Climate change – scoping the issues


Adapting to Climate Change



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climate change

3. Adapting to Climate Change:

Adaptation to climate change is a necessary strategy to complement climate change mitigation effects. Adaptation often produces benefits as well as forming a basis for coping with future climate change. However, experience demonstrates that there are constraints to achieving the full measure of potential adaptation. There are many instances of, maladaptation, such as promoting development in risk-prone locations, which can occur due to decisions based on short-term considerations. The ability of human systems to adapt to and cope with climate change depends on factors such as wealth, technology, education, information, skills, infrastructure, access to resources and management capabilities.22


There are already a number of documented case studies and examples where indigenous peoples have responded to climate change in innovative ways. Some case studies and examples are listed below according to the UNPFII’s seven indigenous regions:

(i) Africa
Indigenous knowledge is the basis for local level decision-making in many rural communities of Africa. Its value is not only for the culture in which it evolves, but also for scientists and planners striving to improve conditions in rural localities. Incorporating indigenous knowledge into climate change policies can lead to the development of effective adaptation strategies that are cost-effective, participatory and sustainable.
African communities and farmers have always coped with changing environments. They have the knowledge and practices to cope with adverse environments. The enhancement of indigenous peoples’ capacity is a key to the empowerment of local communities and their effective participation in development processes. Local farmers in several parts of Africa have been known to conserve carbon in soils through the use of zero-tilling practices in cultivation, mulching, and other soil-management techniques. Natural mulches, moderate soil temperatures do suppress diseases and harmful pests and conserve soil moisture. The widespread use of indigenous plant materials such as agrochemicals to combat pests that normally attack food crops, has also been reported among small-scale farmers. It is likely that climate change will alter the ecology of disease vectors, and indigenous practices of pest management would be useful adaptation strategies. Other indigenous strategies that are adopted by local farmers include controlled bush clearing; using tall grasses for fixing soil surface nutrients which have been washed away by runoff; erosion-control to reduce the effects of runoff; restoring lands by using green manure; constructing stone dykes; managing low-lying lands and protecting river banks.23

1 Jan Salick and Anja Byg, Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change, A Tyndall Centre Publication, Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, Oxford, May 2007, p8

2 ibid, p9

3 Report of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Working Group 2: Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability, 2007, p489

4 ibid.

5 Up in Smoke?Latin America and Caribbean: The Threat from Climate Change to the Environment Human Development, The Third Report for the Working Group on Climate Change and Development, 2006, p17

6 Jan Salick and Anja Byg, Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change, A Tyndall Centre Publication, Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, Oxford, May 2007, p8

7 op.cit 2007, p693

8 Biodiversity and Climate Change: International Day for Biological Diversity, Convention on Biological Diversity, 2007 p12-13

9 Impacts of a Warming Arctic: Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, Cambridge University Press, 2004, p94

10 Cochran, Patricia Alaska Natives left out in the cold, Viewpoint, BBC News, 4 January 2007 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6230731.stm

11 Report on Indigenous and Local Communities highly vulnerable to Climate Change inter alia of the Arctic, Small Island States and High Altitudes, with a focus on causes and solutions, Convention on Biological Diversity, prepared by John B. Henriksen UNEP/CDB/WG8J/5/INF/18 31 July 2007, p10

12 ibid. p11

13 Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, Cambridge University Press, p90

14 Report on Indigenous and Local Communities highly vulnerable to Climate Change inter alia of the Arctic, Small Island States and High Altitudes, with a focus on causes and solutions, Convention on Biological Diversity, prepared by John B. Henriksen UNEP/CDB/WG8J/5/INF/18 31 July 2007, p11

15 Maynard, Nancy C (ed) Final Report Native People-Native Homelands Workshop on Climate Change 28 October-1 November 1998, Albuquerque, New Mexico p54

16 ibid, p29

17 ibid, p28

18 ibid

19 Ema G. Tagicakibau “Pollution in Paradise”: The Impact of Nuclear Testing and Radio-Active Pollution on Indigenous Peoples in the Pacific and Strategies for Resolution, Pacific Concerns Resource Centre, August 2007

20 Report of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Working Group 2: Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability, 2007, p708

21 Robert W. Buddemeier, Joan A. Kleypas, Richard B. Aronson Coral Reefs and Global Climate Change: Potential Contributions of Climate Change to Stresses on Coral Reef Ecosystems, Pew Centre, January 2004, p 25

22 Chakravarthi Raghavan ‘Global warming: Net losses for developing world” South-North Development Monitor (SUNS), 2001

23 Report of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Working Group 2: Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability, 2007, p866


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