Online platform for climate adaptation
04 March 2009
A global initiative by the International Institute for Environment Development will bring together donor agencies, NGOs and research institutes from over 50 countries in an online platform to facilitate sharing of climate solutions.
Dhaka, Bangladesh: A new global initiative will generate and share know-how on strategies to help the world's poorest and most vulnerable communities adapt to the impacts of climate change.
The Global Initiative on Community Based
Adaptation to Climate Change was announced by Saleemul Huq, senior
fellow at the UK-based International Institute for Environment
Development (IIED), at an international conference on community-based
adaptation to climate change in Dhaka, Bangladesh last week. It will be made up of representatives of donor agencies, research
institutes and nongovernmental organisations from 50 countries,
including the Bangladesh Centre for Advanced Studies and the IIED.
The initiative will support an online platform, Community Based Adaptation Exchange,
where stakeholders can share experiences and information about the kind
of adaptation strategies that work best — and could be replicated and
scaled-up elsewhere. They will also hold a number of conferences to
share best practices, with the first in Tanzania in September 2009. Delegates of the conference stressed, among other measures, the need
to use simple, low-cost technologies to enable poor communities to cope
with climate change.
![]()
"It is important to avoid maladaptation or adaptation that will make the situation worse in the long term"
But adaptation should not focus excessively
on short-term "palliative" adaptation strategies that yield immediate
results but might not be sustainable in the long run, warned Ian
Burton, professor emeritus at the University of Toronto, Canada, and
scientist emeritus at the Meteorological Service of Canada.
"It is important to avoid maladaptation
or adaptation that will make the situation worse in the long term as we
are focused on what will work in the short term," Burton said. Potential adaptation techniques include crop varieties that can
tolerate drought, floods and high salinity; drip and other irrigation
techniques to conserve scarce water; building storm and cyclone
shelters; changing crop growing cycles; and diversifying from crops to
fish, shrimp, crab and livestock farming. The meeting heard about a range of successful experiences from
across Africa and Asia. An unusual example from Bangladesh is "floating
gardens" — using a base of aquatic weeds to grow vegetables — which
allow cultivation in waterlogged and flooded areas. In Nepal, local farmers are using their knowledge of traditional
varieties and neglected and underutilised crops to breed suitable
plants and improve incomes. And in Lower Ouémé valley in Benin, communities are seeking
solutions such as cultivating fast-growing crops in dried areas of
swamp forests.