Seal a JUST Deal
The MDG Path to a
Climate Change Solution
For the majority of the world's population and most developing countries, the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and the eradication of poverty remain their
highest priority.

The impacts of climate change threaten the achievement of the MDGs, but also create
opportunities for further efforts to achieve these development imperatives.

The Millennium Development Goals represent an essential step in tackling the climate
change challenge in developing countries.

MDG 7 is precisely about linking environmental protection to poverty reduction through
sustainable development.

Moreover, on the international level, a global deal on climate change can only be
achieved if it has at its center a focus on linkages between poverty, MDGs and climate
change.

An international deal which combines measures to achieve the MDGs with those for
adaptation and mitigation would be a win-win solution for both climate change and
development.
Ir c
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Introduction

  Climate change is a pressing global challenge that requires global cooperation at unprecedented scale
  and speed. However, at the core of this relatively new area of focus lies the long-standing imperative of
  global poverty. Not only will climate change impact poverty and threaten the achievement of the MDGs,
  but addressing poverty, MDGs and development inequalities represent an essential step in tackling the
  impacts of climate change.

  Moreover, it is hard to conceive of a global agreement on climate change which does not have MDGs and
  poverty reduction at its core. Inequalities in the levels of development across and within nations and the
  need for broad-based growth to realize the rights of the poor remain imperatives of developing and
  developed countries alike. Unless these long-standing commitments are adequately addressed,
  an agreement on tackling the new and pressing challenge of climate change will remain elusive.
  Furthermore, if a global agreement on climate change is not reached, there would be a significant erosion
  of trust between developed and developing countries.




  Rh
  e i
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Relationship between the MDGs & Climate Change

  The relationship between climate change and the Millennium Development Goals works in both
  directions, with each impacting the other in positive and negative ways, as illustrated in the diagram
  below:




                                           OPPORTUNITY:



                                                THREAT:




           Climate Change                                 Millennium Development Goals



                                                THREAT:



                                          OPPORTUNITY:
Ip
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                                                         Impact of Climate Change on the MDGs:

Climate change as a threat to the MDGs                                          Threat caused by climate change                                                                MDGs

It is now well understood that the physical impacts                               Changes in natural systems such as increased water scarcity and                              GOAL 1
of climate change will have significant                                         decreased agricultural productivity as a result of climate change will:                        Eradicate
consequences on poverty and the achievement of                                • Reduce the livelihood assets of poor people;                                                   extreme hunger
the MDGs. According to recent analysis released                             • Diminish their food security;                                                                    and poverty
by the Global Humanitarian Forum, hundreds of                             • Alter the path and rate of national economic growth.
thousands of people already die every year from
climate change, a figure they expect to rise to up to
half a million in twenty years. The physical impacts
of climate change ranging from decreased water                     Climate change could lead to a reduction in the ability of children to                                      GOAL 2
availability and agricultural productivity to                     participate in full-time education by causing:                                                               Achieve universal
increased drought and frequency of extreme                       • Loss of livelihoods assets which increase the need for children to engage in                                primary education
weather events will also have their own social and                income-generating activities;
political consequences. These consequences of                  • Displacement and migration of families;
consequences are poised to instigate significant              • Loss of infrastructure such as schools as a result of extreme weather events.
migration, political instability, and conflicts over
scarce resources especially in countries with low
levels of development.                                       Depletion of natural resources, decreased availability of potable water, reduced                                  GOAL 3
                                                             agricultural productivity and increased climate-related disasters could:                                          Promote gender
                                                            • Place additional burdens on women's health;                                                                      equality
                                                           • Increase women's workload;
Climate change as an opportunity for                      • Reduce the livelihood assets of women;
                                                         • Limit women's time to participate in decision-making & income-generating activities.
the MDGs
At the same time, the actions being designed to
tackle climate change can create opportunities for      Increased child mortality, reduced maternal health, increased prevalence of malaria,                                   GOAL 4
the achievement of the Millennium Development           and the undermining of the nutritional health needed by individuals to combat HIV are                                  Reduce child mortality
Goals. If policies are designed correctly, efforts      expected to occur as a result of climate change-induced changes such as:
                                                        • Heat-related mortality;                                                                                              GOAL 5
aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions can
create jobs and new employment opportunities for        • Declining food security;                                                                                             Improve maternal health
the poor. Small-scale clean energy initiatives in       • Decreased availability of potable water;
                                                        • Increased prevalence of certain vector-borne diseases such as malaria;                                               GOAL 6
rural areas can not only generate new sources                                                                                                                                  Combat HIV/AIDS,
of income but also for example, reduce the               • Extreme weather events.
                                                                                                                                                                               malaria/other diseases
substantial time currently allocated by the poor
for firewood collection for energy provision. In
addition, as forest preservation and enhancement         Climate change will have a direct impact on environmental sustainability by:                                          GOAL 7
become part of a global climate solution,                • Fundamentally altering ecosystem relationships;
indigenous populations in these areas can access                                                                                                                               Ensure
                                                          • Changing the quality and quantity of natural resources and biodiversity;                                           environmental
new financial flows and alternate income-                  • Reducing ecosystem productivity.
generating activities through a global climate                                                                                                                                 sustainability
regime. Over a billion people, including many
indigenous groups, depend on forests for their
livelihood and more than half of them live in                 Climate change could have significant impacts on global cooperation and                                          GOAL 8
extreme poverty.                                              partnership, including:                                                                                          Develop a global
                                                               • Increased resource conflicts directly undermining the prospects of global                                     partnership for
The table on the right details the threats and                    cooperation;                                                                                                 development
opportunities for each of the MDGs caused by                      • Altered international trade and economic growth patterns as a result of a
climate change.                                                      loss in natural resources, diminished agricultural productivity in certain
                                                                     areas, and an increased frequency of extreme weather events;
                                                                      • Increased adaptation and mitigation costs expanding the debt burden
                                                                        of developing countries;
                                                                         • Potential for the diversion of funds away from development
                                                                            objectives to efforts focused on climate change.
                                                                             If an equitable and ambitious global agreement on climate change
                                                                                is not reached, there would be a significant erosion of trust
                                                                                  between developed and developing countries.
                                                                               Sources: Adapted from Global Humanitarian Forum Human Impact Report, MDG Carbon Facility data
Opportunity created by climate change
  Actions taken to prevent dangerous climate change such as
  clean energy projects and forest enhancement could result in:
  • Employment opportunities in small-scale clean energy projects;
  • Additional income-generating opportunities for forest dwellers;
  • Increased energy available for use by local enterprises and
    improved local economic growth.


    Efforts to prevent dangerous climate change could support an increase in
    the ability of children to participate in full-time education by:
    • Reducing the time spent by children for energy provision (e.g., collecting
      firewood);
    • Enabling the provision of inexpensive solar lighting for educational
      activities, allowing children to study in the evening.


     Actions taken to prevent dangerous climate change could promote gender equality
     by:
     • Reducing the time spent by women on energy provision
       (e.g., collecting firewood);
     • Creating additional employment and income-generating activities for women.



     Actions taken to prevent dangerous climate change could support efforts to reduce
     child mortality, improve maternal health, and combat HIV, malaria and other diseases
     by:
     • Reducing air pollution from traditional fuels and cooking methods;
     • Providing a sustainable energy supply for rural health clinics;
     • Enabling the cooling of vaccines and medicines in rural environments.




      Efforts to prevent dangerous climate change could support strengthened
      environmental sustainability by:
      • Maintaining and enhancing forests;
      • Protecting the biodiversity found in forests;
      • Substituting the use of non-renewable fuel sources with renewables.

    Actions to prevent dangerous climate change could improve global partnership
    through:
    • Increased flows of finance from developed to developing countries to
      fund required adaptation and mitigation measures;
    • Deepened cooperation for research, development, and transfer of clean
      energy technologies;
    • Improved collaborative efforts to maintain and enhance forests;
    • Institutions and market mechanisms designed to facilitate international
      exchange and cooperation.
    If an equitable and ambitious global agreement on climate change
    can be reached, there would be renewed confidence in global
    cooperation and strengthen the trust between developed and
    developing countries.
Ip
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Impact of the MDGs on Climate Change

  MDGs as a threat to climate change
  On the other hand, global poverty and inequalities in the levels of development across nations are a
  threat to mitigation efforts to prevent dangerous climate change. The priorities of developing countries
  remain the eradication of poverty and the MDGs for which economic growth is a pre-requisite. Such
  growth may be constrained by efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Developed countries have a
  responsibility to support developing nations in their efforts to reduce emissions and adapt to climate
  change through the provision of adequate financial resources and access to relevant technologies. If
  these responsibilities are not met, developing countries will not be able to adapt to climate change or take
  on their responsibilities in reducing their own emissions as required in any long-term climate change
  solution. Thus, unless MDG considerations and objectives are at the core of an agreement on climate
  change, there can not be a solution for this global challenge.


  MDGs as an opportunity for climate change
  At the same time, these same MDG objectives can serve as the foundations for an equitable and
  ambitious deal on climate change. Realizing the rights of the poor through the achievement of the MDGs
  will necessarily form the foundation upon which both adaptation and mitigation measures are built. As
  such, an international deal which combines measures to achieve these objectives with those for climate
  change adaptation and mitigation would be a win-win solution for both the MDGs and climate change.
  Moreover, after years of unmet commitments for development assistance, an equitable and ambitious
  agreement on climate change with development at its core could overcome low levels of trust between
  the developed and developing world and inaugurate a new era of global cooperation.
Ren
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Recommendations: Addressing the Threat to MDG Achievement

  Adaptation
  Adaptation is defined by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change as any
  adjustments in behaviours or economic structures that reduce the vulnerability of society to changes in
  the climate system. For example, adaptation measures include improved irrigation to deal with
  decreased water availability and strengthened building standards for coastal housing to build resiliency
  to the increasing frequency of extreme weather events.

  These adaptation measures will need to be undertaken at an unprecedented scale and speed to support
  poor communities affected by climate change worldwide. However, most of these measures are not
  stand-alone interventions only specific to climate risk, but are actions that should have been taken to
  achieve existing development objectives or marginal changes to such development activities. For
  example, water scarcity is already a significant global challenge which climate change will only
  exacerbate. Adaptation efforts to deal with this scarcity will thus fundamentally be development
  interventions with a slight augmentation to account for the increased scarcity caused by climate change.

  As such, adaptation measures will require as a foundation the achievement of basic standards of
  development, and at minimum the achievement of the MDGs.




  Recommendation 1

    As a first step for adaptation, developing and developed nations must prioritize efforts to
    achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Specifically, developed nations must meet their
    aid commitments to reach 0.7% of GNI consistent with the Paris Declaration on aid effectiveness.




  Furthermore, in order to ensure that poor communities are adequately supported in addressing this
  threat to development, there are a number of key principles that must inform international adaptation
  policies.
Recommendation 2

  Within an agreement on climate change, adaptation policies must adhere to the following
  principles:

  •   Additionality of financing: All funding for climate change adaptation estimated at a minimum of
      $67 billion per year by 2030 must be new funding and not detract from governments' existing
      commitments to the MDGs and other development objectives.

  •   Predictable funding: Financing for adaptation must be predictable and sustainable. Taking into
      account the experience of previous ODA commitments, the case for generating this funding
      through automatic mechanisms is a strong one.

  •   Accountability: Building on lessons learned from development financing, adaptation actions
      and funds must be made much more transparent and accountable, particularly to the poor in
      developing countries.

  •   Realizing the rights of the poor: Adaptation efforts must be designed to be effective in realizing
      the rights of the poor. Hard lessons on aid and development effectiveness have been learned
      over the past three decades. We have learned that the right to information and access to justice
      for the poor are essential components in the process to realize the rights of the poor and achieve
      the MDGs. This experience must be integrated into the design of the institutions and
      programmes for adaptation given the significant overlap between the MDGs and adaptation.

  •   Empowering the poor: Effective adaptation will require not only technical “fixes” such as sea
      walls or irrigation systems, but a whole process of societal change as people, particularly the
      poor, cope with the physical impacts of climate change. As with the MDGs, adaptation measures
      will need to be designed to enable this process of change by empowering the poor by
      strengthening their capacity.

  •   Adaptability: Adaptation institutions, mechanisms and projects will need to be adaptive
      themselves, allowing for learning and innovation as knowledge on climate change impacts is
      expanded. The constellation or multiplicity of funding resources that will eventually exist for
      adaptation should be designed in such a way as to incentivize innovation, share learnings across
      entities, and be able to adapt their strategies as more is learned about the physical impacts of
      climate change and how best to adapt to these changes.




In addition, within the context of the negotiations, the Adaptation Fund exists as a potentially innovative
example that integrates most of the principles we have outlined for adaptation policy. This funding
mechanism is innovative in two ways. Firstly, financing for the Adaptation Fund is generated through a
levy on the carbon markets and thus is additional and non-discretionary in nature. Secondly, the
governance of the fund is more equitable in that developing countries, the recipients of financing
from the Fund, have the majority of the seats in the Fund Board and thus a larger voice and share in
decision making.




Recommendation 3

  The UNFCCC Adaptation Fund should be designated as the central global institution for
  adaptation through which the majority of financing for adaptation actions must be
  channelled. In addition to the above principles, the only other condition that should be placed upon
  the activities of this Fund are that actions supported by the fund must prioritize support to the poor
  and most vulnerable communities, particularly women, who are the most vulnerable to the impacts
  of climate change.
M
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Mitigation: Creating a win-win solution for Climate Change and the MDGs



  In order to create a win-win solution for climate change and the MDGs, the policies for mitigation
  will need to be designed with development aims and objectives at their core.


  Recommendation 4

    Developed countries with historically high emissions must take on ambitious
    targets for emissions reductions in the short, medium and long-term in line with IPCC
    recommendations to reach a 2°C target.




  Recommendation 5

    Mitigation policies for clean energy development and the maintenance and
    enhancements of forests must be designed to support the achievement of the
    MDGs in developing countries. To this end, particularly for least developed countries and
    other countries with low levels of MDG achievement, principles with these aims in mind
    should be integrated into international mitigation policies such as improvements in the
    procedures and modalities of financing mechanisms, access for small-scale projects,
    support for capacity building, local ownership and engagement and the like.
“We face a global economic slowdown and a food security crisis, both of uncertain magnitude and
duration. Global warming has become more apparent. These developments will directly affect our efforts
to reduce poverty: the economic slowdown will diminish the incomes of the poor; the food crisis will raise
the number of hungry people in the world and push millions more into poverty; climate change will have a
disproportionate impact on the poor. The need to address these concerns, pressing as they are, must not
be allowed to detract from our long-term efforts to achieve the MDGs. On the contrary, our strategy must
be to keep the focus on the MDGs as we confront these new challenges.”

                                                                                           Ban Ki-moon
                                                                                     UN Secretary-General



“The effects of pollution driven by economic growth in some parts of the world are now driving millions of
people into poverty elsewhere. At the same time, decades-old aid pledges continue to go unmet. The
Millennium Development Goals are endangered. And the poor lack capacity to make their voices heard in
international arenas, or attract public and private investment. For those living on the brink of survival,
climate change is a very real and dangerous hazard. For many, it is a final step of deprivation.”

                                                                                             Kofi Annan
                                                                             Former UN Secretary-General




“We have to make sure that decisions on climate change are in the interest of the most vulnerable,
supporting their social protection, health, livelihood and therefore they go hand in hand with the MDGs.”

                                                                                         Bert Koenders
                                                                      Minister for Development Cooperation
                                                                            The Government of Netherlands




“Climate change mitigation and adaptation are not just about technology or infrastructure, it's about
people's resilience and increased capacity to help themselves, it's about the achievement of the MDGs.”

                                                                                          Erna Witoelar
                                                                  UN Special Ambassador for MDGs in Asia
                                                                               and the Pacific 2003-2007




“Adapting to the impacts of climate change will impose massive additional costs on Africa: Africa is the
continent least responsible for climate change, but is acutely vulnerable to its effects on economic
growth, poverty reduction, and the prospects for achieving the MDGs... New, additional, more predictable
and sustainable resources need to be provided - in support of both adaptation and mitigation; this will
require the development of new financing sources and effective mechanisms, including the new climate
change funding initiatives currently under discussion, as an integral part of the Copenhagen agreement.”

                                                                             Africa Partnership Forum
The MDG Path to a Climate Change Solution
The UN Millennium Campaign
The UN Millennium Campaign was established by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan in 2002. The Campaign
supports citizens’ efforts to hold their governments to account for the achievement of the Millennium
Development Goals. The Millennium Development Goals were adopted by 189 world leaders from the north
and south, as part of the Millennium Declaration which was signed in 2000. These leaders agreed to achieve
the Goals by 2015. Our premise is simple, we are the first generation that can end poverty and we refuse to
miss this opportunity to do so.




                               www.endpoverty2015.org

                               For further information, please contact
                                      UN Millennium Campaign

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 Mandy Kibel                          Minar Pimple                            Anita Sharma
 UN Millennium Campaign               UN Millennium Campaign                  UN Millennium Campaign
 304 East 45th Street, FF 612         Rajadamnern Nok Avenue                  1800 Massachusetts Ave., NW
 New York, NY 10017                   Bangkok 10200                           Suite 400
 USA                                  Thailand                                Washington, DC 20036, USA
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 mandy.kibel@undp.org                 minar.pimple@undp.org                   anita.sharma@undp.org


 EUROPE                               AFRICA
 Marina Ponti                         Thomas Deve
 UN Millennium Campaign               Sylvia Mwichuli
 UNDP/UNOPS c/o FAO                   UN Millennium Campaign
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The MDG Path to a Climate Change Solution

  • 1. Seal a JUST Deal The MDG Path to a Climate Change Solution
  • 2. For the majority of the world's population and most developing countries, the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and the eradication of poverty remain their highest priority. The impacts of climate change threaten the achievement of the MDGs, but also create opportunities for further efforts to achieve these development imperatives. The Millennium Development Goals represent an essential step in tackling the climate change challenge in developing countries. MDG 7 is precisely about linking environmental protection to poverty reduction through sustainable development. Moreover, on the international level, a global deal on climate change can only be achieved if it has at its center a focus on linkages between poverty, MDGs and climate change. An international deal which combines measures to achieve the MDGs with those for adaptation and mitigation would be a win-win solution for both climate change and development.
  • 3. Ir c nt tu on di o Introduction Climate change is a pressing global challenge that requires global cooperation at unprecedented scale and speed. However, at the core of this relatively new area of focus lies the long-standing imperative of global poverty. Not only will climate change impact poverty and threaten the achievement of the MDGs, but addressing poverty, MDGs and development inequalities represent an essential step in tackling the impacts of climate change. Moreover, it is hard to conceive of a global agreement on climate change which does not have MDGs and poverty reduction at its core. Inequalities in the levels of development across and within nations and the need for broad-based growth to realize the rights of the poor remain imperatives of developing and developed countries alike. Unless these long-standing commitments are adequately addressed, an agreement on tackling the new and pressing challenge of climate change will remain elusive. Furthermore, if a global agreement on climate change is not reached, there would be a significant erosion of trust between developed and developing countries. Rh e i li s ap t on Relationship between the MDGs & Climate Change The relationship between climate change and the Millennium Development Goals works in both directions, with each impacting the other in positive and negative ways, as illustrated in the diagram below: OPPORTUNITY: THREAT: Climate Change Millennium Development Goals THREAT: OPPORTUNITY:
  • 4. Ip ma c t Impact of Climate Change on the MDGs: Climate change as a threat to the MDGs Threat caused by climate change MDGs It is now well understood that the physical impacts Changes in natural systems such as increased water scarcity and GOAL 1 of climate change will have significant decreased agricultural productivity as a result of climate change will: Eradicate consequences on poverty and the achievement of • Reduce the livelihood assets of poor people; extreme hunger the MDGs. According to recent analysis released • Diminish their food security; and poverty by the Global Humanitarian Forum, hundreds of • Alter the path and rate of national economic growth. thousands of people already die every year from climate change, a figure they expect to rise to up to half a million in twenty years. The physical impacts of climate change ranging from decreased water Climate change could lead to a reduction in the ability of children to GOAL 2 availability and agricultural productivity to participate in full-time education by causing: Achieve universal increased drought and frequency of extreme • Loss of livelihoods assets which increase the need for children to engage in primary education weather events will also have their own social and income-generating activities; political consequences. These consequences of • Displacement and migration of families; consequences are poised to instigate significant • Loss of infrastructure such as schools as a result of extreme weather events. migration, political instability, and conflicts over scarce resources especially in countries with low levels of development. Depletion of natural resources, decreased availability of potable water, reduced GOAL 3 agricultural productivity and increased climate-related disasters could: Promote gender • Place additional burdens on women's health; equality • Increase women's workload; Climate change as an opportunity for • Reduce the livelihood assets of women; • Limit women's time to participate in decision-making & income-generating activities. the MDGs At the same time, the actions being designed to tackle climate change can create opportunities for Increased child mortality, reduced maternal health, increased prevalence of malaria, GOAL 4 the achievement of the Millennium Development and the undermining of the nutritional health needed by individuals to combat HIV are Reduce child mortality Goals. If policies are designed correctly, efforts expected to occur as a result of climate change-induced changes such as: • Heat-related mortality; GOAL 5 aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions can create jobs and new employment opportunities for • Declining food security; Improve maternal health the poor. Small-scale clean energy initiatives in • Decreased availability of potable water; • Increased prevalence of certain vector-borne diseases such as malaria; GOAL 6 rural areas can not only generate new sources Combat HIV/AIDS, of income but also for example, reduce the • Extreme weather events. malaria/other diseases substantial time currently allocated by the poor for firewood collection for energy provision. In addition, as forest preservation and enhancement Climate change will have a direct impact on environmental sustainability by: GOAL 7 become part of a global climate solution, • Fundamentally altering ecosystem relationships; indigenous populations in these areas can access Ensure • Changing the quality and quantity of natural resources and biodiversity; environmental new financial flows and alternate income- • Reducing ecosystem productivity. generating activities through a global climate sustainability regime. Over a billion people, including many indigenous groups, depend on forests for their livelihood and more than half of them live in Climate change could have significant impacts on global cooperation and GOAL 8 extreme poverty. partnership, including: Develop a global • Increased resource conflicts directly undermining the prospects of global partnership for The table on the right details the threats and cooperation; development opportunities for each of the MDGs caused by • Altered international trade and economic growth patterns as a result of a climate change. loss in natural resources, diminished agricultural productivity in certain areas, and an increased frequency of extreme weather events; • Increased adaptation and mitigation costs expanding the debt burden of developing countries; • Potential for the diversion of funds away from development objectives to efforts focused on climate change. If an equitable and ambitious global agreement on climate change is not reached, there would be a significant erosion of trust between developed and developing countries. Sources: Adapted from Global Humanitarian Forum Human Impact Report, MDG Carbon Facility data
  • 5. Opportunity created by climate change Actions taken to prevent dangerous climate change such as clean energy projects and forest enhancement could result in: • Employment opportunities in small-scale clean energy projects; • Additional income-generating opportunities for forest dwellers; • Increased energy available for use by local enterprises and improved local economic growth. Efforts to prevent dangerous climate change could support an increase in the ability of children to participate in full-time education by: • Reducing the time spent by children for energy provision (e.g., collecting firewood); • Enabling the provision of inexpensive solar lighting for educational activities, allowing children to study in the evening. Actions taken to prevent dangerous climate change could promote gender equality by: • Reducing the time spent by women on energy provision (e.g., collecting firewood); • Creating additional employment and income-generating activities for women. Actions taken to prevent dangerous climate change could support efforts to reduce child mortality, improve maternal health, and combat HIV, malaria and other diseases by: • Reducing air pollution from traditional fuels and cooking methods; • Providing a sustainable energy supply for rural health clinics; • Enabling the cooling of vaccines and medicines in rural environments. Efforts to prevent dangerous climate change could support strengthened environmental sustainability by: • Maintaining and enhancing forests; • Protecting the biodiversity found in forests; • Substituting the use of non-renewable fuel sources with renewables. Actions to prevent dangerous climate change could improve global partnership through: • Increased flows of finance from developed to developing countries to fund required adaptation and mitigation measures; • Deepened cooperation for research, development, and transfer of clean energy technologies; • Improved collaborative efforts to maintain and enhance forests; • Institutions and market mechanisms designed to facilitate international exchange and cooperation. If an equitable and ambitious global agreement on climate change can be reached, there would be renewed confidence in global cooperation and strengthen the trust between developed and developing countries.
  • 6. Ip ma c t Impact of the MDGs on Climate Change MDGs as a threat to climate change On the other hand, global poverty and inequalities in the levels of development across nations are a threat to mitigation efforts to prevent dangerous climate change. The priorities of developing countries remain the eradication of poverty and the MDGs for which economic growth is a pre-requisite. Such growth may be constrained by efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Developed countries have a responsibility to support developing nations in their efforts to reduce emissions and adapt to climate change through the provision of adequate financial resources and access to relevant technologies. If these responsibilities are not met, developing countries will not be able to adapt to climate change or take on their responsibilities in reducing their own emissions as required in any long-term climate change solution. Thus, unless MDG considerations and objectives are at the core of an agreement on climate change, there can not be a solution for this global challenge. MDGs as an opportunity for climate change At the same time, these same MDG objectives can serve as the foundations for an equitable and ambitious deal on climate change. Realizing the rights of the poor through the achievement of the MDGs will necessarily form the foundation upon which both adaptation and mitigation measures are built. As such, an international deal which combines measures to achieve these objectives with those for climate change adaptation and mitigation would be a win-win solution for both the MDGs and climate change. Moreover, after years of unmet commitments for development assistance, an equitable and ambitious agreement on climate change with development at its core could overcome low levels of trust between the developed and developing world and inaugurate a new era of global cooperation.
  • 7. Ren e ns c d o a m m t i o Recommendations: Addressing the Threat to MDG Achievement Adaptation Adaptation is defined by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change as any adjustments in behaviours or economic structures that reduce the vulnerability of society to changes in the climate system. For example, adaptation measures include improved irrigation to deal with decreased water availability and strengthened building standards for coastal housing to build resiliency to the increasing frequency of extreme weather events. These adaptation measures will need to be undertaken at an unprecedented scale and speed to support poor communities affected by climate change worldwide. However, most of these measures are not stand-alone interventions only specific to climate risk, but are actions that should have been taken to achieve existing development objectives or marginal changes to such development activities. For example, water scarcity is already a significant global challenge which climate change will only exacerbate. Adaptation efforts to deal with this scarcity will thus fundamentally be development interventions with a slight augmentation to account for the increased scarcity caused by climate change. As such, adaptation measures will require as a foundation the achievement of basic standards of development, and at minimum the achievement of the MDGs. Recommendation 1 As a first step for adaptation, developing and developed nations must prioritize efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Specifically, developed nations must meet their aid commitments to reach 0.7% of GNI consistent with the Paris Declaration on aid effectiveness. Furthermore, in order to ensure that poor communities are adequately supported in addressing this threat to development, there are a number of key principles that must inform international adaptation policies.
  • 8. Recommendation 2 Within an agreement on climate change, adaptation policies must adhere to the following principles: • Additionality of financing: All funding for climate change adaptation estimated at a minimum of $67 billion per year by 2030 must be new funding and not detract from governments' existing commitments to the MDGs and other development objectives. • Predictable funding: Financing for adaptation must be predictable and sustainable. Taking into account the experience of previous ODA commitments, the case for generating this funding through automatic mechanisms is a strong one. • Accountability: Building on lessons learned from development financing, adaptation actions and funds must be made much more transparent and accountable, particularly to the poor in developing countries. • Realizing the rights of the poor: Adaptation efforts must be designed to be effective in realizing the rights of the poor. Hard lessons on aid and development effectiveness have been learned over the past three decades. We have learned that the right to information and access to justice for the poor are essential components in the process to realize the rights of the poor and achieve the MDGs. This experience must be integrated into the design of the institutions and programmes for adaptation given the significant overlap between the MDGs and adaptation. • Empowering the poor: Effective adaptation will require not only technical “fixes” such as sea walls or irrigation systems, but a whole process of societal change as people, particularly the poor, cope with the physical impacts of climate change. As with the MDGs, adaptation measures will need to be designed to enable this process of change by empowering the poor by strengthening their capacity. • Adaptability: Adaptation institutions, mechanisms and projects will need to be adaptive themselves, allowing for learning and innovation as knowledge on climate change impacts is expanded. The constellation or multiplicity of funding resources that will eventually exist for adaptation should be designed in such a way as to incentivize innovation, share learnings across entities, and be able to adapt their strategies as more is learned about the physical impacts of climate change and how best to adapt to these changes. In addition, within the context of the negotiations, the Adaptation Fund exists as a potentially innovative example that integrates most of the principles we have outlined for adaptation policy. This funding mechanism is innovative in two ways. Firstly, financing for the Adaptation Fund is generated through a levy on the carbon markets and thus is additional and non-discretionary in nature. Secondly, the governance of the fund is more equitable in that developing countries, the recipients of financing from the Fund, have the majority of the seats in the Fund Board and thus a larger voice and share in decision making. Recommendation 3 The UNFCCC Adaptation Fund should be designated as the central global institution for adaptation through which the majority of financing for adaptation actions must be channelled. In addition to the above principles, the only other condition that should be placed upon the activities of this Fund are that actions supported by the fund must prioritize support to the poor and most vulnerable communities, particularly women, who are the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.
  • 9. M ia tt i i gon Mitigation: Creating a win-win solution for Climate Change and the MDGs In order to create a win-win solution for climate change and the MDGs, the policies for mitigation will need to be designed with development aims and objectives at their core. Recommendation 4 Developed countries with historically high emissions must take on ambitious targets for emissions reductions in the short, medium and long-term in line with IPCC recommendations to reach a 2°C target. Recommendation 5 Mitigation policies for clean energy development and the maintenance and enhancements of forests must be designed to support the achievement of the MDGs in developing countries. To this end, particularly for least developed countries and other countries with low levels of MDG achievement, principles with these aims in mind should be integrated into international mitigation policies such as improvements in the procedures and modalities of financing mechanisms, access for small-scale projects, support for capacity building, local ownership and engagement and the like.
  • 10. “We face a global economic slowdown and a food security crisis, both of uncertain magnitude and duration. Global warming has become more apparent. These developments will directly affect our efforts to reduce poverty: the economic slowdown will diminish the incomes of the poor; the food crisis will raise the number of hungry people in the world and push millions more into poverty; climate change will have a disproportionate impact on the poor. The need to address these concerns, pressing as they are, must not be allowed to detract from our long-term efforts to achieve the MDGs. On the contrary, our strategy must be to keep the focus on the MDGs as we confront these new challenges.” Ban Ki-moon UN Secretary-General “The effects of pollution driven by economic growth in some parts of the world are now driving millions of people into poverty elsewhere. At the same time, decades-old aid pledges continue to go unmet. The Millennium Development Goals are endangered. And the poor lack capacity to make their voices heard in international arenas, or attract public and private investment. For those living on the brink of survival, climate change is a very real and dangerous hazard. For many, it is a final step of deprivation.” Kofi Annan Former UN Secretary-General “We have to make sure that decisions on climate change are in the interest of the most vulnerable, supporting their social protection, health, livelihood and therefore they go hand in hand with the MDGs.” Bert Koenders Minister for Development Cooperation The Government of Netherlands “Climate change mitigation and adaptation are not just about technology or infrastructure, it's about people's resilience and increased capacity to help themselves, it's about the achievement of the MDGs.” Erna Witoelar UN Special Ambassador for MDGs in Asia and the Pacific 2003-2007 “Adapting to the impacts of climate change will impose massive additional costs on Africa: Africa is the continent least responsible for climate change, but is acutely vulnerable to its effects on economic growth, poverty reduction, and the prospects for achieving the MDGs... New, additional, more predictable and sustainable resources need to be provided - in support of both adaptation and mitigation; this will require the development of new financing sources and effective mechanisms, including the new climate change funding initiatives currently under discussion, as an integral part of the Copenhagen agreement.” Africa Partnership Forum
  • 12. The UN Millennium Campaign The UN Millennium Campaign was established by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan in 2002. The Campaign supports citizens’ efforts to hold their governments to account for the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals. The Millennium Development Goals were adopted by 189 world leaders from the north and south, as part of the Millennium Declaration which was signed in 2000. These leaders agreed to achieve the Goals by 2015. Our premise is simple, we are the first generation that can end poverty and we refuse to miss this opportunity to do so. www.endpoverty2015.org For further information, please contact UN Millennium Campaign GLOBAL ASIA NORTH AMERICA Mandy Kibel Minar Pimple Anita Sharma UN Millennium Campaign UN Millennium Campaign UN Millennium Campaign 304 East 45th Street, FF 612 Rajadamnern Nok Avenue 1800 Massachusetts Ave., NW New York, NY 10017 Bangkok 10200 Suite 400 USA Thailand Washington, DC 20036, USA Tel: + 1-212-906-6242 Tel: +66 (0) 2 288 2806 Tel: +1-202-887-9040 Fax: + 1-212-906-6057 Fax: +66 (0) 2 288 1052 Fax: +1-202-887-9021 mandy.kibel@undp.org minar.pimple@undp.org anita.sharma@undp.org EUROPE AFRICA Marina Ponti Thomas Deve UN Millennium Campaign Sylvia Mwichuli UNDP/UNOPS c/o FAO UN Millennium Campaign Design: roots@rootsadvertising.com Bilding E-First Floor Bishop Josiah Kibira House, Via delle Terme di Caracalla, 1 All Africa Conference of Churches (AACC), 00153 Rome, Italy Waiyaki Way Tel: + 39 (0) 6 5705 6597 PO Box 14205 00800, Nairobi, Kenya Fax: + 39 (0) 6 5705 3007 Tel: +254 (0) 20 44 53 440 marina.ponti@undp.org Fax: +254 (0) 20 44 53 444 thomas.deve@undp.org sylvia.mwichuli@undp.org