Data gaps and lack of regular data monitoring in waste statistics and the AFOLU sector.
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- Capacity building and training
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- Legal and/or Policy Framework
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With the financial support from GEF, Montenegro’s NCs and BURs have been developed by UNDP in close cooperation with the Ministry of Ecology, Spatial Planning and Urbanism (MESPU), the ministry which is in-charge of climate change, and other national institutions in charge of specific sections of NCs and BURs, namely: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for the GHG inventory, Hydro-meteorological Institute for climate data, State Statistical Office input data for GHG inventory etc.
As of 2021, MESPU will take over preparations for the future reporting under the UNFCCC. This change will require additional staff, with strong managerial capacities, within MESPU and other supporting national institutions in order to submit NCs and BURs in time. Currently, there are two main challenges:
Lack of specific expertise. More specifically, the GHG inventory unit within EPA consists of only two permanent staff covering energy/industry (well experienced) and AFOLU (works usually with additional national or international experts). For the waste sector, there is a need for internal and external expertise both nationally and internationally. The unit does not have a compiler nor experts for QA/QC etc. In addition, there is no institution in Montenegro in-charge or experienced in calculating GHG emission projections. When it comes to sectoral analysis, strategies, and planning, almost all sectors (health, agriculture, forestry etc.) are lacking national expertise. For climate adaptation, the Hydro-meteorological Institute is part of international fora related to climate change (members of the WMO), and they conduct climate modeling based on the regularly monitored climate data. Lastly, there is limited knowledge of the MRV system within the country.
Data gaps and lack of regular data monitoring in waste statistics and the AFOLU sector. For waste statistics, there is a lack of historic data, and the current data was mainly obtained based on assumptions and default values. Data in AFOLU are still on Tier 1, some data are outdated (e.g., forestry) or not monitored regularly (e.g., land-use, land-use change). In addition, national emission factors are not used in those sectors.
To address these challenges, a series of capacity-building activities were conducted targeting relevant institutions for them to take over the reporting process in the future. State Statistical Office was trained in collecting input data for GHG Inventory; mentoring support for the development of the MRV system was provided to MESPU staff. Supported by the Austrian EPA, the "Twinning light" project is underway, which will build the country’s capacity in creating GHG inventories for the waste sector.
The conceptual framework for the establishment of a national MRV system was developed in 2018. This was based on a large-scale consultation process with national stakeholders, and with support from international expertise. The concept was largely accepted by national partners and ready for implementation. However, due to the change in the political situation, the existing concept is in the process of revision and will be finalized by the end of 2021 and will be reported in the third BUR.
As soon as the concept is revised/confirmed, MESPU will take action to make the national MRV system fully operational. Financial support has already been secured through Capacity Building Initiative for Transparency. The support envisages the development of necessary methodologies, procedures, guidelines for mitigation actions, adaptation actions, GHG inventory and climate finance. In addition, significant support has been allocated for the establishment of a web-based portal/database, which will eventually facilitate the UNFCCC reporting requirements. In parallel, necessary agreements/memoranda will be signed between relevant institutions regarding data sharing, and related capacity building activities will be conducted (mentoring, training, knowledge sharing etc.). The entire process should be finalized by 2025.

Figure 1 proposed institutional arrangements for an MRV system in Montenegro (source: Montenegro Third National Communication on Climate Change 2020)