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CLIMATE CHANGE: Adaptation Fund starts delivering
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IRIN
In what is being hailed as a breakthrough for a "collective effort" by developed and developing countries, the Adaptation Fund set up by the UN to help poor countries cope with the unfolding impact of climate change has finally become operational.
Last week, the Fund's board approved two adaptation projects, one in Senegal - threatened by sea-level rise, less rainfall and high temperatures - and the other in Honduras, which faces increasing water shortages.
The two projects worth a total of about US$14 million are not only the first to be approved by the board but also the first to get money directly from the Fund. Developing countries had been lobbying for direct access, and have now been granted control over how to spend the funds.
The decision is good news ahead of more UN climate change talks slated for December in Mexico.
The money for the Senegal project will be used to implement the country's National Adaptation Plan for Action in the areas of Rufisque, Saly and Joal, along the country's west coast, and will cover actions to protect houses from flooding, erosion and sea-level rise. The project also aims to help rice growers and the fishing community in the region adapt to increased salinization.
Honduras will use the funds to improve water management in its capital region of Tegucigalpa. At least 13,000 households stand to benefit.
Direct access
Direct access marks yet another "positive and innovative action" by the Fund, said Saleemul Huq, lead author of the chapter on adaptation in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's fourth assessment report.
Huq, a senior fellow at the UK-based policy think-tank International Institute for Environment and Development, said the decision adds to the growing list of "positive and innovative features" of the Adaptation Fund. He said these included "its uniquely innovative source of funding through an adaptation levy, its governance structure, which - again uniquely - has a majority of developing countries, and its genuinely participatory and collegial board".
Besides direct contributions from developed countries, the Fund raises money from a levy of about 2 percent on credits generated by the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) set up under the Kyoto Protocol, which in turn operates under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).
The mechanism allows industrialized countries to earn and trade emission credits by implementing projects in developed or developing countries; they can then put the credits towards meeting their greenhouse gas emission targets.
Sven Harmeling, co-chair of the adaptation working group of Climate Action Network International, a global coalition of NGOs, said the Fund’s board "has shown that a collective effort of experts from developed and developing countries, even with a majority of developing country representatives, has been able to set up a consolidated Fund which had to face many complex and new issues, and which manages to address concerns from different sides with regard to fiduciary standards for direct access."
"Developing countries should now do their best to show that they really want to use the direct access opportunity, to show that they are willing to take up the associated responsibility," he said.
The decision to set up the Fund was taken almost 10 years ago under the Kyoto Protocol. Vulnerable countries are given the option of directly accessing money through their national institutions charged with implementing the projects. The first such body - Le Centre de Suivie Écologique du Sénégal - was approved in April 2010.
From: http://www.irinnews.org, 28 September 2010.
