupled with preparedness of health and social
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staff are examples of actions that could significantly improve the life of citizens in urban
areas.
According to the European Environmental Agency, flooding, mainly from intensive
precipitation, is another hazard that requires attention of cities for their risks to, inter alia,
loss of life, disease spread, infrastructure damages, landslides, erosion, pollution of
groundwater sources and, exposure of the population to post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD). There are several manners to improve resilience against flooding. Grey
infrastructure includes the reconstruction of vulnerable buildings; decentralization of
energy systems and, placement of electricity underground. Green measures range from
soft permeable surfaces; green alleys and streets; urban forestry and green open (parks
and wetlands). Green infrastructure costs, performance and benefits include, for
example, green alleys or streets, rain barrels, and tree planting, which are estimated to
be 3-6 times more effective in managing storm-water per $1000 invested than
conventional methods (Foster, Lowe, and Winkelman 2011). To illustrate, the New York
2010 Green Infrastructure Plan has the goal to reduce the city’s sewer management
costs by $2.4 billion over 20 years and this plan estimates that every fully vegetated acre
of green infrastructure would provide total annual benefits of $8,522 in reduced energy
demand, $166 in reduced CO2 emissions, $1,044 in improved air quality, and $4,725 in
increased property value, estimating that by using green practices at a total cost of $1.5
billion less than traditional methods (Foster, Lowe, and Winkelman 2011). Coping with flooding requires not only a mix between grey, green and soft measures, but
also a city-wide planning. The cross-border nature of flooding means that actions must
be taken strategically involving decision makers at a multi-level scale (European
Environment Agency 2012). In this case, soft measures – forecasting and early warning
systems, awareness raising, knowledge, capacity building and training, integration of
climate change into building codes and spatial planning, regulations and fiscal incentives
and, insurance– are vital for a successful use of grey and green options. The state of
New York provides an interesting case for the analysis of adaptation measures on
flooding in the Hudson estuary, involving the Catskill, Kingston, Peirmont and Stony
Point communities. Highly affected by hurricanes Irene and Sandy, each community
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formed a task force to improve flood resilience in the municipality. Among the main
recommendations, one can find the relevance of soft measures and social empowerment
for a successful flood plan, which include enhancing emergency management and
developing and securing evacuation routes, communicating with community members
about flood preparedness, developing long-term plans for at-risk municipal infrastructure,
evaluating zoning and building codes and, identifying policy to reduce vulnerability.8 In the area of water, population growth, changes in land use and climate change are
factors increasing the risks of water scarcity, which, in many cities, is already a reality.
The recent water crisis in mega cities, such as Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro illustrates
the problem of water availability and its socio-economic impacts at present (New York
Times 2015). Grey infrastructure approaches involve rainwater harvesting, ground water
recharge and grey water recycling for toilet flushing and irrigation, for example.
Desalination and re-allocation of water resources are options that can assist with water
supply, but are usually expensive and several cities cannot afford these measures.
Green roofs can contribute to rainwater harvesting and vegetated areas can slow down
water run-off, store storm water and allow infiltration in the soil, which could keep water
available for vegetation and other uses (European Environment Agency 2012). Overall,
core elements of a water sustainable city must value water, promote a culture of
conservation, and make citizens appreciate that their urban spaces are embedded in
natural systems (Econonics 2014).
3.4 Social empowerment and learning as success factors of an adaptation plan There are several manners to conceive an adaptation plan. When identifying the most
appropriate option, it is common to make use of cost-benefit analysis to support the
process of decision-making. However, this research emphasizes that such an approach
has significant shortcomings and, if not accompanied by other elements, risks to
undermine a comprehensive adaptation strategy. Again, New York represents an 8 For a full report, see: http://www.dec.ny.gov/energy/93950.html
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interesting example of a city that used a cost-benefit analysis but admitted it is not
enough to measure the costs of social exclusion when planning adaptation. This
suggests that cost-benefit analysis is important but not sufficient to decision-makers, if
social externalities are not taken into account (Terenzi and Wigstrom 2013).9 In this
sense, the analysis of technical solutions can be inspiring but there are other conditions
for a successful implementation of an adaptation planning, especially in a context of
uncertainty. While cost-benefit or cost-effectiveness analyses are methods that propose
solutions based on optimal calculations, “robust” (don't fail) decision making methods are
appointed as positive alternatives (Lempert and Collins 2007; UNEP 2013)
To avoid failure, robust decisions must be flexible meaning that they can change
accordingly to future needs. In this approach, a participatory process is highly
recommended, as well as in-depth reflection on cross-sectoral implications of selected
adaptation measures. Participatory engagement is important for several reasons, notably
the creation of ownership among participants, which can improve the likelihood of
effective implementation of policies since the communities will better understand how
certain decisions are impacting their lives. Beyond improving awareness regarding
climate change, participatory engagement also has a positive effect on equity and helps
to resolve social conflicts. Moreover, it reinforces local capacities, knowledge, trust,
which, in the long run, tends to help citizens to tackle vulnerabilities individually or
collectively (UNEP 2013). It is fundamental to acknowledge that participatory processes
can be a tool to prepare communities to make informed decisions about adaptation in a
scenario of constant change (Keys, Thomsen, and Smith 2014).
Examples of participatory tools for adaptation:10 • CARE Community Vulnerability and Capacity Analysis methodology CARE11 -
This tool assists practitioners to understand the implications of climate change for
9 This argument was also present during a field work trip in NY in April 2015, which will be furhter explored in the next deliverable of University of Versailles (D7.3). 10 Information collected in Pringle 2011. 11 http://www.careclimatechange.org/cvca/CARE_CVCAHandbook.pdf
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the lives and livelihoods of people, as well as in the creation of a dialogue within
communities and other stakeholders, such as businesses, non-governmental
agents. The goal is to improve scientific data with local knowledge for adaptive
capacity enhancement.
• The CRiSTAL Screening Tool CRiSTAL (Community-based Risk Screening Tool
– Adaptation and Livelihoods);12 - is a screening tool designed to help project
planners and managers to integrate risk reduction and climate change adaptation
into community-level projects. It provides guidance to better understand risks
between livelihoods and climate, to assess a project’s impact on community-level
adaptive capacity, and make project adjustments to improve its impact on
adaptive capacity and reduce the vulnerability of communities to climate change.
• The Participatory Learning Action (PLA) notes are published by the International
Institute for Environment and Development (IIED)13 and, published for 25 years,
these publications illustrate participatory methods and approaches, which provide
examples of the use of participatory tools in multiple settings.
Examples of Participatory Scenario Development Approaches
for Identifying Pro-Poor Adaptation:
• Formulating Climate Change Scenarios to Inform Climate-Resilient Development
Strategies: A Guidebook for Practitioners (UNDP 2011) 14 . This publication
focuses on the formulation of climate-change scenarios as a tool to inform low-
emission climate-resilient development strategies. This publication provides
guidance on:
o The identification of key stakeholders and the establishment of participatory
planning and coordination frameworks;
o Generation of climate change profiles and vulnerability scenarios;
o Identification and prioritization of mitigation and adaptation options;
12 Full reports can be found here: https://www.iisd.org/publications/summary-cristal-community-based-risk-screening-tool-adaptation-livelihoods 13 http://www.iied.org/participatory-learning-action 14http://www.climate-services.org/sites/default/files/undp2011_formulating_climate_scenarios.pdf
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o Assessment of financing requirements; and development of low-emission
climate-resilient roadmaps for project development, policy instruments, and
financial flows.
• Decision-making for Climate Resilient Livelihoods and Risk Reduction: A
Participatory Scenario Planning Approach (CARE International 2012)15. This
publication enables actions for climate-resilient livelihoods and disaster risk
reductions. Key messages include:
o A multi-stakeholder platform allows sharing, understanding, interpreting and
communicating climate information by fostering dialogue and synergies
across stakeholders.
o It is important to combine local and scientific knowledge systems to make
climate information relevant locally and for empowering communities.
o Local adaptive capacity is improved through the inclusion of communication
and the use of climate information in adaptation planning processes, which
enable communities to live with uncertainty presented by climate change.
• ActionAid International has developed a tool for “participatory vulnerability
analysis”16. This tool aims at situations of emergencies and conflicts that involve
communities, local authorities and other stakeholders. This guide is useful for
using the output of the local level to inform national and international level action
policies. It is also useful to better understand how emergencies and development
impact the communities' vulnerability.
In the process of community engagement, other participatory tools related to advice on
the facilitation process are relevant. Numerous publications present techniques and tips
for this exercise, including designing the process and the experience, creating checklists
and templates, references and resources that could assist local authorities (Keating 15 http://www.careclimatechange.org/files/ALP_PSP_Brief.pdf 16 http://www.actionaid.org.uk/sites/default/files/doc_lib/108_1_participatory_vulnerability_analysis_guide.pdf
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2003).17 It is essential that there is no “one size fits all” model for climate adaptation. In this case,
cities and international networks offer a valuable platform for knowledge exchange and
learning.18 Given the urgency to shape urban growth in a resilient way, cities have
increased their influence in international governance and have been fostering several
noteworthy initiatives at the international level. For example, ICLEI- Local Governments
for Sustainability is large network with more than 1,000 cities that has led action towards
sustainability at the city level by impacting over 20% of the world's urban population.19
European cities in particular have been at the forefront of climate change action. Another
example is the EU's Convenant of Mayors agreement, which became an important
initiative that counts over 6,000 signatories.20 This agreement commits various cities to
utilize renewable energy and implement energy efficient measures with the goal of
meeting or exceeding the EU's GHG reduction target of 20% reduction by 2020. As a
result of this initiative, the Urban Adaptation Support Tool was created in 2015 to support
cities in adaptation. This tool provides practical guidance and knowledge support to the
signatories and other interested cities by guiding adaptation planning and
implementation cycles through the facilitation of access to in-depth expert information
and data via an up-to-date literature database and information sources on each step of
the idealized urban adaptation cycle.21 The C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group also is
another example to illustrate how international networks can foster resilience. Founded
by London Mayor Ken Livingstone in 2005, this organization has today a global outreach
and is responsible for reducing GHG emissions in 75 cities (Carbon Disclosure Project
2012). This platform is used by cities to exchange successful experiences in the domain
of mitigation and adaptation among practitioners. More recently, another international initiative must be highlighted. On the occasion of the
17 For a summary of Keating 2003, see: “National Collaborating Centre for Methods and Tools. Facilitation Guide for Working with Groups” 2011. 18 This argument was present during interviews with local authorities in Rio de Janeiro during a dialogue organized with the civil society and climate change experts in january 2005. 19 See: http://www.iclei.org/iclei-global/who-is-iclei.html 20 As for April 2015. See: http://www.convenantofmayors.eu/index_en.html 21 See: http://climate-adapt.eea.europa.eu/tools/urban-ast/step-0-0
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United Nations Climate Summit in New York in September 2014, urban leaders agreed
to a more comprehensive agreement named Compact of Mayors, which commits cities
to four steps: disclosing data about their emissions, setting ambitious targets for
reducing emissions, developing strategies to mitigate and adapt to climate change,
tracking and reporting their progress. The novelty of this agreement is that for the first
time there exists a standard method of measuring and reporting emissions at the city
level. With the goal to foster accuracy and establish an international benchmark for city-
level emissions, the Global Protocol for Community-Scale Greenhouse Gas Emissions
(GPC) became a new tool in climate mitigation that aims to improve measurement and
transparency (Dalkmann 2014).
Acting in cities means closing a significant infrastructure gap, which, according to the
Word Bank, would require US$ 1 trillion in developing cities, a contrasting number
compared to the US$ 135 billion annually of official development aid (ODA) (Dalkmann
2014). Aiming to close this gap, the 2014 UN Climate Summit also launched the City
Climate Finance Leadership Alliance that aims to create a marketplace for low-carbon
projects through a network of city leaders and financing bodies. For instance, the World
Energy Council suggests several ways to increase the funds for municipalities,
especially in developing countries (World Energy Council 2010). 1. Increase land and properties taxes progressively;
2. Set up a minimal land registry and monitoring of the property market in order to tax the
capital gains on land and buildings streaming from public investments and
regulation changes;
3. Use of carbon finance as a way to boost North-South capital transfers and sharing
responsibilities;
4. Charge users the full cost of urban services.
Tariffs and subsidies, however, represent a challenge as it is now clear that some
services, particularly targeting the poorest, must be subsidized to improve access rates
(World Energy Council 2010). Overall, financial shortcoming frequently is a relevant
barrier for adaptation actions. The next session will highlight how international climate
finance could help cities to raise new sources of funds and how issues related to
monitoring affect this agenda.
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4. Monitoring and evaluating adaptation- opportunities and gaps around the notion of efficiency
The previous sections discussed some approaches and examples towards the design
and implementation of adaptation action. Nevertheless, another relevant element
remains to be explored: how can we measure progress? The evaluation of the effectiveness of climate adaptation and the degree of urban
resilience is relatively new and strongly informed by other areas, notably livelihoods,
disaster risk management and food security. Therefore so-called good practices in the
context of climate change adaptation are still emerging through a recent exchange of
knowledge between stakeholders and governments (Bours, McGinn, and Pringle 2014).
Consequently, research on how best to adapt to uncertain effects of climate change and
on what are the main characteristics of a well-adapting society, remains incipient and it
is fundamental to understand what works well, in which circumstance and for what
reasons. That is, posing the right questions is sometimes more important than fostering
unreflected change, which could cause unintended consequences (Pringle 2011).
At the same time, measuring successful adaptation-planning remains a challenge and
much of adaptation actions are so far reactive, deriving from the need to compensate
damage caused by natural disasters (i.e. Floods, landslides, tsunamis, earthquakes).
Quantified assessments of adaptation measures do not represent a general rule and
various cities have developed successful adaptation plans using qualitative data and
information from historical experience and knowledge as a base for decision making,
showing that scientific uncertainty is not necessarily a barrier to action on adaptation
planning. Shifts in perception and behavior, together with leadership remain essential
aspects of successful resilient cities (Carmin, Dodman, and Chu 2013). Despite
remaining challenges for defining, measuring and planning effective adaptation, the
analysis of some case studies indicate significant advancements on such tasks (Pringle
2011).
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The interest in studying successful adaptation measures is also related to the risks of
maladaptation and fit. Widely discussed in the literature, experts have been alerting for
the problems of ill-conceptions of adaptation that can, in fact, exacerbate ongoing
climate vulnerabilities. One current example highlights the protection of coastal
properties from storms that can, in the long term, affect environment integrity. This
reinforces the argument evoked at the beginning of this analysis that emphasizes the
importance of posing the right questions. As Pringle (2011) puts: ‘are we doing the right
things?’ and ‘are we doing things right?’. A second challenge when evaluating climate-
adaptation and resilience is whether or not initiatives are actually serving for climate
purposes. There are concerns that climate adaptation has become a manner to attract
funding, for example, and thus a rhetorical way to frame proposals in the eyes of
international agencies or private donors. A third challenge relates to the difficulties to
attribute costs. Previous studies pointed out how a variety of actors and actions have
shaped certain outcomes, which turn into positive environmental and development
results independent from specific adaptation interventions. This is usually related to
measures capable of reducing poverty and improving, for instance, housing and living
conditions, as well as provision for infrastructure and services (Satterthwaite et al. 2007). This
is actually a desirable aspect considering that monitoring and evaluation should involve
an entire system and not only the environment department, if existent. A fourth challenge
derives from a methodological point of view, since quantitative information produced in
cities is also found to differ substantially and lack consistency, limiting the direct
exchange of methodologies between cities (Hunt and Watkiss 2011). Finally, one should
note that cost-benefit analysis does not evaluate non-monetary aspects, such as indirect
benefits related to health, environment preservation and development of cultural heritage
(Ackerman and Heinzerling 2002).
While we showed numerous tools and policies that can assist local leaders to implement
adaptation strategies, criteria and indicators for measuring, the level of success remains
unresolved. Some argue that reporting on adaptation is relatively easy, but determining
its outcomes is a hard task conceptually and in practice (Bours, McGinn, and Pringle
2014). According to Tyler at al. (2012), it might be difficult to assess an adaptation
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measure before an extreme climate event. For instance, if a city intends to adapt to
projected intense rainfall event, through green space for flood retention, storage and
infiltration or new drainage infrastructure, effectiveness could only be fully evaluated
when such an event happens. Moreover, because of the likely trajectory of climate
change, adaptation measures may never be complete since they will need to be
continuously reshaped to cope with ongoing climate shifts.
Overall, adaptation action encompasses a complex set of objectives ranging from the
notions of effectiveness, efficiency, legitimacy and fairness (Adger, Nigel, and Tompkins
2005). It is precisely the need to renew legitimacy in political action that deserves special
attention from the point of view of political science. How can justice be addressed in this
process of change and redistribution of costs and benefits? Answering this question is
fundamental for ensuring that adaptation will be implemented effectively. Effectiveness refers to the capacity of an adaptation action to achieve its previously
determined objectives, usually in terms of reducing risk and avoiding danger of climate
change (Adger, Nigel, and Tompkins 2005). The number of houses removed from a
certain area could measure this, since they would have an impact on the level of risks in
vulnerable areas. Interventions in public health could also serve to calculate the impact
of disease burden. Nevertheless, Adget et al. (2005) point out four major inconveniences
in measuring effectiveness. First, there is uncertainty regarding how an adaptation action
will work even under precise conditions. Second, the effectiveness of an adaptation
option can be done by a certain organization but remains reliant on actions of third
parties. For example, a demand for water reduction will ultimately depend on consumers
and measuring effectiveness of actions that rely on individuals remains very difficult to
assess. Third, such measurements depend on an (unknown) future. For instance, a flood
protection embankment will depend on the future flood regime. The same holds for
declining incomes that could also affect the effectiveness of certain regulations, making
social and economic conditions central elements of this puzzle. Fourth, in theory, any
adaptation measure can create unintended consequences on natural and social
systems. For instance, when actions are innovative, consequences are hard to predict
(i.e. river channel restoration). Overall, effectiveness of an adaptation action depends
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largely on spatial and temporal scales, which requires any project to previously specify
its objectives (outputs and outcomes). At the same time, monitoring and evaluating
adaptation actions has to be based on three principles in order to be effective: designed
for learning, managed for results; and maintaining flexibility in the face of uncertainty
(Harley et al. 2008). It is important for decision makers to acknowledge that adaptation entails advantages
but also costs. To assess efficiency, economic evaluation techniques are central, since
costs and benefits are calculated in terms of financial terms. For Adger et al. (2005:82),
“any assessment of the economic efficiency of adaptation actions requires consideration
of, first, the distribution of the costs and benefits of the actions, second, of the costs and
benefits of changes in those goods that cannot be expressed in market values, and,
third, the timing on adaptation actions”. Indeed, the timing of the adaptation action in
relation to the climate change impact affects the perceived economic efficiency. For
example, a farmer deciding on which crops to plant in the next year is little interested in
the long term perspective when defining its capital turnover (Adger, Nigel, and Tompkins
2005). Efficacy and efficiency are thus interrelated and are part of accountability needs,
which should show that pre-established goals were in fact accomplished. In this
perspective, impact and economic assessments of climate change constitute a relevant
step in urban adaptation responses but have been mostly explored in developed
countries as a mean to drive and support adaptation strategies and raising awareness.
This is certainly because of the lack of human capacity and resources to conduct such
complex assessment in developing countries.
To date, quantitative estimates of the costs of climate change risks are mostly focusing
on flooding, health and, to a lesser extent, water resources (Hunt and Watkiss 2011).
These are often 'must do' risks and lead to win-win and no-regrets options for any
population (Foster, Lowe, and Winkelman 2011). Noting that most of adaptation actions
are done through the perspective of public goods (conservation of habitats, resources for
future use, human protection, food security), resources for implementing these actions
could face serious challenges, especially in times of economic recession. The
knowledge on the most cost-effective options is therefore highly desirable information for
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decision-making. However, as aforementioned, assessing the protection of public goods
only through the lenses of environmental economics is insufficient. Because climate
change is such a complex problem, notably for its intergenerational character,
effectiveness and efficiency are not enough to judge successful adaptation plans. Equity,
legitimacy and fairness must be part of the equation. These criteria are directly related to
systems of decision-making and consequently reflect distribution of power within
institutions (Adger, Nigel, and Tompkins 2005; Gallopín 2006)
Climate change has uneven impacts throughout countries and societies, as a result of a
varied level of vulnerability strongly connected to uneven social and economic
conditions. Questions about the success of adaptation interventions must then deal with
who is going to benefit from them and whether or not certain social groups are excluded.
Overall, adaptation must be framed under the perspective of an ongoing process that
aims to inspire changes in the social, economic, environmental and institutional field that
assist development objectives (UNDP 2007). In addition, it must be conceived as a living
process and not a final outcome.
In the process of developing an adaptation plan, financial constraints are commonly
identified barriers. International cooperation is one channel for alleviating barriers to
urban climate change, but they are getting less and less likely to be an effective and
efficient source of funding for cities. At the international level, after an increased
realization that adaptation is as important as mitigation, the UNFCCC has established in
2001 two funds for adaptation financed by voluntary contributions: the Least Developed
Countries Fund (LDCF)22 and Special Climate Change Fund (SCCF),23 both managed by
the Global Environment Facility (GEF). In 2007, the Parties of the Kyoto Protocol created
the Adaptation Fund (AF), which is financed with 2% of all emissions credits (CERs)
under the Clean Development Mechanisms (CDM).24 The negotiations of the post-2012
climate regime have put finance at the heart of the debate, especially after the
commitment of developed countries in Cancun (COP 16) to provide $30 billion “fast start”
financing for developing countries in the period of 2010-2012, of which a third is
dedicated to adaptation (WRI 2010). After 2014, climate finance became even more of a
22 See: https://www.thegef.org/gef/LDCF 23 See: https://www.thegef.org/gef/SCCF 24See:http://unfccc.int/cooperation_and_support/financial_mechanism/adaptation_fund/items/3659.php
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“hot topic” with the announcement of US$ 9.3 billion to the Green Climate Fund (GCF),
the newest financial mechanism of the UNFCCC that has contributions from developed
and developing countries.25 The overarching goal is to mobilize US$100 billion a year by
2020. It is interesting to know that in this new mechanism the goal is to allocate 50:50 of
resources for adaptation and mitigation, indicating the rising importance of adaptation as
well.
One main concern with these international adaptation funds is that their projects are not
assessed according to comparable metrics. The AF uses a guideline from the
Programme Review Committee (PPRC), which has several general criteria for project
assessment, including, inter alia, economic, social, environmental benefits, meeting
national standards, cost-effectiveness, arrangements for management and monitoring
(Stadelmann et al. 2011). Another example is the GEF indicators, which do not take into
account efficiency indicators and global targets for adaptation projects. 26 This is
concerning from an economic point of view because, ideally, one would try to allocate
resources in the most efficient funds, but due to a lack of consensual universal metrics,
the efficiency cannot be compared. (Stadelmann et al. 2011).
Climate adaptation needs to support change on the ground and be coupled with
development policies. However, international funds are unwilling to grant funding for
most needed infrastructure given the perception that they are not exclusively climate-
oriented. Moreover, the preference for funding projects instead of processes represents
a barrier for effective urban adaptation (Satterthwaite 2013). This is because
investments in communities have shown great benefits in terms of scale. One example
are the achievements of the Community Organizations Development Institute (CODI) in
25 http://www.un.org/climatechange/blog/2014/12/green-climate-fund-surpasses-10-billion-goal/ 26 The steps in the GEF Project Cycle vary according to the following project types, but they generally need to ensure that it: is in a country that is eligible to receive GEF funding; is consistent with GEF strategic objectives and strategic programs; is being submitted through a GEF Agency that has a comparative advantage to support the project concept; provides an estimated cost of the project, including expected co- financing; requests a GEF grant amount that is consistent with resources available in the focal area and with allocations available to the country under the Resource Allocation Framework; indicates clear milestones for further project preparation. For further details see: http://www.thegef.org/gef/sites/thegef.org/files/gefcs/docs/922.pdf
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Thailand, which showcased how national governmental funding can assist community
organizations composed of people living in informal settlements to improve their own
housing. One main advantage of involving the community is the community buy-in of
decisions made by local authorities. To illustrate, the Asian Coalition for Community
Action (ACCA) has since 2009 supported over 1,000 community initiatives in 168 cities
in 19 nations. With funding available for each initiative around only US$1-3,000, it was
the community that took the investment decision (Satterthwaite 2013). This is a
significant example of the importance of community engagement to bring
transformations on the ground. Partnerships between local governments and
associations dealing with the most vulnerable people can thus help city-scale efforts in a
more efficient way. There are reasons to believe that inverting the general logic of
national and international funds towards, first, providing funds and, then, letting those on
the ground make decisions that will act on their vulnerabilities. This would replace the
frequent cycle in which cities conduct vulnerability studies, followed by experts
identifying projects and, finally, seeking funding (Satterthwaite 2013). What is becoming clearer and clearer, is that public finance is poorly equipped to ensure
sufficient resources for developing countries in adaptation for two main reasons. First,
there is little chance to precisely predict the costs of the effects of climate change.
Second, finance generation through taxes is subject to market volatility and hence
cannot be predictable in scale (Atteridge 2011). The involvement of the private sector is
then highly recommended for raising new finance for adaptation and yet little studies
exist on the potential for voluntary private investments. One example of ongoing climate
financing is the European Investment Bank (EIB). It raised EUR 3bn from capital
markets for its Facility for Energy Sustainability and Security of Supply, created in 2007,
to generate new finance-related lending activities as a complement to their public funds
(Atteridge 2011). One should note that the EU aims to ensure that at least 20% of the
European budget is climate-related expenditure. Such a goal is part of the Multi-annual
Financial Framework 2014-2020 and complements a range of other channels, such as
funding opportunities via the European Investment Bank or the European Bank for
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Reconstruction and Development. 27 Beyond green bonds, “responsible investment”
funds offer investors the ability to direct investments towards climate issues. The private
sector could play a role in scaling up finance through, for instance, designing
manufacturing and distributing goods and services that can help communities and
individuals to cope with climate change, as well as providing risk management tools. In
this case, insurance is the most common example (Bräuninger et al. 2011).
4.1 Initial lessons from the Stakeholders Dialogue and fieldwork in New york, Bogota and Bilbao Environmentally sustainable cities are likely to be more productive, competitive,
innovative and prosperous (UN-Habitat 2013). A fine balance between economic growth
and the environment is thus key to achieve a resilient city. For instance, it has been
estimated that in the United States, urban sprawl costs around $400 billion a year for
public services, such as water and waste, investment for roads and other infrastructure,
together with congestion, accidents and pollution (Steer 2014). In this country, New York
has become a model for adaptation planning. Severely affected by Hurricane Sandy in
2012, this city has become a valuable case to better grasp adaptation measures, notably
related to flooding. With PlaNYC, launched by former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, New
York was able to drop CO2 emissions by 19 percent bellow 2005 levels, “putting it ahead
of schedule to achieve its emissions reduction target of 30 percent by 2030"28. In the
process of building resilience, community education became a priority, as several
citizens need to know about new regulations, such as new flood insurance rates for
homeowners located in vulnerable areas. Through a website, the Center for NYC
Neighborhoods, a non profit organization dedicated to prevention and rebuilding from
Sandy, has been working to promote affordable homeownership in NY, while helping
citizens to understand how new federal legislation that raised flood insurance affects
them.29 Following hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the National Flood Insurance Programme
(NFIP) in NY was left with a $25 billion in debt. For this reason, a reform was done to 27 More information on this is available on the website of the European Commission under the theme 'Financing Adaptation": http://ec.europa.eu/clima/policies/adaptation/financing/index_en.htm 28 More information available here: http://www.nyc.gov./html/planyc/html/home.shtml 29 See: www.floodhelpnyc.org
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increase the financial stability of this programme via the Biggert-Waters Flood Insurance
Reform Act in 2012. More precisely, this Act is a law passed by Congress and signed by
the US President that extends the NFIP for five years, while requiring a reform in the
programme that includes a timeline for implementing reforms.30 After hurricane Sandy in
2012, the ONG Center for NYC Neighborhoods focused on short term financial needs
establishing the Neighborhoods Recovery Fund, which offered grants and loans to help
homeowners with financial needs that could not be covered by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) and to make insurance payments. One important action
was to reduce displacement by connecting financially vulnerable homeowners to house
counseling and foreclosure-prevention legal services, which helped 4,000 NY families
(Peale 2015).
The city of Bogotá, Colombia, adds another interesting example to this analysis. Despite
the absence of a formal plan of adaptation to climate change, this city was successful in
several policies that created benefits in terms of climate change, environment, urban and
social aspects (Lampis 2013). The large decrease in homicide rates during the first half
of the 1990s and the renewal of public spaces and infrastructure are the main features of
these transformations. Bogotá backed a climate change adaptation working group made
of two groups involving several departments such as the planning, information and
environmental control departments and communication, education and participation
departments, the health department, the mobility department and the risk management
department (Terenzi and Wigstrom 2013). Additional institutions that are relevant for
adaptation in Bogotá include: Secretaría Distrital de Ambiente (SDA), which is in charge
of the drafting and operation of the environmental policies of the city, in interaction with
the Corporación Autónoma Regional (CAR), which is responsible for environmental
management in the surrounding region; the Secretaría Distrital de Hábitat (SDH), the
Secretaría Distrital de Educación (SDE), the Secretaría de Integración Social (SDIS).
Despite the absence of a comprehensive adaptation strategy, the city has benefited from
several projects and guidance (e.g the city is a member of C40) that are relevant for
adaptation to climate change. The example of Bogotá suggests a path-dependency in
which pre-existing institutions contributed to the shaping of future options, mainly with
30 Further details available here: https://www.fema.gov/media-library/assets/documents/31946
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regards to Bogotá's emphasis on risk reduction and management. The city has
developed several vulnerability and impact assessments: risk mapping of zones of the
city from floods, landslides, earthquakes and forest fires have been established. With
regards to land use planning, the city has launched risk management programmes,
including programmes on relocation of low-income households in high-risk area. The city
triggers various types of programmes to mitigate hazards and reduce exposure and
vulnerability for communities, including resettlement, engineering works, public service
improvements (particularly drainage) and housing improvement subsidies. Climate
change adaptation is also being integrated into its master plan (POT - Plan de
Ordenamiento Territorial). Bogotá also benefits from deliberative networks between
academic and public policy institutions (with the National University of Colombia and the
IDEAM for instance) (Lampis 2013). However, some ambiguous aspects regarding the
governance of the city still remain. As UN-Habitat observed, “the Disaster Prevention
and Emergency Department’s portfolio is dominated by geotechnical studies, projects of
civil engineering aimed at the mitigation of risk and to the strengthening of the most
critical spots across the slopes where the majority of peripheral barrios have been built
over the last three decades” (UN-Habitat 2012, 38 ) and social determinants and drivers
are not addressed. There is still a high demand for housing and very scarce access to
credit or to formal urban development projects. Moreover, a ‘polyphony’ of organizations
is currently responsible for disaster risk management, but there is no real concerted
planning between all relevant departments (UN Habitat 2012). The participation of
citizens in public policy also lacks consistency and remains a top- down exercise
(Lampis 2013).
The city of Bilbao is another interesting case, which is explored by the RAMSES project.
Preliminary discussions of the authors with local authorities linked to the department of
civil protection indicated the importance of triggering events to the advancement of
adaptation policies. Following the disastrous floods from 1983, the city of Bilbao has
been investing in prevention instead of coping with high costs of emergency situations.
In the last five years, the amount of interventions from the civil protection department has
dropped by 35%. Investments in more resilient constructions, as well as intensive work
of maintenance of buildings and better money investments from public administration are
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main reasons for this.31 It is interesting to note that the municipal emergency plan (PMU)
does not include climate change as a hazard. Investments in meteorological instruments
to deal with extreme weather events, notably winds and floods, have been primordial
actions. One should observe that the Basque Water Agency (URA) is an important actor
in the definition of investments related to flood prevention. Responsible for the whole
Basque Country, URA must ensure a holistic view of the region and coordinate action
between, for example, upstream and downstream Bilbao. Furthermore, investments in
the highly affected region of La Peña in the 1983 floods included, for example, the
improvement of the capacity to evacuate water and the increase of the riverbed. During
interviews, we found that another important aspect in dealing with emergencies and
disaster relief has to do with public communication. It should be noted that PMU
disposes of a press department that takes decisions together with politicians and
technicians regarding when the PMU should be activated. After 1983, the PMU was
activated only three times.32 In particular, the Centre for Climate Change (BC3) has
played a vital role in estimating the costs of potential flooding in Bilbao, which is
expected to increase by 56,4% due to climate change. Four main aspects contribute to
this endeavor: making use of the hydrologic models to understand expected flood
events, gathering socio-economic information on the area affected, value the physical
impact of the flood event, and make use of economic valuation techniques to come up
with ‘good’ estimates. These measures are important considering the concern to develop
policies that could assist climate adaptation, particularly in the protection of residential
and non-residential properties, cultural heritage, human health and general urban
disruption, such as transport interruption and emergencies. One illustration of a chief
infrastructure change with an impact in the adaptation capability of Bilbao is the Deusto
Canal, located on the right bank of the Estuary of the city. According to BC3, final result
for the 10-year return period expects flood events to disappear totally. Bilbao is also an
interesting case study since it has passed through a vital urban revitalization process,
which benefitted considerably from a private-public partnership. It could be argued that
this city is an example of a "context-first approach", meaning that decision makers began
by responding to a problem itself (flooding in the case of Bilbao) instead of reacting to a
31 Interview with local authorities in Bilbao, July 2014. 32 it should be mentioned that the budget of the safety and security department has been of $55 million euros in 2014, according to interviews with local authorities in Bilbao, July 2014.
RAMSES Project (Grant Agreement n° 308497) D7.2
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scientific climate projection directly. Several arguments are in favor of this approach in
the adaptation planning literature, especially given the high level of uncertainty related to
the "science-first" approach (Reeder; Ranger, 2011). Given the incipient
institutionalization of organizations dealing with climate science, such as the BC3
established in 2008, more analysis on the effects of these organisms remains to be
done.33
What a brief analysis of these cities indicates is that adaptation measures cannot be
envisaged without taking into account the socio-economic and cultural specificities of
each territory. In summary, two basic types of indicators could be employed to measure
and evaluate successful adaptation actions. One is a process indicator, which measures
progress in a process leading to a desired outcome (for example the number of people
trained in a disaster risk reduction policy) and the other is a outcome indicator, which
defines a specific gain (i.e. Change in post-flood disasters). Since this last one is more
complex to analyze as they take a long time to be understood due to the long term
horizon of climate change, both set of indicators should be developed (UNDP 2007). In
sum, measuring adaptation engenders several steps and its level of success could be
related to six “guiding principles” (DEFRA 2010): • Sustainable: ensure that sustainable development is being promoted as way to
minimize the threats posed by climate change;
• Proportionate and Integrated: climate change assessment must become
“business-as-usual” and taken at the most appropriate level and timescale;
• Collaborative and open: ensure that adaptation is involving a wide range of
stakeholders and promoting a cross-sectoral vision;
• Effective: Actions should be context-oriented, implementable and enforceable,
but also ensure flexibility to adjust to changing scenarios;
• Efficient: Actions should take into account cost-benefit analysis;
• Equitable: Actions should ensure that proportionate share of costs and benefits
are distributed, taking into account vulnerable groups in particular.
Finally, common obstacles to implement adaptation go beyond technical aspects of 33 The next steps of work package 7 is to develop more in-depth analysis on RAMSES selected cities through field work.
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planning and include actions used for supporting such implementation efforts, among
others: communications, consensus-building, integration with other development
policies, and capacity-building for main actors and institutions involved in the
implementation tasks (DEFRA 2010). Essentially, when building adaptation strategies,
the central question to be kept in mind is: “what are we adapting for?”(DEFRA 2010). In
this context, tools (grey, green and soft) for adaptation should be context-oriented,
meaning that societal priorities, economic interests, governance structures, policy style
and cultural aspects must be taken into account.
If adaptation plans and implementation strategies are, in the end, unique, their
effectiveness tends to depends on principles, such as participatory and inclusive
measures, the recognition both of local and scientific knowledge, accountability, and
stakeholders engagement. Because many methods are available, the interest of this
research is to take stock of some tools that fit urban purposes, highlighting the benefits
of expanding participatory methods in decision-making in terms of effectiveness. This
argument was strongly supported by local authorities during the 2nd RAMSES
Stakeholder Dialogue, which took place back-to-back with the European Climate Change
Adaptation conference (ECCA) in Copenhagen (Denmark) on 11 May 2015.34 During this
event, partners of the RAMSES project could exchange with experts and practitioners
how lessons learned so far could feed into more effective adaptation policies on the
ground. Through interactive exercises, a number of topics was discussed with a focus on
methods to improve decision-making on adaptation, impacts of climate change on public
health and transition factors towards a more resilient city.35 A full report of this activity is
currently under preparation, but one overall conclusion was that adaptation policies must
reconcile the economic (monetary) issues with the social dimension of adaptation
(climate justice). While several technical solutions can be found to improve urban
resilience, participants consensually agree that a functional city, in terms of governance,
is a fundamental ingredient for success. Finally, in the task of engaging stakeholders,
one practical advice from practitioners interested in the first steps of an adaptation plan
was to start “mapping capabilities” inside the government and among stakeholders.
34 See: http://www.iclei-europe.org/events/?cmd=view&uid=47cca293 35 Impressions from participants of the event can be found in this video: http://www.ramses-cities.eu/resources/
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Conclusion The city of the 21st century is the one that implements disaster risk reduction policies in
an inclusive manner, recognizes the importance of public spaces, stimulates job
creation, promotes social diversity, and expands the notion of prosperity beyond the
economic growth criterion (UN-Habitat 2013). Focusing on the issue of urban
adaptation, this paper can serve as a starting point for local authorities to start a
reflection on gaps, priorities and means to develop a resilient city in a context-oriented
manner. This research represents one piece of the puzzle involving studies on urban policies and
governance for climate adaptation within the RAMSES project. The final aim of this
project is to better combine top-down and bottom-up approaches and demonstrate that
adaptation in the context of climate change is not a linear or deterministic process.
Therefore, it cannot exclusively be evaluated through the lenses of impact and
vulnerability.
From the analysis of current initiatives attempting to draw lessons from measuring and
monitoring tools, learning appears as an important goal in this process. This means that
monitoring and evaluation of successful practices must go beyond accountability to
donors, for example, and generate knowledge to be shared beyond a scientific
community. It was argued that strict terms of economic justification of success or failure
are insufficient to determine positive outcomes in the adaptation field.
What remains to be refined is to know how learned lessons can be incorporated in future
decision making and how a societies can use this information for their own benefit
regarding adaptive capacity. Overall, elements of effectiveness, efficiency, and fairness
must be combined when evaluating success. However, the weight to each criterion will
vary according to a specific society and time. This suggests that evaluation of the social
and cultural aspects of each city is absolutely fundamental for a deeper understanding of
adaptation-planning. If economic impact approaches are useful for determining
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economic costs and benefits of certain projects, it is more essential to examine why
benefits have been achieved beyond their value (Pringle 2011). In this context, lessons
from Smit and Wandel remain valid as they argue that adaptation is rarely addressing
climate change only and that monitoring and evaluation tools are one important way to
improve understanding of complex socio-economic and environmental contexts in which
adaptation takes place (Smit and Wandel 2006).
In the end, multiple scales of interaction between human and environment systems
influence adaptation. Such complexity has meaningful implications for public policy,
considering that lower levels of scale are reticent to fundamental institutional changes
given the need to respect governance hierarchies. Indicators are key tools for project
evaluation, but shortcomings persist. In conclusion, they should not be perceived as a
short cut to understanding complex scenarios. On the contrary, they must be designed
according to local context. Overall, the analysis of socio-economic factors must be taken
into account and in an anticipatory manner. Even in the best mitigation scenarios, the
coming decades will face significant consequences of historical environmental
degradation. The effects of climate change on migration, for example, deserve further
attention both at the local and international levels. As Adger et. al (2005) argue, shortly
put, the degree of success of adaptation depends largely on the capacity to adapt and
the distribution of that capacity.
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