NEGOTIATIONS
FOCUS
PROCESS
KEY STEPS
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Adaptation overview
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An overview of the main adaptation issues is provided in the boxes below.
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Cancun
Adaptation Framework
The Bali
Action Plan, adopted at COP 13 in Bali, December 2007, identified adaptation as one
of the key building blocks required for a strengthened future response to climate
change to enable the full, effective and sustained implementation of the Convention through
long-term cooperative action, now, up to and beyond 2012. At the Cancun Climate Change Conference in December 2010,
Parties established the Cancun
Adaptation Framework (CAF) with the objective of enhancing action on adaptation,
including through international cooperation and coherent consideration of matters relating to
adaptation under the Convention.
At the Durban Climate
Change Conference in November/ December 2011, Parties advanced the implementation of
the CAF by agreeing on:
- The technical guidelines for the development of national adaptation plans
- The continuity of the work programme on loss and damage including the establishment of
institutional arrangements at COP19
- A three year work plan for the Adaptation Commiittee
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Nairobi
work programme
The objective of the Nairobi work programme on impacts vulnerability and adaptation to
climate change, is to help all countries improve their understanding and
assessment of the impacts of climate change and to make informed
decisions on practical adaptation actions and measures.
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National Adaptation Programmes of Action
The National
Adaptation Programmes of Action (NAPAs) provide an important way to prioritise urgent and
immediate adaptation needs for Least Developed Countries (Article 4.9). The
NAPAs draw on existing information and community-level input. A database of all
NAPA priority adaptation projects sorted by country and sector is available online at the
UNFCCC Least Developed
Countries (LDC) portal.
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Support for
Adaptation
Developing countries require international assistance to support adaptation (Articles 4.4, 4.8 and
4.9). This includes funding, technology transfer and capacity
building.
Funding for adaptation is provided through the financial mechanism of the
Convention. Current funding opportunities include:
- the Global Environment Facility (GEF) Trust
Fund, including support for vulnerability and adaptation
assessments as part of national communications;
- the GEF managed Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF)
under the Convention;
- the GEF managed Special Climate Change Fund (SCCF)
under the Convention;
- The Adaptation Fund (AF) under
the Kyoto Protocol and managed by the Adaptation Fund Board (AFB).
Parties in Cancun established the Green
Climate Fund (GCF) as another operating entity of the financial mechanism of the
Convention under Article 11 besides the GEF and the AFB. Parties further decided that a
significant share of new multilateral funding for adaptation should flow through the GCF. In
Durban, Parties made the GCF operational by agreeing on its
governing instrument.
Responding to a request from Parties, an interface
on adaptation funding was developed to assist the implementation of Decision
1/CP.10 and provide information on options available for funding adaptation
worldwide.
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