Towards pro-poor adaptation to climate change in the urban centres of low- and middle-income countries

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Author(s)
Moser, C. and Satterthwaite, D.
Publication language
English
Pages
50pp
Date published
01 Oct 2008
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Environment & climate, Urban
Organisations
International Institute for Environment and Development

 

This paper outlines a framework for adaptation to climate change for urban areas in low- and
middle-income nations that is pro-poor and that enhances the capacity of low-income
households and community organizations to contribute to such adaptation. It begins by
describing how urban centres in low- and middle-income countries concentrate a large
proportion of those most at risk from the effects of climate change – as people‘s lives,
assets, environmental quality and future prosperity are threatened by the increasing risk of
storms, flooding, landslides, heatwaves and drought that climate change is likely to bring. It
also points to the weaknesses in the local institutions with responsibility for addressing this
and the very large deficiencies in the infrastructure and services needed for protection. It
also discusses the lack of attention given to supporting adaptation in urban areas by
scientists, governments and international agencies, and considers why this is so.
To improve understanding of the problems and to contribute to identifying solutions, the
paper introduces an asset-based framework focused on households and community
organizations. As a conceptual approach this helps to identify the asset vulnerability to
climate change of low-income communities, households and individuals within urban areas.
It also considers the role of assets in increasing adaptive capacity. The asset-based
framework provides an operational tool, an asset-adaptation framework, which serves to
highlight the measures needed to address four aspects of risk and vulnerability. These four
aspects are illustrated in relation to extreme weather events. The first consists of the
measures needed to protect those most at risk from extreme weather: safer sites, protective
infrastructure and better-quality buildings – to prevent extreme weather events from causing
disasters. The second, third and fourth aspects focus on limiting the impact of extreme
weather events for low-income or otherwise vulnerable groups through household and
community actions for pre-disaster damage limitation, immediate post-disaster response,
and longer-term rebuilding. This highlights the many synergies between poverty reduction
and resilience to climate change, and clarifies how vulnerability and risk are influenced by
income level, age and gender.
The paper then highlights three reasons why strengthening, protecting and adapting the
assets and capabilities of individuals, households and communities is far more important in
low- and middle-income countries than in high-income countries. The first is the limitations in
urban governments’ adaptive capacity, especially in providing needed protective
infrastructure and services to low-income populations. The second reason is the
unwillingness of many city or municipal governments to work with low-income groups,
especially those living in informal settlements (which usually include most of those most at
risk from floods and storms). The third reason is the key role of assets in helping households
and communities to cope with disasters.
This focus on strengthening the asset base of households and communities is also a key
means of building more competent, accountable local governments. The paper discusses
how a substantial part of adaptive capacity relates to the ability of households and
community organizations to make demands on local governments and, wherever possible, to
work in partnership with them. Case studies illustrate the effectiveness of such partnerships
in some nations. The paper concludes by discussing the roles for local and national
governments and international agencies in supporting adaptive capacity at all levels.