201 1
RePoRt
Acknowledgements
the design team would like to acknowledge the input provided by officials, professionals, civic society institutions, constitutional assembly members and political party leaders, and for sharing their vision towards effective local climate change adaptation initiatives undertaken in Nepal. the team would like to acknowledge their appreciation of the contributions of Batu Uprety, Sanjip Raj Pandey and Sujan Subedi of the Ministry of environment and Simon Lucas and Sabita thapa of the Department for International Development (DFID) for their critical review and comments on the draft report. the team would like to acknowledge Biswo Ulak and Yogendra Bijuchhen (CADP-N) for their administrative and managerial support. the team would like to thank the pilot teams and team leaders from Britain Nepal Medical trust (BNMt), Institute for Social and environmental transition - Nepal (ISet-N), Local Initiative for Biodiversity Research and Development (LI-BIRD), Nepal Water for Health (NeWAH), Resource Identification and Management Society Nepal (RIMS-N), Rupantaran Nepal, Rural Self-Reliance Development Centre (RSDC). they greatly appreciate the local communities, staff of government and non-governmental agencies, and local leaders who worked with the pilot teams to establish the feasibility of local adaption planning. the Climate Adaptation Design and Piloting Project (CADP-N) is a collaborative project of the International Institute for environment and Development and the Institute for Social and environmental transition. the work was funded by DFID Nepal under a bilateral agreement with the Ministry of environment. this project was contracted and project managed through the DFID-funded Livelihoods Resource Centre, which is led by HtSPe Limited. the design team consisted of: Simon Anderson (IIeD), Nanki Kaur (IIeD), Deepak Rijal (CADP-N), Jessica Ayers (IIeD), Sibongile Pradhan, Ajaya Dixit (ISet-N), Marcus Moench (ISet), Fawad Khan (ISet-P), Basana Sapkota (Moe) & Binod Chapagain. the Piloting team consisted of: a. Support studies: Naya Sharma, Ganga Awasti & Krishna Joshi, Jony Mainaly, Kalyan Gauli and Jibraj Pokhrel. b. Pilot studies: Shreekumar Maharjan, Prativa Sapkota, Ram B. Mijar, Dhan Khadka & Rakesna Basnet; Sohan Shrestha, Meena Kunwar; Mahendra Shah, Bhupendra Shahi, Manoj Khadka, Bhanu Niraula; Himalaya Panthi, Mr. Ratan Budhathoki, Umesh Pandey and Santosh Basnet; Arjun Dhakal, Shiva Basyal; Ajaya Dixit, Kamal thapa and Madhav Devkota; thapa K., G.B. Sharma, R.B. Rana, K. Lamsal, and S. Subedi; Citation: Name of Chapter, Author/organisation. Climate Adaptation Design and Piloting Project, Nepal. 2011.
Acronyms
ACSM ADC AICC AIDS AMC BCC BNMt CADP-N CAPA CF CBA CC CCA CFUG CG CSo DADo DAG DAo DDC DFCC DFo DFID DHo DLSo DSCo DPHo DCSIDo FCHV FeCoFUN FFS FGD FNCCI Go GoN Gos HH HFMC HIV HP
: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :
Advocacy Communication and Social Mobilization Agriculture Development Committee Agriculture Information and Communication Center Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome Activity Management Committee Behaviour Change Communication the Britain Nepal Medical trust Climate Change Adaptation Design and pilot Project -Nepal Community Adaptation Plans of Action Community Forest Cost Benefit Analysis Climate Change Climate Change Adaptation Community Forest User group Central Government Civil Society organization District Agriculture Development office Disadvantage Groups District Administration office District Development Committee District Forest Coordination Committee District Forest office Department for International Development District Health office District Livestock office District Soil Conversation office District Public Health office District Cottage and Small Industry Development office Female Community Health Volunteer Federation of Community Forest Users Nepal Farmers Field School Focus Group Discussion Federation of Nepalese Chamber of Commerce and Industry Government organizations Government of Nepal Government office Household Health Facility Management Committee Human Immune Deficiency Virus Health Post
HR HRD I/NGo IGG IIeD IPM ISet IWM LAPA LFP LSGA MAPS MCA MFSC Moe M&e MoHP NAPA NeWAH NGo NtFP oD P1 PHC/oRC PILMG PNoG PRA PWBR RDF RIMS Nepal RN RP RSDC SLD SRC StD SWot VDC VFCC WASH
: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :
Human Resource Human Resource Development International/ Non-Governmental organization Income Generating Group International Institute of environment and Development Integrated Pest Management Institute for Social and environment transition Improved Water Mill Local Adaptation Plan of Action Livelihoods and Forestry Programme Local Self Government Act Medicinal and Aromatic Plants Multi-Criteria Assessment Ministry of Forests and Soil Conversation Ministry of environment Monitoring and evaluation Ministry of Health and Population National Adaptation Programme of Action Nepal Water for Health Non-Governmental organisation Non-timber Forest Products organizational Development Priority one Primary Health Care/out Reach Clinic Public and Institutional Land Management Group Partner Non-Governmental organisation Participatory Rural Appraisal Participatory Well-Being Ranking Regional Forest Directorate Resource Identification and Management Society Nepal Rupantaran - Nepal Range Post Rural Self-Reliance Development Centre Shared Learning Dialogue Self-Reliance Cooperatives Sexually transmitted Disease Strengths, Weaknesses, opportunities and threats Analysis Village Development Committee Village Forest Coordination Committee Water Sanitation and Hygiene
tAble of contents
5 27 65
pilot reports
Designing Local Adaptation Plans for Action for the Agriculture Sector Designing Local Adaptation Plans for Action for the Forestry Sector Strengthening Health Facility Management Committees to Back Up Essential Health Adaptation Initiatives of Climate Change Vulnerable Communities Developing Climate Change Adaptive Capacity through WASH Initiatives and Local Planning Processes Exploring Climate Adaptation Mechanisms for Watershed Management Identifying the Role of Local Financial Institutions in Finance Delivery, Governance and Planning in Developing the Capacity of Communities to Adapt to climate change Gateway Systems Analysis for Assessing Vulnerability and Building Local Adaptive Capacity to Climate Change Impacts An Assessment of Institutions and Experience to Provide a Foundation for Climate Adaptation Designing and Piloting 97 147 189 243 295 327 357 411
IntroductIon
climate change, in the form of increased temperature patterns and increased variability in the timing, intensity and form of precipitation, is already leading to differentiated impacts across nepal. Future climate induced changes are likely to exacerbate these impacts (nepal nAPA, 2010). climate change thus threatens to pose an additional, and potentially major, barrier to the already challenging development process in nepal. responding to the need to address the impacts of climate change, the Government of nepal (Gon) has initiated the process of adaptation planning. this includes a number of policy and institutional processes. For instance, in terms of policy planning initiatives, the Gon has completed the preparation of the national Adaptation Programme of Action (nAPA) document and has in place a donor compact on climate change, which provides the basis for donor alignment and coordination behind a nationally led adaptation planning process. In terms of institutional processes, the Gon initiated the nAPA Plus process, which put in place institutions such as the Knowledge Management Hub and a Multi-stakeholder Forum that supports robust and iterative adaptation planning. the Government has established a climate change division within the Ministry of Environment which has a mandate to coordinate the climate agenda in nepal. Following the principles of the nAPA process, the Government recognises the need to mainstream adaptation into national planning processes. It is also keen to support local planning processes and capacities, and acknowledges that effective adaptation support will need to be mainstreamed into development planning at all levels - local, sector and national - and into programmes for social protection and disaster risk reduction. In light of these two factors, the Gon has identified the need to develop Local Adaptation Plans for Action (LAPA) as a means to mainstream climate change adaptation into development planning in a bottom-up manner. under the climate change donor compact, development partners are willing to collaborate and work towards climate change resilience, guided by the Government. dFId, as signatory to the nepal climate change donor compact, supports this approach, and is supporting the development of LAPAs through the project Support for climate change adaptation in nepal design and piloting phase (cAdP-n). the cAdP-n project tested a series of hypotheses related to the feasibility and effectiveness of designing LAPA so that they identify and address the climate change adaptation needs of the poor and excluded the most climate vulnerable people at the local scale. these hypotheses were tested through 7 pilots that explored the process of bottom-up mainstreaming of local adaptation priorities into development planning. the pilots took different entry points for informing the design of LAPAs: Four of the pilots took a sectoral entry point to inform the design of LAPAs (agriculture, forestry, public health, and water and sanitation).
introduction
One pilot looked at the role of microfinance institutions in supporting adaptation. One pilot explored the potential for adaptation planning at the watershed scale. The final pilot tested a systems-based approach to adaptation planning and mainstreaming. the piloting sites are depicted in Figure 1. details of piloting partners and approaches are provided in table 1. the pilot activities were supported by detailed studies of the existing planning and financial frameworks to inform entry points for mainstreaming. these studies were: 1. Political Economy of Climate Change in Nepal: this report assesses the political economy around climate change in nepal in order to identify viable design and implementation options for the LAPA; 2. Planning Frameworks in Nepal: this report assesses the policy, budgetary and institutional planning frameworks in nepal. It aims to guide effective mainstreaming of the LAPA into existing development planning processes; 3. Decentralisation Framework in Nepal: this report assesses the decentralisation framework in nepal in order to identify entry points for the bottom-up mainstreaming of the LAPA.
introduction
this cAdP-n report is a compilation of the support studies and pilot reports that have informed the design of the LAPA framework and process. It is one of three main outputs of the cAdP-n project, and is accompanied by: 1. TECHNICAL REPORT: this report provides an overview of the LAPA process and learnings. 2. LAPA MANUAL: this manual outlines the LAPA methodology for all the steps involved in designing and mainstreaming local adaptation plans into the development planning process. the main features of the LAPA are: 1. the LAPA Framework ensures that the process of integrating climate change resilience into local-to-national planning is bottom-up, inclusive, responsive and flexible. 2. The unit for LAPA is the VDC. the Vdc is the most appropriate scale for integrating local adaptation plans for action into development planning. this scale is able to capture location/community specific adaptation priorities and ensure that national level support does not get fragmented or incur large transaction costs. It thus provides the best match between bottom-up and top-down adaptation planning. 3. use of the LAPA Framework will support decision-makers at local-to-national levels to : a. Identify the most climate vulnerable Vdcs, wards and people, and their adaptation needs and options; b. Prioritise adaptation options in easy ways whereby local people make the prioritisation decisions; c. Prepare and Integrate local adaptation plans for action into local-to-national planning in accordance with the Local Self Governance Act ; d. Identify appropriate service delivery agents and channels for funding to implement local adaptation plans for action, and thus ensure that the best sequence of adaptation actions is carried out by the most appropriate service providers in a timely and resource efficient manner; e. Assess the progress of LAPA to ensure effective planning and delivery; f. Provide cost-effective options for scaling out local-to-national adaptation planning.
introduction
Responding to Climate Change in a tRansitional politiCs: a Review of the politiCal Context of nepal in Relation to designing loCal adaptation plans foR aCtion
Responding to Climate Change in a transitional politics: a Review of the political Context of nepal in Relation to designing local adaptation plans for action
Submitted to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
ExEcUTIvE SUMMAry
This political appraisal aims at providing a brief overview of Nepals political dynamics and responses to climate change from various political institutions. The appraisal examines the political dynamics particularly in relation to how political constituencies understand and respond to the emerging climate change threats. The review is primarily based on literature review, content analysis of some key policy documents and interactions with Members of Parliament (MPs). In particular, the election manifestos of major political parties, drafts of various constitutional committees and governments major initiatives on climate change make up the secondary information. It was followed by bilateral and joint interactions with several MPs including those who are advancing climate change related activities within the Parliament. Analysis of these documents and interactions with MPs reveals that there is enormous interest and concern around climate change. The Prime Minister himself, the cabinet ministers, the government agencies, particularly at the upper layer, are adequately informed, concerned and are actively advancing the agenda. On the other hand political leaders, parties and the constituent assembly also appear to be aware of the issue so that several provisions are made in the new constitution. Upon analysis it is learnt that natural resources management has received a high priority in the political programmes of the parties, in the drafts of the thematic committees of the constitution assembly and in everyday discourses among the political leaders. However, having given a high priority, there are often gaps between policy rhetoric and actual practices of parties and the parliament. Another important aspect that came out is the relative low contention on the issue. While there are several areas of disputes in planning and designing development interventions, the climate change agenda is often perceived as technical and isolated from the development agenda. Devolution and decentralisation appears to be one of the major elements which will have a major implication on the climate adaptation programme. In this context, the effectiveness of the adaptation initiatives lies to the extent in which the Local Adaptation Plans for Action are able to develop a decentralised and highly pro-poor focus. Given the relative access of ordinary citizens, including the poor and marginalised, to the local governments, it is suggested that local governments should be the locus of programme design and implementation.
Responding to Climate Change in a tRansitional politiCs: a Review of the politiCal Context of nepal in Relation to designing loCal adaptation plans foR aCtion
TAbLE Of cONTENTS
executive Summary table of Contents 1. introduction 2. the political dynamics 3. Constitutional responses to climate crisis 4. Climate change and party manifestos 5. the parliamentary process 6. Government initiatives 7. Nepals position on CoP 15 8. designing climate adaptation programme within the transitional politics in Nepal 8.1 NrM and environmental issues as priority agenda 8.2 Gaps between written statements and actual practice 8.3 climate change as a technical less contested agenda 8.4 Local level, including direct community institutions is the preferred strategy 9. Conclusion 10. References ANNeXeS
7 9 11 12 13 15 18 19 21 22 22 22 23 23 24 25 26
Responding to Climate Change in a tRansitional politiCs: a Review of the politiCal Context of nepal in Relation to designing loCal adaptation plans foR aCtion
10
INTrODUcTION
This study looks at the national political dynamics of Nepal in the context of climate change. The study explores the potential supportive or constraining political environment that strongly influences the success [or failure] of the evolving policies, plans and programmes aimed at addressing climate change. In particular, it examines the potential risks and uncertainties in the political arena that directly influence the successful implementation of the Local Adaptation Plan for Action (LAPA). The appraisal is therefore an important aspect of LAPA as it ensures that the LAPA is adequately informed by Nepals unfolding political dynamics and allow ample spaces for adjustment to the emerging political impulses. While reviewing the overall political dynamics in relation to climate change, specific focus is paid to: i) understanding the priorities of relevant constitutional Assembly and Parliamentary committees in relation to climate change; ii) Understanding the working modality adopted by the above committees in framing climate change related policies; and iii) identifying and understanding the dynamics of major climate change institutions. Developing a political appraisal of Nepal is itself a challenging job due its complex dynamics with multiple actors often driven by unstated agenda. consequently, there is huge uncertainty with very low predictability. The task is particularly challenging because any proxy indicator has relatively low reliability. To overcome this, multiple sources of data are being used. These include: election manifestos of major political parties; prepared drafts of various committees at the constitution assembly; interview and interaction of with cA members; major initiatives of the government. The report is divided into four sections. The first section deals with stated and hidden agenda and the positioning of the major political parties on addressing climate change induced consequences and threats. The second section reviews the emerging responses at the constitutional level. The third section builds on the governments major initiative towards addressing climate threats. The fourth and final section analyses and synthesises lessons based on the political dynamics observed in the above three sections.
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Nepals political transition towards a new federal republic state has been slower than anticipated due to a number of factors. The constituent Assembly, for instance, has been unable to draft a new constitution within its original two year timeframe. The establishment of the current government has been preceded by a period during which political parties were unable to arrive at a common consensus on the nature of government. . The differences are at two fronts: i) there are huge challenges in completing the peace process. The crux of the problem is issue of the modality and number of ex-Maoist combatants to be integrated in the national army. ii) bringing the parties with diverse ideological orientation and political programme together into a new constitution is another big challenge. Parties have diverse views on the structure of the government and of parliament, formation of the court, number, border and authority to the states, local governments and property rights. currently, there are over 200 such provisions where the parties are deeply divided. Nepals internal political dynamics are also influenced by regional interests. A Task force has been established to try and bring about consensus between political parties in order to resolve the major issues on the road towards the establishment of a federal state. The practical challenges towards reaching to a logical end must be understood in the context of long, painful political history and unique power configuration in Nepalese polity. The famous twelve-point agreement followed by historical successful peoples movement against the monarchy led to major political change. The key outcomes of the changes are: i) abolition of century long monarchy; ii) comprehensive peace accord between the government and the rebels; and iii) election for the constitution assembly. During this process there has been a major change in the traditional power configuration. Whilst the power of the monarchy declined, the Maoist party became a mojor political force with largest presence in the constitution assembly. The conventional parliamentary parties Nepali congress and the UML became the second and third parties. Also the regional parties, particularly representing Madhesis emerged as a significant force though they are internally divided. An important aspect of the new power configuration is that the current constitution assembly can be regarded as inclusive with over one third women, a significant number of indigenous people, dalits and other ethnic minorities as constitutional Assembly (cA) members. The key development challenges and the government priorities however may remain unchanged despite the evolving political transition, and current stalemate in peace process and constitution drafting. The widespread poverty, rising inequality and deep-seated social exclusion, which are largely recognized by all actors including the political parties may continue to be the key development priority. At the operational level, lack of accountability, frequent strikes and protests and frequent changes in political dynamics, continue to undermine the implementation and effective delivery of programmes.
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Nepal is drafting a new constitution to institutionalise a fundamental political and social change in recent years. After its completion and approval, the new constitution provides a general framework within which all laws and regulations will be developed. In this context, the provisions associated with natural resources management, environmental governance and fundamental citizen rights can be regarded as the proxy indicators for political responses to the issue of climate change. Therefore, the analysis of the relevant provisions in drafts of different subject committees of the constitution Assembly is an important aspect of this analysis. This section is dedicated to the review of the constitutional provisions. Generally speaking, the constitution has addressed climate change issue directly or indirectly at different points. Out of 10 thematic committee reports (Annex 1) six have substantially touched on the issue (Table 1). It is observed that climate change issue is clearly spelt out at the heart of the constitution -in the fundamental rights section that citizens enjoy rights to adaptation and that they will have rights to compensation against climate related disasters. Apart from guaranteeing other basic rights, the interim constitution ensures rights of ethnic minorities, indigenous people and those who fully rely on natural resources as well as those who are vulnerable to climate change impacts. Moreover, the constitution instructs to set aside 40% forestland, for environmental conservation. Major arguments behind the proposal are sustained supply of environmental services, conservation of biodiversity, arresting erosion and landslide and watershed protection. However, the rationale for the provision has been questioned from several corners. redefining forests as a most productive and climate resilient ecosystem can be a good strategy to address food scarcity, poverty and climate change. The proposed provisions are quite progressive, have specific provisions for minorities and indigenous people, and relatively clear on the issue of climate change and potential negative consequences. The strong and explicit provisions on climate change issues could be due to the timing of drafting the constitution. This is being drafted in a time when climate change has dominated the national and international discourses of development and environment including national security. Also Nepal being an agrarian, developing country, there is no strong industrial and corporate influence over the policy making. Whatever is the explanation, strong constitutional provisions provides a general assurance that any policies and plans to address climate change threats may get adequate support from all the state apparatus including the government agencies. Structure of governance, particularly the extent of devolution and decentralisation is a critical issue in responding to climate change. Strong local governance with adequate
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Responding to Climate Change in a tRansitional politiCs: a Review of the politiCal Context of nepal in Relation to designing loCal adaptation plans foR aCtion
2 3 4 5
committees on constitutional bodies constitutional committee committee for national interests State restructuring and power sharing committee fundamental rights and Guiding Principles
autonomy in handling environmental and development issues may open up spaces of locally suitable, and designed responses to climate change. Although a good Local Self Governance Act was promulgated in 1998, it was not implemented to its spirit. Meanwhile, due to the violent political conflict, and painful political transition after 2006 movement there are no elected political local governments in Nepal for over a decade. Government officials are running the office for administrative purposes. consequently, the whole agenda of local governance has been in the shadow.
There are strong prospects for strong local governance in the future. There is a political consensus and the constitutional drafts have put important functions under the list for local governments. recently a high level multi-party Task force has agreed to empower local governments with their own legislative, judiciary and executive functions. It indicates a political consensus for strong local governance. This will provide adequate spaces where LAPA and other programmes can be implemented in direct collaboration with the local governments.
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In a parliamentary political system, citizen vote to the parties based explicitly on their stated agenda, which are expected to be translated into government policies and programmes. Therefore, an assessment of election manifestos of political parties gives an indication of the public policies to be adopted by the government. This study has analysed manifestos of major political parties which can influence the government policies either being part the coalition or from their opposition bench. The table below presents key statements of the four major parties namely the cPN (Maoist), Nepali congress, cPN (UML) and Madhesi Jana Adhikar forum (Table 2). The review focuses on sectors that are already affected or are most likely to be affected by the climate change. Therefore, the focus is on natural resources management and rural livelihoods associated with the management of these resources. These are agriculture, food, land use, forest management and environmental policies. The analysis of party manifestos reveals that there are very limited provisions that directly address climate change. However, the responses to climate change threats can be found in different areas including forest and natural resource management, environmental governance, agriculture, public
Water mgt
Water power as the basis of national economy Transform traditional agriculture into a commercial one Optimal use of resources for alleviating poverty Protection of natural environment, respect all MEAs
churia must be protected as water source for Terai as the basis of national economy Agriculture under provincial policy NrM issues under provincial policy Environmental issues under provincial policy
Agriculture
Sustainable management of NrM Mainstreaming environment in overall DDc programme respect all MEAs
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Responding to Climate Change in a tRansitional politiCs: a Review of the politiCal Context of nepal in Relation to designing loCal adaptation plans foR aCtion
health, fundamental human rights, state institutions, national security, etc. Land use and land tenure are the priority areas. There appears a common concern for the need of transforming land use system and land tenure. Parties have used language according to their ideological baggage revolutionary, radical or scientific. Agrarian reform in diverse form appears in all manifestos. A related issue is reorganising agriculture. Enhancing agriculture production and productivity is often on the top of the agenda across all manifestos. In all manifestoes modernising agriculture with increased inputs has been given due attention. Not surprisingly, all parties follow that path of enhancing production through high input agriculture but quite in identifying potential impacts of climate change on the performance of the sectors. A few exceptions exist at some points organic farming, local varieties, sustainable farming though not promoted as adaptation measures to climate change. The discussion on water is often associated with hydro power. Almost every document recognises hydro power as the key sector that potentially contributes to national economy. Harnessing hydro power potential is therefore a major priority. Only a few documents focus on irrigation. Unfortunately, little is discussed on how to arrange drinking water. It appears that water is seen as the source of national economy not a basic livelihoods need. Policies towards forest management appear to be influenced by conservationist agenda. Almost every manifesto associates forest management with non timber forest products (NTfP), ecotourism and biodiversity. There is little discussion on timber management and forests contribution to national economy. The
language itself is forest conservation, not of management. Only the Nc manifesto recognises commercial management of forest resources as a priority policy agenda. Having said these similarities, the manifestos also show some dissimilarity as summarised in Table 2. The differences exist on land distribution. Nepali congress (Nc) and forum are relatively silent on the issue. Though scientific forest management is common, cPN (Maoist) appears to have emphasised on industrial use of forest while forum is concerned with protection of churia forest. The language of cPN (UML) appears to be influenced by developmental, participatory discourses (e.g. mobilising international aid for Himalayan conservation, participatory NrM). Mainstreaming environmental management within the District Development council/committee (DDc) is explicitly stated in Nc manifesto. It should be noted that a comparison between Party manifestos is difficult as they do not have a common framework. consequently, many specific issues may have been left out unintentionally. Despite the indicative policy directions provided above, it is generally hard to track any specific policy focus of the manifestos. In many cases, similar programmes are proposed by the parties with seemingly opposite orientation. Moreover, parties prefer to use general language than specific and often populist tune. Analysis of the manifestos shows that the parties try to please everyone than to propose any substantial policy options. In addition, parties treat climate change, often as a technical and isolated issue largely associated with environment. In most of the documents climate changes comes along with forest and other natural resources and the solution offered are also associated within reforestation/plantation.
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Responding to Climate Change in a tRansitional politiCs: a Review of the politiCal Context of nepal in Relation to designing loCal adaptation plans foR aCtion
bOx 1 Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal his government has given a high priority in responding climate change threats many of which come from his personal interests. The Kalapathar cabinet meeting, Nepals participation in copenhagen and activities of the climate change council indicate so. However, there are doubts in the continuity of these initiatives. Some members of constitution assembly have initiated a collective response to address climate change threats. They visited different parts of the country to observe the impacts of climate change. They also advanced the discussion with concerned stakeholders and professionals and prioritise climate adaptation projects within the regular disbursement of MPs funds. They have funded for projects on improved cooking stoves, environmental awareness, and environmental management.
Source: interaction with MPs on 27 Oct, 2010
As parties largely see climate change along with forest and environment often detached from the economy, industry and livelihoods; there appears little contestation in recognising the problem. It has two consequences. first, there appears consensus among the political in recognising and defining the problem. Second, most of the solutions offered are around afforestation and forest protection where there is little debate. The potential consequences are that climate change may never get properly recognised and addressed. The party manifestos give divers views on understanding poverty and addressing it.
The Maoists often talks of socio-economic and cultural restructuring- redistributing the power and resources. There are heavy, politically loaded concepts such as feudalism and imperialism which the Maoist wants to transform. Other parties, particularly Nc aims for high growth and addressing poverty through trickledown effect. Madhesi Jana Adhikar forum has little explicit explanation of the issue. May be the difference exists on the process and steps for economic transformation. Maoist seemed still to be committed for political change before they directly go for economic transformation whereas other parties position seems to be to institutionalize political achievement and give top priority for economic transformation.
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The parliamentary process, particularly, the structure of the various thematic committees (Annex II) and the process of developing and finalising any specific agenda into the form of law is an important issue to be aware of. The parliament works primarily through these thematic-committees. Apart from primary discussion on any bills, they provide a political oversight of respective policy issues and also sometimes monitor the implementation. Some of the past actions of these committees had been very important in shaping government decisions and actions. The Public Account committee and the Natural resource committee in particular remained active. currently over 20 MPs representing different parties have formed an informal group on climate change (Annex III). They collectively visited different parts of the country to see the impacts of climate change in landscape and rural livelihoods. Some members of this group have invested the Parliamentarian Development fund into climate related projects. However, these projects have received little technical support from the government or other development agencies. Moreover, the group organised a couple of events to increase the MPs understanding on the issue. Now MPs of this group are lobbying towards institutionalising a parliamentary committee on climate change that could provide a broad framework for the governments actions around climate change issue. Most of these are young MPs, who have not the leading roles in their parties but of secondary leadership. Therefore it may take a long time before actually realising the authentic climate change committee within the parliament. An interaction with MPs revealed that the government bureaucracy often tend to avoid any direct interface with the political leaders. Whenever the MPs demand information on specific policy decisions, the senior officials at the bureaucracy respond late or provide only peripheral information. Sometimes they even complain that the parliamentary committees have become bottlenecks for swift decision making process. Sometimes, there have been disputes over defining correct scope of the committees resulting in encroaching other committees territory. This is particularly important as climate change is overly integrated and may simultaneously influence diverse policy arenas.
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GOvErNMENT INITIATIvES
The government of Nepal has taken several initiatives in responding the climate change threats (box 1) Most of these initiatives are part of compliance under the UNfccc. Some others are encouraged and supported by the donors. Many of the activities are routine and mandatory activities under global conventions. Some example include: submission of national communication report to the UNfccc secretariat, formation of various high level committees, regular participation to cOP and development of NAPA, etc. Moreover, being one of the poorest and aid dependent counties, Nepal often immediately signs almost all international conventions and actively participates in several global and regional events. The cabinet of GON met in Kalapatthar, near the Everest base camp and declared three new PAs2 as dedicated to climate mitigation purpose. Similarly, Nepal applied to the World banks fcPf scheme and is preparing itself for carbon trade through rEDD scheme. Apart from its domestic initiatives, Nepal has been actively representing itself in the global climate negotiation and has clearly expressed its position in various issues. On December 16, 2009, speaking at 1 Initial National communication (INc) the copenhagen, Prime Minister Madhav Nepal has submitted in July 2004 proposed five-point program on climate change. 2 climate change Network- a multistakeholder firstly, the Prime Minister urged the world leaders body established to think of the future of our planet, highlighted the 3 climate change council formed chaired by need to understand the common but differentiated the Prime Minister responsibility. Secondly, he clearly expressed his 4 Kathmandu to copenhagen -a regional intention that the copenhagen treaty should be conference organied ambitious and legally binding following the Kyoto 5 Kalapatahar (Everest) meeting declared new protocol and that developed nations should set high PAs targets on reducing greenhouse gases. Thirdly, he 6 Second National communication submitted demanded that a priority should be given to the least 7 climate change policy under preparation developed countries because of their poor capability 8 Preparation of NAPA to adapt to the climate change impacts. fourthly, Source: collection from media report top priority should be given to the gender sensitive development and poverty alleviation to address the climate change. finally, he requested for a concrete and sustainable investment with easy access to resources and technology for the identified LDcs. bOx 2 Nepals major activities on climate change Government actions on climate change so far are focused at the international and national level. There are no specific actions at the local level. Only some awareness types of activities are carried out mainly by the non government development agencies. Absence of significant
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Responding to Climate Change in a tRansitional politiCs: a Review of the politiCal Context of nepal in Relation to designing loCal adaptation plans foR aCtion
investment at the local level can be attributed to the weak decentralisation. Though the Local Self Governance Act was promulgated in 1998, it was never implemented in its true spirit. The local government bodies remained largely under the Ministry of Local Development and therefore cannot enjoy adequate autonomy to generate revenue, and plan and implement their own development priorities. Many scholars attribute the poor decentralisation for the current movement for federalism and particularly the regional and ethnic resurgence movements. As there is a political consensus towards federalism and strong devolution, one can expect strong local governments in the new constitution. Apart from effective mobilisation of available resources, the decentralised planning and implementation would help design more appropriate interventions at the local level. Though decentralised system can be expected to induce a pro-poor governance at the local
level, actual realisation of development benefits by the poor remains a major challenge. One way to address this challenge would be to mobilise multiple channels of funding, planning and programme implementation. There is long history and a rich experience of community governance in Nepal. Local community institutions are managing forests, irrigation canals, watersheds, schools, health posts, saving and credit schemes, cooperatives and several other social services. The disadvantaged groups including the poor, Dalits, women and ethnic minorities have relatively better access to these institutions. Empowering these local institutions, channelling funds through them and mobilising their human and network resources may help the poverty outcomes of any development interventions. Therefore the local government bodies and the community institutions must be considered during the design of LAPA framework and programmes.
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Nepal reaffirms the shared vision that all people, nations, and cultures have the right to survive, develop, and alleviate poverty. It views developed countries as the culprits of the crisis demands for a climate justice. Therefore, it favours the common but differentiated responsibilities of all nations including many developing countries. It is in favours of the 1.50 c limit. being a mountainous country, Nepal seeks to draw special attention to mountain ecosystem through forming an alliance of mountain countries. besides, Nepal expects to benefit through its community based forest management particularly through payment mechanism such as reducing Emission from Deforestation Degradation (rEDD+). However, given the extreme poverty and low emission, Nepals priority is in adaptation, therefore seeks international support to implement National Adaptation Plan of Action (NAPA) other adaptation programmes. for the same it seeks an adequate, additional, country driven, direct, sustainable, unconditional, and predictable funding primarily as grants. Nepal demanded that developed countries should contribute at least 1.5 % of their GDP to the adaptation fund. These funds could help enhance the national capacity to adaptation and enhance and early warning, forecasting, and modelling of potential climate change impacts.
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The review of the literature, content analysis of major policy documents and the interaction with the MPs identified some important message for designing any climate adaptation programmes. This political appraisal has become important exercise revealing a couple of good insights that can enhance the quality of the LAPA design and increase the likelihoods of its successful implementation. Major observation can be summarised as follows.
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Responding to Climate Change in a tRansitional politiCs: a Review of the politiCal Context of nepal in Relation to designing loCal adaptation plans foR aCtion
23
cONcLUSION
This study shows that the responses of Nepals political constituencies towards climate change crisis are diverse and could often be interpreted as inconsistent. . responses usually emerge from individual understanding, often based on limited knowledge of the whole issue. There is little internal discussion among the political bodies, many of them are exposed to international and NGO led activities and therefore get different perspectives. These are further complicated by the conflicting ideological and political orientation of political parties and leaders. However, it is surprising that there is huge variation even within the leaders of particular political party partly due to little serious homework and discussion on the issue within the parties. However, despite contingency nature of knowledge of climate politics, the political leaders including senior party leaders share some common dominant narratives on climate change. for example, there is shared view that climate change is primarily due to industrialised countries and that Nepal as a LDc should get aid to better adapt to the changing global climate. However, many have not gone beyond this general situation and there is little understanding and explanation of our adaptation priorities let alone the programmes.
24
rEfErENcES
constituent Assembly of Nepal, 2010. Drafts of the thematic committees. The constitution assembly. Kathmandu cPN (Maoist) 2008. Election manifesto. cPN (Maoist), central office, Kathmandu. Nepali congress 2008. Election manifesto. Nc, central office, Kathmandu. cPN (UML) 2008. Election manifesto. cPN (UML), central office, Kathmandu. Madhesi Jana Adhikar forum, 2008. Election Manifesto. MJf, central office, Kathmandu. GON, 2008. Press release of the Kalapatthar meeting. Transparency International 2010. Global corruption reprot 2009. PP: 276-279
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ANNExES
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaptation Plans for action: current Practices and experiences of state and non-state actors in nepal
Submitted to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
Submitted by Ganga Datta Awasthi Krishna Dev Joshi SUPPORT Foundation December, 2010
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ExECUTIvE SUMMARy
The study reviewed current planning and budgeting processes in relation to developing Local Adaptation Plans of Action (LAPA). The Government of Nepal has recently endorsed the NAPA document and has committed to mainstreaming climate change into all kinds of development initiatives through non-project profiles. Unlike other projects, NAPA is a framework that intends to incorporate climate change adaptation into the regular planning and development process. The government identified the need to develop LAPA as a means of mainstreaming climate change adaptation into development planning in a bottom-up manner. This requires a hybridized planning process where bottom-up and top-down approaches mesh, so as to avoid undermining the value of adaptation interventions. CADP-N is developing a framework for LAPA, in line with the NAPA implementation framework, and has been piloting LAPA initiatives to validate and refine it at the local level. The authors of this study reviewed and analyzed the relevant literature, participated in a national workshop, and interacted with community, line agencies and CADP-N. This report synthesises the information and presents the four options below for mainstreaming LAPA in varying contexts: 1. A programme that fully follows the government planning, programme and budgeting system. 2. A governmentled planning and programming process with flexible funding and TA support. 3. A Turnkey model directly implemented by the Development Partners with weak linkages with the government system. 4. A hybrid model that follows the government planning and programming processes but with provision of alternative service delivery by local service providers. The other features of this model will be direct funding to DCCCS with or without re-election in the government budget. The study compares and contrasts cases which have frameworks that support community initiatives; that strengthen access to new technologies and have decentralized service provision. The study recommends that flexibility and dynamism are vital for mainstreaming climate adaptation through a bottom-up planning process which has full participation of all stakeholders, local bodies, citizen forums, communities and development partners. The four case studies include PAF, SSMP, South Asia PCI and LGCDP. The LGCDP works within the government system, whereas SSMP aligns with the local bodies planning and funding system. The PAF provides funds directly to the communities and service providers but is reflected in the national budget books. The South Asia PCI is directly funded by the DFID Central Research Department and has links with national research and development systems, as policy support partners only, while activities are implemented through selected NGO partners.
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
Based on the findings, the following recommendations are made: (i) An inclusive participatory bottom-up planning process involving the most vulnerable communities and other stakeholders at community level should be made mandatory. Guidelines and funds can be combined from different sources such NGOs, vDC, DDC and a national level climate change fund. (ii) Flexibility of funding is required for the development and implementation of plans to ensure immediate impact, in the place of lengthy fund flow mechanisms. However, the funds need to be reflected in the national or local government budgets. (iii) On-going monitoring, supervision and reporting mechanisms have to be in place, with indicators that are closely correlated with the District Planning, Monitoring and Analysis System (DPMAS) developed by NPC. This will include: a. Regular review of progress at local and central level meetings, b. Joint monitoring involving all stakeholders including journalists, c. Periodic status reporting to the concerned higher level authorities. (iv) For maintaining greater accountability and transparency, the following measures have to be internalized in the project cycle: a. Public and social audits, b. Public hearings, c. Citizens interaction and feedback, d. Making programmes and budgets public.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
executive Summary table of Contents 1. background 2. objectives of the study 3. methodology 3.1 Desk review 3.2 Sharing of preliminary findings 3.3 Case Study 3.4 Limitations of the Study 4. Planning and budgeting practice 4.1 Option I. Programme that follows the government system 4.1.1 Guiding principles for planning and implementation 4.1.2 Local planning and budgeting processes for LAPA 4.1.3 Institutional arrangements 4.1.4 Points to be considered for effective NAPA and LAPA implementation fund flow 4.1.5 Fund flow mechanisms 4.2 Option II. Government-led with donor technical and financial support 4.3 Option III. Turn key model (Direct Execution model) 4.4 Option Iv. Hybrid model 5. Arrangements for emergency operations 6. Case studies 6.1 Poverty Alleviation Fund (PAF) Nepal 6.2 RiUP South Asia Participatory Crop Improvement (SAPCI): Best Bets projects 6.3 Sustainable Soil Management Project (SSMP) 6.4 Local Governance and Community Development Project (LGCD) 6.5 In conclusion 7. overall Recommendations Documents reviewed and consulted 9. Annexes
29 31 33 37 38 38 38 38 38 39 39 39 40 43 45 46 46 47 47 49 50 50 51 53 55 56 57 57 58-64
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
32
BACkGROUND
Nepal was portrayed as the fourth most vulnerable nation in terms of the adverse impacts of climate change in a report released in October 2010 by the Uk-based international risks advisory firm Maplecroft. The Climate Change vulnerability Index, compiled by Maplecroft, put Nepal in the extreme risk category, along with four other South Asian nations Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. Bangladesh tops the list and India follows. Maplecroft stated that the index was intended as a guide for strategic investment and policy making. The index was based on 42 social, economic and environmental factors, including the responsiveness of government to assess the risks to population, ecosystems and business from climate change. The vulnerability to adverse impacts of climate change in Nepal and other South Asian countries, is due to high dependency on rain for cultivation, poverty and topography. While other South Asian nations will be affected by sea-level rises, Nepal will be largely affected by the melting of snow in the Himalayas and the changes in climatic patterns. The vulnerability index also takes into account the regions poverty level, preparedness to combat impacts of climate change, and the high dependency on natural factors for food (http://bit.ly/depTkT). Increasing greenhouse gas emissions and alarming rises in temperature have greatly affected the entire county. Erratic and torrential rains, resulting in severe floods, have affected human settlements, lives and properties, human and animal health, agriculture, water resources, biodiversity, other natural resources and physical infrastructure. Prolonged droughts have adversely affected crop production and vegetation. These erratic phenomena are also having immense impacts and posing challenges to overall ecosystems and national wellbeing, and as a result, peoples livelihoods are seriously threatened (Nepal NAPA, 2010). Nepals climate is affected by the Himalayan range and the South Asian monsoon. Observed data indicate consistent warming and a rise in the maximum temperature at an annual rate of 0.04 0.06 0C. Studies also indicate that the observed warming trend is not uniform across the country. Warming is more pronounced in high altitude regions, in comparison with the Terai and Siwalik regions. The monsoon rain is most abundant in the east and declines westwards, while winter rains are higher in the northwest and decline southeastwards. Temperatures tend to increase from north to south and with decreasing altitude. Rapid changes in temperature patterns and variability in the timing, intensity and form of precipitation, have already impacted agriculture and natural resources. Although there are fewer studies on the impacts on human and animal health, cases of natural disasters across Nepal have increased in recent years. Future climate induced changes are likely to exacerbate these impacts (Nepal NAPA, 2010).
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
The impact of changing climate is highly visible in agricultural production; changing rainfall patterns are adversely affecting crops at emergence, during vegetative and reproductive growth stages, and grain filling, and thereby the entire crop productivity is greatly influenced. Because planting time is influenced by climatic conditions, changes have implications for cropping intensity and overall crop production per unit area. Thus, climate change poses an additional threat (and potentially a major barrier) to the already challenging development process in Nepal. For instance, in its most recent Three year Interim Plan, the Government of Nepal has identified poverty reduction and social inclusion as its development priorities. Poverty reduction and social inclusion interventions rely heavily on the sustainability, growth and equitable distribution of benefits within the key sectors that rural and urban livelihoods depend on. Given that the main impacts of climate change will be transmitted via primary sectors such as agriculture, water and forestry, the effectiveness and the sustainability of development interventions will largely depend on the extent to which these sectors and interventions address climate change. Recognising the tremendous challenge of climate change the country is facing, the Government of Nepal (GoN) finalised and endorsed the NAPA document in September 2010. NAPA is a strategic framework to assess climatic vulnerability and systematically respond to the impacts of climate change by developing appropriate adaptation measures. For overseeing NAPA development, the Government has established a Climate Change Division within the Ministry of Environment, which has a mandate to coordinate the climate agenda in Nepal. The country also established a Climate Change Council (CCC) chaired by the Prime Minister, which provides high level political support and policy guidance to the climate agenda.
The process of prioritising and selecting climate adaptation actions was carefully adopted and made as consultative as was possible. A multi-criteria analysis was used in a step-wise process that culminated in identifying the most urgent and immediate climate adaptation actions according to national needs and interests. The prioritized adaptation options include both urgent/ immediate and long term adaptation strategies in key vulnerable sectors under six thematic working groups. Emphasis has been given to providing information, knowledge, skills and technology to the most vulnerable households living in fragile and climate vulnerable districts across Nepal. The strategies and actions have been targeted to increase communities adaptive capacity through livelihoods support, improved governance, collective responses, improved service delivery, access to technology, and finance. A watershed and landscape level approach was suggested in dealing with issues related to food security, biodiversity loss, water scarcity, energy use, settlements, disease outbreaks and governance (Nepal NAPA, 2010). The criteria to assess the urgent and immediate needs were applied in order to develop top-priority project profiles at the final prioritization workshop. There was strong convergence between several of the most urgent and immediate priority projects identified by individual thematic working groups. Thus it was agreed to combine priority activities and develop combined project profiles. The NAPA project team carried out an integrated ranking of priority activities and clustered these into nine combined project profiles. They are: 1. Promoting Community-based Adaptation through Integrated Management of the Agriculture, Water, Forest and Biodiversity Sectors. 2. Building and Enhancing Adaptive Capacity of vulnerable Communities through Improved Systems and Access
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
3. 4. 5.
6. 7. 8.
9.
to Services Related to Agricultural Development. Community-based Disaster Management for Facilitating Climate Adaptation. GLOF Monitoring and Disaster Risk Reduction. Forest and Ecosystem Management for supporting Climate-led Adaptation Innovations. Adapting to Climate Challenges in Public Health. Ecosystem management for Climate Adaptation. Empowering vulnerable Communities through Sustainable Management of Water Resource and Clean Energy Supply. Promoting Climate-Smart Urban Settlements.
and explore ways to bridge gaps between local to national levels in the formulation and implementation of adaptation plans. It is envisaged that LAPA will complement the national level planning initiatives at the local level, and at the same time will provide a mechanism via which such local adaptation needs and capacities can be mainstreamed into development planning at micro, meso and macro levels. The participants of the Inception Meeting of NAPA held in May 2009 emphasised that Nepals wide diversity of ecosystems, microclimates, cultures and socio-economic circumstances demand a series of LAPAs (Regmi and karki, 2010). The suggestion was to prepare LAPA through a countrydriven operational process, for the effective implementation of the most urgent and immediate adaptation needs as prioritised in the NAPA. It was envisaged that the national programme of adaptation would: be coherent with the priorities developed during the NAPA process; seek to channel financial resources to adaptation responses by many actors and agencies (public sector, civil societies and private sector); and be under the coordination of the government of Nepals climate focal point - the Ministry of Environment Nepal (NAPA, 2010).
The total cost to implement these integrated adaptation measures is about USD 350 million (Nepal NAPA, 2010). As climate adaptation has been recognised as a national priority, the NAPA process has to be fully integrated into national development processes so as to support climate vulnerable communities and contribute to climate-proof socioeconomic development. The GoN also recognises the lack of linkages between national and local level planning scales. In this context, the GoN has identified the need to develop Local Adaptation Plans of Action (LAPAs) as a means to mainstream climate change adaptation into development planning in a bottom-up manner. The CADP-N has developed a framework for Local Adaptation Plans of Action (LAPA) in line with the NAPA implementation framework, and is piloting the LAPA framework at the local level. This was initiated to find a way to address adaptation within Nepals wide diversity of ecosystems, microclimates, cultures and socioeconomic circumstances. These pilots should work within location specific adaption needs
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
the peace process, and the constitution writing process is still uncertain. The political uncertainty and frequent changes in government have destabilised the process further. Over the last five months, the country has been governed by a caretaker government. This has had a number implications including the failure to approve the budget and programme for the current fiscal year. virtually all of the development works are in stagnation. In some parts of the country, the security situation is not favourable for carrying out normal development activities. A high staff turnover is common, due to a lack of human resources at the operational level, low morale and motivation of the staff due to insecurity, and a lack of proper reward and punishment system. Similarly, since 2002, the non-existence of political representation at the local level has derailed the participatory planning process of local governments. The party political representation mechanism is non-accountable and legally only mandated for advisory functions. De jure Local Development Officers (LDOs), vDC Secretaries and Municipal Executive Officers are authorised to run the local government, but in practice the all party political mechanism, which is supposed to simply play an advisory role, is influencing local government decisions. Several reports indicate high fiduciary risk, corrupt practices and the siphoning of financial resources for political gain, through a non-accountable political mechanism.
Several of the vDC Secretary positions (around 800) are vacant. Due to adverse security conditions in the villages, most of the Secretaries work from the District Headquarters. In this context, they are requesting the government to relieve them of their political role and limit them to their original roles. Similarly, retention of LDOs and Executive Officers is also challenging, due to both security reasons and the frequent transfers caused by frequent changes in the government. Mainstreaming climate adaptation into the bottom-up planning process is a national priority. The LAPA process would need to be mainstreamed and promoted in such a way that it guides the human development agenda of making socio-economic development climate-proof. This demands a holistic approach which integrates cross-sectoral efforts at all levels with the effective participation of communities, local governments, academia, civil society, youth organizations, women and grassroots organizations. The process must focus on the most vulnerable communities and their priorities be addressed urgently through a flexible LAPA implementation process. This would be applicable in the normal situation. However, since the country is in transition and facing several challenges, it is important that multiple strategies and options are in place to progress development processes such as LAPA at the local level.
36
This study aimed to document the development planning processes at the national and local level. The assessment would enable the CADP-N team to identify entry points for mainstreaming climate change adaptation (CCA) into development planning processes, and to propose institutional and budgetary frameworks. The expected outputs of the study were: The review and documentation of existing national planning and budgeting systems, highlighting the linkages with local planning. A presentation of local level frameworks of inclusive participatory planning and budgeting processes. A map of the key institutions involved at the national and local levels. A presentation of case studies of the existing best practices of local planning, budgeting and implementation during the transition period. A summary of plans, budgetary support and service delivery mechanisms for responding to the needs of vulnerable and poor people during emergencies and in the event of extreme climatic variations, e.g. loss of crops and livestock due to severe drought or floods. Exploration of the possibilities of mainstreaming cross cutting issues such as environmental issues (e.g. climate change), gender and inclusion.
37
METHODOLOGy
The study used the following approaches to complete the task. 3.1 Desk review and analysis: All the available published literature prevalent to the planning and budgeting processes, were reviewed and analyzed in relation to climate change adaptation with a focus on LAPA. 3.2 Sharing preliminary findings: The findings from the desk review were shared in a national workshop on the NAPA process held in August 2010. This workshop provided an excellent opportunity for interaction with key people from various major stakeholders, including government Ministries, Departments, NGOs, INGOs and POs. Discussion with participants provided insight into the issues related to planning and budgeting processes in relation to climate change adaptation (CCA). Similarly, the consultant participated in the field visit in Dhading and subsequent brainstorming sessions held at kurintar. Feedback and suggestions obtained during the process were incorporated into the document. Similarly, Consultant also participated in the field visit in Dhading and subsequent brainstorming sessions held at kurintar. All the important feedbacks and suggestions obtained during the process were incorporated in the document. 3.3 Case studies: Case studies of the planning and budgeting processes were identified and are presented in this report. This was done to explore the possibility of using the essence of current models for mainstreaming programmes and activities for the development of climate change adaption plans at local and national level, without losing flexibility and room for innovation. 3.4 Limitations of study: The study is based on a desk review and interactions. Interactions took place with experts, a community in Dhading district, and a few government line agency personnel in Dhading. Due to limited time the suggested strategies, concepts and policies of LAPA could not be piloted in the field context.
38
After reviewing various relevant practices currently operating at local level, it was evident that there could be number of options for LAPA planning and budgeting. The following three options, however, seem most appropriate for mainstreaming LAPA, depending on the context:
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
(iv) The MoE would consult the Apex Programme Steering Committee (APSC) and then allocate specific guidelines and budget ceilings for central, district and local level activities. Implementation guidelines and budget ceilings would be provided to the concerned line ministries and district level offices, with a copy to the District Development Committee (DDC) for planning purposes. (v) The MoE would issue district level guidelines and budget ceilings to its district level offices (once they are in place) or designated offices, with copy to the DDC. District diversities would be addressed through specific guidelines issued for the local planning process.
NGOs and private sector organisations. They would discuss the budget ceilings and guidelines and instruct agencies to initiate community level adaptation planning and allocate budget ceilings for the most vulnerable communities. vDCs could also allocate funds from their block grants or source resources for climate change and create a total basket of investment for climate adaptation initiatives. (iii) While initiating community planning, the district and vDC level agencies would have to seek synergy and avoid duplication. B. Village level planning process The steps and processes followed in the village level planning process are shown in Figure 1, (Annexure 1). The village planning would follow the steps and processes specified in LSGA/R from community citizen forums (Ward level), Ward Committees (once in place), Sectoral Plan Formulation committees, Integrated Plan Formulation Committees, to vDC village Councils. The vDC could form a special village level climate change coordination committee (vCCCC) for coordination and implementation of climate change activities at vDC level. The government is implementing social mobilization programmes in all vDCs and the 404 wards of various municipalities, through local service providers. Under this programme, the most disadvantaged families will be empowered to submit their priorities to local bodies. The empowered communities will be able to make the local bodies more responsive and accountable to communities. This is thus an opportunity for implementing LAPA at community level, through integrating their needs and priorities into the local planning process. The plan would pass through the CCICC before submission to the integrated plan formulation committee. The provision of Citizen Forums is specifically created to fill the gap left by the current
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
VdC
monitoring Committee
Village Council
absence of elected representatives. The other objective of the forum is to have wider citizen involvement in prioritization and planning, and for creating downward accountability, transparency and managing transition. The Citizen Forums would represent vulnerable communities, disadvantaged groups, women, Dalits, ethnic minorities and others according to the local community situation. c. District level planning process All the steps and processes followed in the district level planning process are shown in Figure 2. (i) The district level activities would be recommended through village councils, which are beyond the budget ceilings of vDCs and their functional and geographical jurisdiction.
(ii) DDCs would organize Ilaka level stakeholder meetings for prioritizing the adaptation recommendations of village councils and refer to the respective Plan Formulation Committees (PFC) for further prioritization within the specific areas and jurisdictions. (iii) The PFC would recommend climate change related activities to the Climate Change Planning Coordination and Implementation Committee (CCPICC) for further screening against the guidelines and priorities. The CCPICC would prioritise the activities and make recommendations to the Integrated Planning Committee (IPC) of the DDC. (iv) The Integrated Plan Formulation Committee would review all the planning proposals received from the PFC and CCPICC, and prioritise activities within the budget ceiling for district level implementation and higher level activities for incorporation into central level plans, and would submit to the DDC.
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
Figure 2. LAPA planning and implementation framework for district level district Planning Process
implementation Committees
Coordination Committees
district Council
(v) The DDC would intensively discuss and prioritise the proposals received from IPCs and forward them to the district council. The district council would approve the district annual plans and budgets, and set priorities for central level activities, and make recommendations to the respective line Ministries. d. Central level planning (i) The Ministry of Environment would refer to the Programme Management Unit (PMU) for screening the local level priorities and recommendations of the districts councils to be incorporated into the central level plans. The PMU would prepare a draft ASIP for discussion on the APSC. The APSC would approve and prioritise central and district level activities within the thematic areas and submit them to the MoE. (ii) The MoE would submit the proposal to the NPC within the stipulated time
under the budget guideline directives. At the NPC level, the proposals would be discussed thoroughly with the concerned stakeholders, including Ministry of Finance (MoF), and the proposals would be forwarded to the MoF by the NPC. Before the annual budget speech in the Parliament, the annual plans and budget would have to be endorsed by the MCCICC and CCC chaired by the Prime Minister. The areas for central level activities for NAPA planning would concentrate on the recommendation of the district council and Thematic Working Groups (TWGs). However, the TWGs also have to consider the District Council recommendations. Inter-district priority areas may also be handled by central level agencies. All other activities have to be implemented through local level agencies. The central level agencies need to facilitate, monitor and give timely feedback
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
for smooth implementation of the local level activities. The central level activities primarily focus on the areas listed below; Policy formulation Putting in place the legal framework (amending the existing or drafting new ones) Capacity development both at national and local level regarding: a) innovation and research capacities on science, technology and development paradigms b) Institutional capacity c) Individual capacity within the institutions d) System-based capacity
e) Infrastructural and logistical capacity Monitoring and evaluation Setting standards (quality control) through procedural guidelines and institutional arrangements The relations and linkages of local and central level planning and budgeting according to the participatory decentralized framework is shown in Annexure 1.
10% of budget
district Coordination Committee (dCC) (at district development Committee to the extent possible)
implementation
80% of budget
Programme/Project implementation through existing community level organization/s like CFuG, different FGs, irrigation Groups and other interest groups
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
dFid, eu
ministry of environment Apex Programme Steering Committee Climate Change management division Climate Change Support unit CCS PSC PSC 2
PSC 3
PSC 4
Line Agencies
Local Adaptation Plans of Action & local climate adapatation & low emissions initiatives
Climate Change Council (CCC) chaired by Prime Minister. National Planning Commission (NPC) and Ministry of Finance (MoF). Multi-stakeholder Climate Change Implementation Coordination Committee (MCCICC) representing NPC, MoF and all other relevant line Ministries, chaired by Minister of Environment, with representation from development partners. Apex Programme Steering Committee (APSC), chaired by the Secretary Ministry of Environment and with representatives from other relevant agencies at the national level. Programme Management Coordination and Implementation Committee (PMCIC), chaired by the Joint Secretary of the MoE and the National Programme Director.
Climate Change Support Unit (CCSU) supported by development partners technically and financially. Development Partner Advisory Group. A framework for NAPA implementation, as envisioned by Nepal government (Figure 3a), and a practical model, based on the NAPA implementation framework for the transition phase up to 2014 (Figure 3b), would be required to mobilize the stakeholders for climate change adaptation initiatives. B. Institutional arrangements for programme implementation at local level The following would be in place for the implementation of adaptation plans and interventions at the local level:
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
1. DDCs and vDCs would be made the focal agencies. 2. District Environment and Energy units of the Ministry of Environment would be strengthened and re-oriented to address climate change issues. 3. Where the Environment and Energy unit of the Ministry is not in existence, any line agency would be authorized to act as Secretariat of the District Coordination Implementation Committee on climate change, at the request of the district coordination committee. 4. District and village level Coordination Committees would be established with the representation of the relevant stakeholders (line agencies such as agriculture, forest and public health, representatives of civil society, NGOs, private sector, disadvantaged groups, vDCs, technical assistance team), and chaired by the DDC Chairperson/ Local Development Officer and vDC Chairperson/Secretary respectively. 5. In order to be flexible and have a quick impact, some adaptation activities could be contracted out to NGOs and private sector actors. Selection criteria would be developed for potential implementing partners and public procurement rules could be followed for a competitive bidding process. 6. While implementing adaptation measures, the respective communities would be fully involved in every step of the planning cycle including implementation through user committees directly formed by the target groups. The capacities of the communities and user committees would be enhanced during implementation. 7. The relevant government line agencies could also be involved in implementation of the activities. 8. Technical assistance would be needed for smooth implementation of programme activities.
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
environment) within the regular programme activities. However, the special programmes prioritized by the thematic groups can be implemented through line ministries, involving them in all steps of the planning process so that they own the programme and do not see it as an extra burden. In the long run these activities will have to be internalized to ensure continuity through the regular planning process. The flexibility for contracting out or using other options for implementation would need to be in place for the programme to be dynamic and output oriented.
support outside of the programme ta, Prog. coord others Pooled donors, basket funding Basket, ear marked fund cdta/dev
assistance would be maintained for fund flow mechanisms, as agreed with the government. Central and budgetary support would be borne by the CCF with proper authorization routes: Ministry of Finance Ministry of Environment (a) to line Ministries for central level activities, (b) to DDCs for district and local level activities, and (C) to Energy and Environment Unit or any assigned unit. The DDCs would be authorised by the respective line agencies or Energy and Environment unit upon the request of Coordination Committee, and the member Secretary of the respective line agencies would manage the funds according to the decisions of the coordination committee. The DDCs and VDCs could channel resources from their block grants and their on-source revenues for climate change related activities. VDC level funds would be channelled after analyzing a vDCs capacity and track record of past fund management. Fund flow mechanisms for vDCs will be decided by the District Coordination Committee in order to ensure an immediate response to climate vulnerable communities. A technical assistance team would appraise the situation before decisions are made at the Coordination Committee. Reporting and financial auditing mechanisms would be according to the government financial rules, regulations and systems.
4.2 Option II. Government-led with Donor Partner Technical and Financial Support
The government would lead the LAPA development and implementation process with the technical and financial support
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
from donor partnerships. The details are as follows: (i) The planning processes would be adopted following the steps and processes of normal government planning. This would have to comply with the principles of fund allocation criteria that 20% funds are used at the centre and 80% are spent at the local level. (ii) Institutional structure would be same as option 1 above, however the funding would be channelled directly from donor partners to TA or reflected in the Red Book and implemented and facilitated by TAs. In this model also, the Joint Secretary of MoE would be assigned as Programme Director (PD), and the Team Leader of the TA Team would be the Programme Manager (PM). Funds would flow with the joint signatures of PD & PM. This is a NEx (Nationally Executed Programme) model of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)/UNCDF (United Nations Capital Development fund). This approach would increase the ownership and stake of the government in the adaptation programme. (iii) The reporting and financial auditing mechanisms could either follow the government system or, with the consent of the Office of the Auditor General (OAG), an External Auditor could be appointed, but the audit report would have to be submitted to the OAG.
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
level steering and management committees (Figure 5). The auditing of funds would be conducted according to the agreement with the government. The implementing partners would coordinate with vDCs and Municipalities while implementing adaptation activities. The DCCCC would coordinate the district level agencies.
controls the fund. The line agencies of the government ministries request the DTCO for issuance of the cheque for the payment of bills and DTCO issues the Cheque in favour of the party directly. The concerned party receives payments from the appropriate line agencies. This system resolves the issues of non-settlement of accounts. Similarly, the DTCO issues cheques to the DDC to deposit in a Ga account directly, instead of a kha account as used previously. The DDC controls the account. Hence, the GoN financing and LBs financing differs slightly here.
Figure 5. Flexible project implementation models for managing transitional climate change funds
technical Assistance
district CCiCC tA
Local level
VdC
municipalities
Communities
48
The legal framework for emergency relief and operations, with its Acts, Rules and Guidelines, is in place. In emergencies, the normal planning process is more or less bypassed. For Emergency Relief and Operations, separate committees exist at national, central and local levels. The national Disaster Management Committee (NDMC) is formed under the chairpersonship of the Prime Minister, and has representatives from all the relevant Government line agencies including the security agencies, NGOs, Civil societies and the private sector. This committee is responsible for the formulation of policies and provision of directives to the relevant agencies at central and local level. A national level fund is established, called the Prime Minister Disaster Management Fund for Emergency Relief and Operations. The fund is operated according to decisions made by the committee. For medium term assignments and expenditure, the fund is managed by a subcommittee chaired by the vice Chairperson of the NPC. Similarly, the Home Ministry is the focal ministry for emergency relief and disaster management at the central level. Most of the activities are coordinated and mobilized by the Home Ministry. In case of endemic disaster, all the relevant agencies and resources, including security agencies, can be mobilized if necessary. A quick vulnerability or loss assessment is carried out and emergency plans are prepared by local level disaster management committees and submitted to central level committees for funding. At the local level, the Disaster Management Committee is chaired by the Chief District Officer and all the relevant agencies are represented, including the Local Bodies. Emergency operations needing immediate response are mobilized through the Emergency Relief team. Short term and medium term operations are implemented through the relevant agencies, civil societies, Red Cross and security agencies according to the nature of the incidence. In the case of severe drought and flood, the damage and loss is assessed and compensated through relief measures. The disaster relief agencies prepare plans quickly and then operations begin immediately. A responsibility matrix is prepared. The funds are mobilized through national agencies, citizen forums, civil societies and private sector organisations, including international agencies. Relief items and cash flow to the affected areas using the appropriate channels. Generally, preventive measures are undertaken by development agencies, and relief measures by security agencies. Provisions are made in the LBs block grant guidelines to set aside a budget for disaster management, which is deposited in a separate fund established at the respective LB level. Emergency and short term operations are undertaken through the relief fund, and medium and long term projects are undertaken by the relevant line ministries or departments, as a priority under their normal programs.
49
CASE STUDIES
50
Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
Community Contribution
Financial Auditing: PAF maintains transparency in technical and financial processes through initiating social audits, periodically maintaining displays based at the project sites. Impact assessment: PAF conducted an impact study in 2009. PAF benefitted 302, 862 poor households, of which nearly 66% are defined as very poor, 25.4% as medium poor, 8.6 as poor 0.2% as marginal non-poor.
Purposes: Significant use of RNRRS and other natural resource research outputs for the benefit (direct/in-direct) of poor men and women in diverse contexts. Planning Process: These are projects awarded through global tendering and most of the activities are determined during the bidding stage. Six monthly and annual reviews and planning events are done to incorporate best practices, new learning and any modifications needed. Planning events are attended by the all implementation partners, and other stakeholders are invited in support of the scaling-up strategies. Implementation modality: A consortium of the major implementing agencies is decided during the bidding phase. Credible and professional NGOs are identified through a rigorous selection process. For example, in Nepal South Asia PCI projects are implemented by FORWARD, LI-BIRD, and SUPPORT Foundation, while the District Agriculture Development Offices (DADO) of the Department of Agriculture and Nepal Agriculture Research Council (NARC) provide specific services and act as intermediaries.
6.2 Research into Use Programme (RiUP) South Asia Participatory Crop Improvement (SAPCI) Best Bets projects
Type of Initiative: This is an Interim Program of the Department for International Development (DFID), under the banner of Research into Use Programme (RiUP). It was designed to scale up Best Bets identified from the DFID-funded Renewable Natural Resources Research Strategy (RNRRS) programme. Projects were awarded through global tendering. The projects referred herein are better known as the South Asia Best Bets.
51
Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
Fund Flow Mechanism: These initiatives come under off-budget and directly-funded projects. Natural Resources International Pvt. Ltd handles the budget on behalf of DFID. The funds are directly transferred to lead agencies such as FOREWARD and LI-BIRD, and they in turn disburse money to other implementing partners and intermediary organisations (Figure 7). Financial Auditing: Strong financial auditing is in place. Regular audits by all the implementing partners and the auditing of sampled expenditure by Natural Resources International take place. Monitoring and Evaluation and Reporting: A strong built-in monitoring and evaluation system is in place. Joint monitoring is done regularly, involving all the important stakeholders in the value
chain. The project has resident staff in the field and a major part of their role is the regular monitoring of activities on the ground. Monitoring and Evaluation is also done by the Centre for Advanced Research in International Agricultural Development (CARIAD), Bangor University, Uk , Technical Assistance to the initiative. Reporting on technical and financial progress is done quarterly, and an Annual Report is produced at the end of the year. In addition to technical and financial reporting the following aspects are included: Publications and Media coverage Issues for management consideration External impacts Lessons learnt (a) Technical learning (b) Process learning Success stores In-depth case studies
Figure 7. Implementation modality and fund flow mechanism for DFID Central Research Department funded RiUP South Asia PCI programme
direct Funding dFid CRd, uK dFid Research into use
Awarded 13 best proposals in Asia Lead agencies in Nepal FORWARD implementing agencies FoRWARd Collaborators infomediary Communities NARC SeAN Li - biRd doA ANRoPi LI - BIRD SuPPoRt Foundation Pvt. Companies
52
Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
Impact Outcome and Impact Assessment: An outcome assessment is undertaken at the end of each season on a certain percentage of randomly selected households, to get feedback on the appropriate uptake, acceptance and adoption of the technologies. Findings from these assessments provide evidence for the appropriateness of the technologies. External impact assessments and process documentation are also carried out.
Objective/Purpose: Improve the livelihoods of households in the middle hills of Nepal by the promotion of sustainable soil management practices and their diffusion in a locally based extension system. Funding Mechanism: The SSMP uses a competitive grant scheme (CGS) to disburse funds locally for implementing extension services. Currently there are suggestions that the CGS is made more of a process of strategic decentralization in the coming phase, whereby vDCs will be involved in implementation through Agriculture Development committees (ADCs) at the village level. Technical backstopping will be provided by the Collaborating Institutions (CIs) and DADOs. The funding will be channelled from DADF to vDCs. SSMP uses a Service Contract model in which tenders are evaluated primarily against the potential capacity and ability of the service provider to deliver a set of services defined by the SSMP. Implementation Modality: The SSMP has a decentralized, farmer-led, locallyresponsive and integrated approach to the
Figure 8. Implementation modality, fund flow mechanism, service provisions and monitoring and evaluation in SSMP III
53
Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
Figure 9. Implementation modality, fund flow mechanism, service provisions and monitoring and evaluation in SSMP Iv
Civil Sec
eNAbLeRS Pmu-K tC
FCs
Program
beNiFiCiALieS
development and dissemination of practices. (These include improvements in the methods of manure preparation and application, use of liquid manure, legume cropping, agroforestry, and plantation of fodder trees and grasses on private land).This approach involves contracting government organization (GOs) and NGOs as Collaborating Institutions (CIs) through a competitive grant system (CGS) to provide a SSMP based extension service to farmers groups. Monitoring and evaluation, impact assessment and reporting: The SSMP uses joint monitoring that involves important stakeholders such as CIs, Journalists, civil society organisations, political party representatives, local bodies and agriculture officials. SSMP professionals along with officials from Department of Agriculture also
undertake regular monitoring, while periodic evaluation at the middle and end of the project phase is carried out by external evaluators. Reporting is done quarterly and annually. The Collaborating Institutions report to DADOs and SSMP, and the SSMP compiles and forwards information to the steering committee Secretary, MoAC, DoA, SDC and Helvetas. Impact Assessment: The SSMP periodically conducts adoption and impact assessments. Several adoption and impact studies and reviews have been commissioned by SSMP, to improve the effectiveness and delivery mechanism of the programme. Financial Auditing: Periodic internal and external audits are carried out by following SDC/Helvetas standard norms.
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
Objectives/Purposes1: LGCDPs purpose is to improve access to locally and inclusively prioritized public goods and services. This is achieved through both supply and demand side interventions; specifically, through integrating mechanisms for the exercise of shared community decision rights over the block grant allocations for service delivery and clear community oversight responsibilities into the local government system. The programme will contribute to the overall state restructuring process by making the state at the local level more accountable to people in respect to the allocation of discretionary fiscal resources, increased block grants and own-
dPs
moF
n l ta tio to risa o th au
th au ori
FCGo
copy of authorisation
Ka accounts
n fu in
re
po
st
rts
w flo n io ct
ru
sat ion
instruction
mLd
reports
dtCo ddC
fu low nd f
Ka accounts
Kha accounts
municipality
ue req
rep
fund flow
ddF\mdF
ga 4 non-operating accounts
ga 4.5 income / loan from donors ga 4.6 internal loan and ga 5 Misc
ga 4.1 ga 4.2 ga 4.3 ga 4.4 current capital own revenue account account source sharing revenue
VdC/VdF
ga 4 non-operating accounts
ga 4 Vdf funds
ga 2 operating accounts
ga 2.1 current exp. account ga 2.2 capital exp. account ga 2.3 ga 3 ldf adm. deposit exp. account account funds
operating accounts
funds
funds
reports
fund flow
55
Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
source revenues. The public finance aspects of local government will be integrated with community participation and community led initiatives to create a state-citizen interface for nation building. The capacities of the demand side (ie community groups, particularly disadvantaged groups) and supply side (ie national and local level institutions related to service delivery and oversight agencies) are enhanced through program interventions. Planning Process: LGCDP follows completely demand-led, inclusive, decentralized participatory planning process as specified in LSGA/R. Fund Flow Mechanism: LGCDP National Advisory committee approves the annual indicative plan, budget and block grant allocation of the programme. Fund flow and allocation is according to the JFA and programme implementation guidelines. Harmonized funding modalities are in place, from donor partners with JFA signatories, such as pool basket funding through the government Treasury system to LB accounts, TA pool fund, TA and aligned funding modalities coordinated at the central and local level (Figures 10). Monitoring and evaluation: LGCDP uses a performance monitoring and evaluation system. GESI issues are integrated into the local governance performance monitoring and evaluation system, with use of GESI sensitivity indicators, and gender and other socially disaggregated data. On-the ground monitoring and mentoring is done by roving support and monitoring teams from the centre, consisting of key MLD/PCU and line agency staff. These teams operate under the supervision of MLD and the central LGCDP team. Decentralized monitoring mechanisms are in place for use from user group level to LB level. Transparency and accountability exist through social auditing, public audits and public hearing systems at the different
levels. An internal audit is carried out by the Internal Auditors of DDCs and Municipalities, and a final audit is done by the Office of the Auditor General and Independent external auditors. A Local Government Accountability Facility (LGAF) is established for maintaining transparency and accountability. A Quality Assurance Mechanism (QAM) is also in place for quality assurance and fund tracking. Reporting: There is a robust system for physical progress reporting linked to a facility/office in MLD. The progress, efficiency and effectiveness of the project is monitored through a regular monthly, trimesterly and annual reporting. The LGCDP will publish annual reports that cover both physical and financial progress and include major achievements. Outcome and impact assessment: A midterm review of the programme was recently carried out by an independent review team. An outcome assessment will be done at the end of the current programme phase.
6.5 In conclusion
All the above mechanisms are currently in place at the local level, but with differing modalities as they vary in planning resource disbursement and implementation. Some of these models are closely linked and work with the DDCs or line agencies at the local level, whilst others follow the processes of local bodies. Each model has its own strengths and weaknesses. The models that follow local government processes face delays in implementation and reporting, whereas those with greater flexibility produce immediate outputs and outcomes, but are less likely to be replicable and sustainable. But there are strong cases for some of these to be appropriate for LAPA implementation, e.g. the SSMP model for the transition period.
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OvERALL RECOMMENDATIONS
In the long run, once the transition phase is over and locally elected bodies are in place, government processes and systems would need to be adopted. However, for the transition phase and for creating quick impacts, flexible fund flow mechanisms could be adopted with consideration of the following points: (i) An inclusive, participatory, bottom-up planning process that involves the most vulnerable communities and other stakeholders at community level, should be made mandatory. However, guidelines and funds can be combined from different sources, such NGOs, vDC, DDC and a national climate change fund. (ii) Flexibility of funding of the plan maintains support to bring about immediate impact, rather than indulging in lengthy fund flow mechanisms. However, the funds have to be reflected in the national or local government budgets. (iii) On-going monitoring, supervision and reporting mechanisms have to correlate closely with the District Planning, Monitoring and Analysis System (DPMAS) developed by the NPC. This will include: a. Regular reviews of progress at local and central level meetings, b. Joint monitoring involving all stakeholders and journalists, c. Periodic status reporting to the concerned higher level authorities. (iv) For ensuring greater accountability and transparency the following measures have to be internalized in the project cycle: a. Public and social audits, b. Public hearings, c. Citizens interaction and feedback, d. Making programmes and budgets public.
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ANNEx 1.
THE PROCESS AND STEPS OF THE ANNUAL PLANNING PROCESS ADOPTED IN NEPAL
Families/ Families/ Families budget Ceiling/ Guildelines Flow/time VdC/ municipality Level
time Frame
Family
1
Ward Civil Society Forum
Ward Committees
2 3 4 5 6
VdC/municipality
illaka Level
7 8 9 10 11 12
baisakh Falgun masanta
Kartik masanta
district Council
Sectoral ministry
Parliament
Asadh
58
ANNEx2.
ELABORATION OF ANNExURE-1
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
The vDC/Municipality shall have to provide guidance on selection of projects and formulation of plans to different ward committees [43 (5a), 111 (5a)]. While deciding the budget ceilings for vDC/Municipal Level investments they also have to calculate their potential revenue and other grant resources, programmatic or Non programmatic grant and other income sources to be invested within their boundaries. For this vDC and Municipalities have to organize stake holders meeting for resource calculations 1.1.9 The projects which are under operation shall have to be invited from the ward committees, users committees and NGOs in the vDC/Municipality area [43 (5b), 111 (5b)].
1.1.10 In formulating annual plans, following matters shall have to be taken as the basis; Directives received from the NPC/DDC on National Development Policy. Overall necessities indicated by periodic plans [43 (7), 111 (7)]. 1.1.11 The vDC/Municipalities has also forecast their own income and other resources while preparing the plans. .1.1.12 The concerned Ministry has to classify their activity according to village/Municipality and District levels.
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
The integrate committee has to synergize the program/ projects both from citizen forums and ward committees and seek the backward and forward linkages and submit the proposal to concerned vDC/Municipalities 2.2 The vDC/municipality may organize meetings of LAs/NGOs/Private sector and COs representatives, member of integrated (advisory) committee, if any, and prepare a comprehensive plan to be approved by respective committee/Board. The vDC/municipality has to classify activities within their jurisdiction /resource capacity and the programs and projects that to be referred for DDC/central level and submit to their respective councils. The village/municipal councils have to approve the plans programs within their jurisdiction and budget ceiling .The remaining programs of district/central level have to be prioritized and recommended to Illaka level- by the end of Poush.
2.3
2.4
B) District Level planning process: The following are the steps and processes of District level Inclusive, participatory planning process: 2.5 The Illaka level committee has to prioritize activities according to policy guidelines/ resources and recommend to concerned sector-wise plan formulation committees. The respective plan formulation committee has again to prioritize and recommend to DDC. The DDC has to call integrated committee meeting and seek complementarily synergy, to avoid duplication /overlapping in the received proposals and recommend to DDC. The integrated plan formulation committees are recently reformulated to make them more representative by including the representatives of all Disadvantaged groups, civil society and private sector. The DDC has to categorize as district/ central level programs and has to recommend for approval of district level programs to the district council. The district council approves the district plan and recommend for central level activities with priorities to concerned Ministries for central level consideration (by Falgun masanta)
2.6 2.7
2.8
2.9
C) Central level planning process: 2.10 The respective/ concerned ministry has to check district plan, together they are within budget ceiling guidelines or complement to National Policy or not. If they are not within guideline then issue directive/comments to concerned DDC and consider the central level activities and clear central level activities and recommend to NPC by Chaitra. 2.11 The NPC has to finalize the central plans and issue direction, if any, to districts regarding district level plans. The NPC has to approve central plans and submit to Ministry of Finance/ Parliament. The Parliament approves plan and budget.
2.12 2.13
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
D) Local Plan Implementation process: 2.14 The MoF issues authorization letters to concerned Ministries and for non conditional block grants directly to DDCs and Municipalities 2.15 The concerned ministries have to authorize to complement the plan, if any, corrections; they have to issue direction for correction. According to authorizations at the local level they prepare the calendar of operation and implement their activities according to their responsibility Matrix by line agencies, NGOs and users groups. Periodic monitoring, reporting, review, social and public audits are in regular process
2.16
2.17
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ANNEx 3.
S.no. 1.1
description of the Work NPC MoF and Ministries, Agencies prepare budget ceilings on the basis of MTEF for the budget projections of coming Fy The resource committee analyses the resources availability and submits report to budget committee Determine the total size and ceilings of budget
1.2
Resource committee
1.3
Budget committee
2. Dispatch of Budget ceilings and guidelines 2.1 Prepare Ministry wide/sector wide budget ceilings and guidelines NPC/MoF 3rd wk of Marga (30th Jan to 5th Feb) 2.2 Dispatch Ministry Wide/Sector wide budget ceiling and guidelines MoF 4th Wk of Marga (6th to 12th Feb) 2.3 Dispatch received budget ceilings and guidelines to Depts/District Offices and Programs Sectoral Ministries 1st Wk of Poush (16th to 23rd Dec) Respective district offices 1st wk of Magh (16th to 22nd Jan) 3.1.2 Department compiles all the district formats and prepares a comprehensive /consolidated budget and submits to Ministry The resource committee analyses the resources availability and submits report to budget committee Submit program and budget within the ministry Departments/ programs both district wise and program wise and central level activities Policy discussion of central and district level budget Submit the policy and program statement to OPMCM by concerned Ministries to be delivered by HoS to the Parliament and copy to NPC/MoF Budget discussion on Capital and current budgets Respective Dept 4th wk of Magh (6th to 12th Feb) Resource committee 3rd wk of kartik (31st Oct to 6th Nov) Respective Ministries 3rd wk of Falgun (27th Feb to 5th Mar)
3. Prepare program and budget including three year projections 3.1.1 Prepare the budget form and submit to respective dept
3.1.3
3.1.4
4. Budget discussions Incl. TYP exp projections 4.1 4.2 NPC with participation of respective ministries and MoF Respective Ministries Ist week of Baishakh (14th to 21st April) MoF with the participation of respective Ministries and NPC MoF Second week of Baishakh (21st to 28th April) Third week of Biashakh (28th April to 5th May) 4.5 Discussions on budget principles and priorities in the finance committee of parliament 3 -4 wk of Baisakh
rd th
4.3
4.4
FM
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Planning and Budgeting Processes with reference to local adaPtation Plans for action: current Practices and exPeriences of state and non-state actors in nePal
4.6
MoF
4.7
FM
4.8
FM
4.9
FM
5. Submission of budget in the Parliament and seek approval 5.1 Budget speech FM
5.2
Parliament
6. Program approval and Authorizations 6.1 Dispatch of authorization to concerned Ministries 1st day of Sravan (17th July) 6.2 Program approval by NPC with Trimester breakdown 3rd wk of AShad (4 to 10 July)
th th
FS
NPC/Ministries
6.3
Ministries
7. Monitoring and Evaluations 7.1 7.2 Conduct Ministerial review meetings under the ministerial policies as specified in the budget speech Review progress every two months every 1st week of month Ministries
Source: Budget Formulation Manual, Fourth Edition, MoF 2064 (2008) FS: Finance secretary, FM: Finance Minister, PGM: Program
64
Submitted to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
65
ExECuTIvE Summary
The report presents an overview of the decentralization framework in Nepal so as to inform how climate change adaptation can be best mainstreamed into the development planning framework. It focuses on the fiscal and service delivery mechanisms in decentralized governance as envisaged by legal formulations. It sheds light on the participatory bottom-up planning process, whereby local development plans are based on local needs. The study reaffirms the existing social mobilization modality for community development in Nepal as the best option for climate change adaptation measures. The report describes the existing legal, policy and operational frameworks of local bodies at the local level, and their roles in coordinating local service delivery and implementation of development works. Since the existing local selfgovernance mechanism is seen as weakly functioning, this report makes suggestions for legal, policy and operational reform. It explores the role of local bodies, NGOs, CBOs and other public agencies in the development of climate change adaptation plans. Institutional and formal frameworks are key to support work at this level, as local people know best the means of addressing the localised impacts of climate change that they are experiencing. The institutional capacity building of local bodies bears great significance, where both the impacts of climate change are uncertain and unpredictable, and the means of increasing adaptive capacity differs over time. Therefore, this report suggests different levels of reform on the one hand and the creation of innovative approaches to adaptation planning on the other.
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TaBLE OF CONTENTS
executive Summary table of Contents 1. background 2. objectives of the Study 3. methodology 4. Results 4.1 Overview of Present Context of Decentralization in Nepal 4.2 Overview of Local Self-Governance act, 1999 (LSGa) 4.2.1 Local Bodies (LBs) 4.2.2 Overview of Planning Process under LSGa 4.2.3 Components of LSGa 4.2.4 Decentralization Process under LSGa 4.3 Sectoral Studies 4.3.1 agriculture 4.3.2 Forestry 4.4 review of Local Governance and Community Development Program (LGCDP) 4.4.1 Financial management 4.4.2 monitoring and reporting 4.4.3 Lessons Learnt 4.5 review of Decentralization Process on the Ground 4.5.1 Case Study 4.6 Gaps 5. discussion 6. Concluding Remarks References
67 69 71 73 74 75 75 75 76 80 83 84 86 86 87 87 88 88 89 89 89 89 91 93 95
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70
BaCKGrOuND
The principal objective of decentralization is to deliver public goods and services to the people through democratically formed local institutions that can determine the needs and aspirations of local people more effectively and efficiently. Those local institutions are the political units legitimised through the popular mandate of people. Decentralization through legal arrangements in creating local institutions (called Local Bodies in Nepal) at the local level, specifies their role and duties and devolves the public functions of the central government to the local bodies. It also transfers roles, responsibilities and functions of the central level authority to the legally created institutions at local level, which is known as the principle of subsidiarity. Therefore, the success of decentralized governance relies on effective articulation of the principles of subsidiarity, where the functioning of central and local governance bodies are indicated and the division of functions, responsibilities and resources are made according to their capability. The overarching principles of decentralized governance system have been accepted globally. In the spirit of reforming local governance, the Governing Council of the united Nations Human Settlements Programme has adopted guidelines on the decentralization and strengthening of local authorities. It emphasises the importance of decentralization policies in achieving sustainable human development. It acknowledges the role of national governments within the overall context of sustainable development and their responsibility for good governance within each nation, with local authorities as their partners. Decentralized systems throughout the world endeavour to embed participation and accountability as the pillars of good governance. In Nepal decentralized governance reaffirms this, ensuring participation of people in local governance, and ensuring Local Bodies (LBs here after) are directly accountable to local people. Peoples participation in governance makes it a sustainable form of governance, where the decisionmaking power resides with local people to decide how they prioritise their needs through their elected representatives. Through LBs people feel they have access to the people in governance who deliver need-based public goods and services. It is, thus, regarded as one of the most democratic tools available to materialize good governance and meet the needs of the people. In short, decentralization is believed to enhance the accountability of LBs, to improve the proper utilization of resources, to ensure distributive justice, and to improve service delivery systems so that the fruit of democracy reaches people at the local level.
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The local elections in 1992 and 1997 elected representatives for 75 DDCs, 58 municipalities and 3913 vDCs, an indicator of the post-1990 democratic era that reintroduced multiparty democracy and showed commitment to decentralized governance. after the expiry of their tenure in 2002, when the then King dissolved the House of representatives, the legal authority for the elected representatives ceased to exist and is now vacant. Since then, the Local Development Officer (LDO) who is a civil servant, has been placed as the head of the DDC and the Secretary of the vDC. LDOs have now been given the rights that were provided to LBs as per the Local Self Governance act (LSGa). With climate change having become a determining phenomenon affecting peoples livelihoods and the nations development, there is an immediate and urgent need to address it. In the context of Nepal, adaptation to impacts of climate change is a national priority. NaPa aims to mainstream climate adaptation programs into Nepals development planning process, so that development goals are achieved beyond the project or programme level. This study of the existing framework of development planning of Nepal was necessary to explore the options and ways forward for mainstreaming adaptation. mainstreaming adaptation into development planning is central to the development and implementation of Local adaptation Plans of action (LaPa).
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The objectives of the study that informs this report were: to document the current state of knowledge of existing financing, service delivery and evaluation mechanisms, to provide different development planning framework options for LAPA participatory design and piloting purposes, to facilitate the mainstreaming of climate adaptation planning into the existing development framework.
73
mETHODOLOGy
The study was based on primary and secondary sources of data. Primary data comes from Nepals acts and rules, field study and interviews with key personnel. Books, articles, journals, and reports provided the secondary data. The study was carried out in three phases consisting of a desk study, field study and analysis of the findings and data. The desk study reviewed literature and information in order to gather information relevant to the study and find the gaps in the literature. The case study was prepared through interviews with key personnel. It helped in the overall analysis of data.
74
rESuLTS
1 Where the Interim Constitution of Nepal in its Article 139 provides for the provision for Local Self Governance where the arrangement about local self governance bodies are incorporated. Article 139 reads as, Arrangements shall be made to set up local self governance bodies to ensure the peoples exercise of their sovereignty by creating congenial atmosphere and thereby ensuring maximum peoples participation in the countrys governance, and also by providing services to the people at the local level and for the institutional development of democracy, based on the principle of decentralization and devolution of power. 2 Section 3, LSGAs
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a. Devolution of required powers, responsibilities, and means and resources as are required to make the LBs capable and efficient. b. Development of institutional mechanism and functional structure in LBs capable of considering local people and bearing responsibilities. c. Devolution of powers in resource mobilization in a transparent and accountable manner for the discharge of functions, duties, responsibilities of LBs. d. Orientation of LBs towards establishing civil society based on democratic process, transparent practice, public accountability, and peoples participation, in carrying out the functions devolved to them. e. arrangement of effective mechanisms for developing local leadership. f. Encouragement of the private sector to be involved in service delivery systems. The LSGa, as reflected in the principles above, identifies devolution as an important instrument in the realisation of decentralization. It is an important formulation to legitimize political units in the form of LBs that are based on popular mandate. It envisions an expenditure model, revenue model, intergovernmental transfer and borrowings as forms of fiscal decentralization. The act has many strong features that make it an inclusive law, such as the participatory bottom-up planning processes with annual and periodic planning, the mapping of resources, accountability and transparency, and the representation of women, deprived and marginalized groups. Since the LSGa has consolidated previous acts such as the vDC, municipality and DDC acts, it is now a unified and comprehensive law to promote decentralized governance in Nepal. The compulsory function of central government remains in funding the LBs, which ensures the sustaining of LBs through legal formulation itself. It has also devolved
various functions and responsibilities to LBs, along with entrusting the fiscal rights to execute their responsibilities. It devolves such functions and activities to the local level in order to streamline local development activities. It has basically transferred comprehensive central decisionmaking power and resources to the local level through the process of devolution. The LSGa stipulates the present structure and functioning of 3913 vDCs, 58 municipalities and 75 Districts in Nepal. In order to bring in effect the principles and provisions of the LSGa, the Local Self Governance regulation, 1999 was formulated. The LSGa also established the DImC as the main decentralization policy making body and the LBFC as the policy designing body in the decentralization of fiscal matters. The LSGa also gives recognition to the participation of International/Non-Governmental Organizations (I/NGOs) and Community Based Organizations (CBOs) in the delivery of services to the local people.
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and service delivery, and imposing taxes, charges, fees etc as approved by the village Council, municipality Council and District Council respectively. The legislative framework that is in place to render powers and responsibilities to LBs, allows LBs to act on their own or by establishing partnerships with private bodies, NGOs and CBOs and other stakeholders. The structural and institutional frameworks of the different LBs are detailed below: 4.2.1.1 Village Development Committee (VDC) The GoN specifies village development areas by taking into account the geographical situation, population, communal unity or diversity of inhabitants of the rural area (Section 4). The GoN then divides the village development area into nine Wards, of equal population as far as possible (Section 5). The village Council (vC), constituted under Section 8 of the act, serves as the legislative body of the village development area. The vDC, constituted under Section 12 of the act, serves as the executive body of the village Council in a village development area, and consists of the Chairperson, vice-chairperson (who are directly elected by Nepalese citizens within village development area), nine Ward members (who are directly elected by Nepalese citizens within each Ward of the village development area) at the rate of one each from their respective Wards, and two members including one women nominated by the vDC from amongst the members of the vC. The act envisages the vDC as an autonomous and corporate body (Section 13). The structure of the vDC is presented in the chart below: The spirit of decentralization asks vDCs to undertake all the functions within its ability and scope, since it is the representative unit formed directly from election by local people. Only those functions and public actions that are beyond the capacity of vDC should be vested to the institutions beyond or above that. It consists of all legislative
and executive bodies within it, which is why it serves as an integral body for local governance. as the legislative body in the
Village Council
Account Committees
VdC Chairperson
Secretary
lowest tier of local government, the village Council has the following functions, duties and powers to; a. pass the budgets, plans and programs submitted by the vDC. b. adopt the resolutions relating to the levying and collecting of taxes, charges, fees, levies etc proposed by the vDC. c. discuss irregularities identified by the audit report of the vDC, and direct the vDC to take the necessary action for the clearance of the irregularities in respect of those irregularities which cannot be regularized under the prevailing law. d. evaluate the administrative functions of the vDC and give necessary directions to the vDC. e. approve the byelaws of the vDC. The vDC, as the executive body of the vC, executes the decisions and directions of the vC (as per Section 28). In addition to that, it has functions, duties and powers in the sectors of agriculture, rural drinking water, works and transport, education and sports,
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irrigation and soil-erosion and river control, physical development, health services, forests and environment, language and culture, tourism and cottage industries. Section 31 of the LSGa stipulates the functions of vDC members. among the 13 vDC members there are the 9 chairpersons of each Ward Committee. They are required to prepare plans for development and construction works in their own Ward and submit them to the vDC. They also arrange the forwarding of feasible projects from NGOs to the vDC, discuss the undertaking of development and construction works, and help consumer groups and other NGOs in the selection of projects and formulation of plans. Detail is provided in section 43(5) (a)(b) where it states that in formulating vDC annual plans, the vDC is required to obtain the guidance and prior estimation of the resources and means from the DDC and other concerned agencies for the forth-coming fiscal year. also, the vDC has to provide guidance on the selection of projects and formulation of plans to the different Ward Committees for the formulation of service and development programmes for the forth-coming fiscal year. members are invited from the Ward Committees, consumers committees and NGOs in that village development area to formulate plans. This is how co-ordination between government and non-government sectors comes from the bottom level of LBs. 4.2.1.2 Municipality The municipality operates at the same lowest level as the vDC, but in urban areas. The GoN specifies an area as a municipal area by taking into account the population (at least twenty thousand) and the presence of electricity, roads, drinking water and communications facilities. In hilly and mountainous areas, however, the GoN can specify a municipal area as having at least ten thousand population, electricity,
3 Section 96
transportation, drinking water and communication facilities. municipal areas are then divided into at least nine Wards consisting of equal population, as far as possible. The municipality, constituted as per Section 80 of the act, is the executive body of the municipal Council where municipal Council itself is the legislative body formed under Section 76. The municipality consists of one mayor and Deputy mayor, directly elected by Nepalese citizens within the area, the Chairperson of each Ward Committee (who are also directly elected), and two other members including one woman nominated by the municipality from amongst the members of the municipal Council. The organizational chart of the municipality is shown in the figure below: The municipality Council (mC), as the legislative body of municipality, has the same functions, duties and powers for its municipal area as the village Council has for its village development area. In addition to following the directions and decisions of the mC, the municipality has its own functions, duties and power in exercising its rights and discharging its responsibilities under the LSGa3. These relate to finance, physical development, water resources, environment and sanitation, education and sports development, culture, works and transport, health services, social welfare, industry and tourism and miscellaneous. Since the municipality is the representative body of urban people, it is entrusted with primacy over functions of other intermediary bodies within its institutional capacity.
4.2.1.3 District Development Committee (DDC) The DDC is an intermediary local unit in the local government structure of Nepal. Part 4 of the act provides for provisions relating to the DDC, whereas Section 170 provides for the specification of district
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development areas as maintained under the Local administration act, 1971. The district development area can be further delimitated into between nine and seventeen areas. The DDC serves as the executive body of the District Council (DC). The DDC consists of a) members elected by the elected members of the vC and mC with one member from each area, b) President and vice-president elected by the elected members of each vC and mC in the district from amongst themselves, c) members of the Hor (at present there exists a Constituent assembly) and the National assembly (at present the National assembly does not exist) within the District, ex-officio member, and d)two members including one woman nominated by the DDC from amongst the members of the DC. The structure of the DDC is shown below: The DC is the legislative body of DDC. In addition to ensuring the implementation of the decisions and directions of the DC, the functions, duties and powers of DDC are
widespread4. They relate to agriculture, rural drinking water and habitation development, hydropower, works and transport, land reform and land management, development of women and helpless people, forest and environment, education and sport, wages for labour, irrigation, soil-erosion and river control, information and communication, language and culture, cottage industry, health services, tourism and miscellaneous. In this sense, the DDC has its different functions as service delivery functions to local level. DDC has different committees and sections, as named above, each with their own jurisdiction. an Integrated Planning Committee within the DDC is set up with the objective of integrating the plans from different sectors within the District. Thus the LSGa prescribes that the vDC and municipality each have eleven and the DDC has sixteen legal functions, duties and powers. The overlap between agencies sharing the same jurisdiction of work is
municipal Council
Various Committees
municipal board
Account Committee
mayor
executive officer
Administration unit
Planning unit
tax unit
4 Section 189
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often found to be a hindrance to effective functioning. Since, the vDC and municipality have operational jurisdiction of their own areas there is no functional overlap, however, there is an overlap of functions and powers between vDC, DDC and the Centre and also between the municipality, DDC and the Centre. acute specification of functions, duties and powers is therefore necessary for effective functioning.
authoritative body in making macro and sectoral ceilings. The resource Committee of the NPC (consisting of representatives from the NPC, moF, Nepal rastra Bank, and the Financial Comptroller Generals Office) is the committee that makes a projection of available resources for approval under the ceilings determined by NPC. after approval, the NPC instructs the line ministries to come up with their development budget plans for the next fiscal year. The NPC provides the necessary guidelines, formats and budget ceiling. The line ministries then send the format to their district offices, and the district plan comes up in the concerned ministry. The ministries then consolidate the plans from all the district offices and different projects that can contribute to their sectoral objectives are sent to the NPC and moF for final approval. after receiving all the sectoral developmental plans from the concerned line ministries, the NPC organizes tripartite discussions with the NPC, moF and relevant line ministries. The overall plans from all the sectors are discussed in the light of the periodic plans set previously. Once conclusions are reached that are within the available resource projection and contribute
ddC
district Council
ddC President
different Committes
Secretary
Administration Section
Planning Section
technical Section
Account Section
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to the national and sectoral periodic plan objectives, the NPC finalizes the programme for the coming fiscal year. Then the Finance minister is called to the meeting for further submission of the detailed programme, which is published in the annual programme book of the NPC. The Finance minister reviews and consolidates the budget, and presents it to the Cabinet for approval. It is then submitted to the Parliament (the Constituent assembly is currently acting as the Parliament), for final approval by the elected representatives of the people. Local level planning takes place within the district. The DDC works out the budgets, programs and plans for the coming fiscal year, and sends the list of programs and plans to the ministry of Local Development (mLD) to be incorporated in to the annual budget. The NPC, after endorsement, sends a lump sum budget to the mLD who distributes it to the DDCs. The structural
planning framework, representing both top-down and bottom-up approaches, is depicted in the figure below. The figure above shows the overall planning framework. It in addition to the existing framework, reflects the missing links in practice between different institutions that are operating at the same level for the same broader goal of community development. Their effective partnership would bring about a very positive result towards this goal. The participatory planning process stipulated in the LSGa empowers LBs in preparing plans and programs that best address the needs and aspirations of local people. The processes of developing vDC, municipality and DDC plans and implementing them are discussed below. Sections 43 and 111 of the act provide for formulation of periodic and annual plans of the vDC and municipality respectively, where they give priority to the following:
district Planning
municipal Planning
s, NGo s Cbo
NGo s, Cbos
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a. projects that are production-oriented b. projects that raise the living standards and income, and provide employment or direct benefit to rural people, and contribute to the alleviation of poverty c. projects requiring low cost and larger peoples participation d. projects operated through local means, resources and skills e. projects benefitting marginalized people and communities f. projects protecting and promoting the environment In formulating plans for the next year, each vDC and municipality is required to obtain the guidance and prior estimation of resources and means from the DDC and other concerned agencies, and it has to provide the same guidance to the Wards in formulation of service and development programs for the forthcoming year.5 moreover, the project ideas should have come from the Ward Committees, consumers committees and non-governmental organizations in the village development area and municipal area, and the plans be based on them.6 For the plans and process set forth, the vDC and the municipality should coordinate with the governmental, non-governmental and donor agencies that implement different services and development programs in the area for the following7: a. To remove duplication between the vDC/municipality and the concerned agency on investment to be made in any service sector. b. To maintain complementary coordination among investors. c. To chiefly maintain the role of consumers in procedures.
d. To use methods whereby the inhabitants can have maximum benefit from the investment. e. To determine a timetable for the implementation of the various programmes. In order to implement the projects, the vDC/ municipality has to use its own resources, from grants from the DDC, the GoN and various non-governmental organizations. The programs that are to be operated by non-governmental organizations should be implemented by entering into an agreement with the vDC/municipality. Similarly, programmes or projects that are to be implemented by the vDC/ municipality, carry the investment of nongovernmental organizations too, and should be implemented in accordance with the agreement entered into between the two organizations.8 The LSGa, moreover, provides for the vDC/municipality to encourage NGOs for the acts of identification, formulation, approval, operation, supervision, evaluation, repair and maintenance of the village development programme within each village development area.9 In order to execute its functions and responsibilities, the vDC/municipality is legally provided with a fund10, which consists of the amount received from the GoN or DDC, amount received from fees, charges, levies and rents that vDC/ municipality is entitled to receive, amount received from the sale of movable and immovable properties and other objects of the vDC/municipality, amount received from donations, grants, assistance or gifts, amount received from income generating programs, and the amount of loan and borrowing.
5 Section 43(5)(a) and 111(5)(a)of the LSGA 6 Section 43(5)(b) of the LSGA 7 Section 47 and 116 of the LSG 8 Section 48 and 116 of the LSGA 9 Section 51 and 121 of the LSGA 10 Section 60 and 125 of the LSGA
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Section 195 of the LSGa provides for the formation of DDC plans and their implementation. Each DDC has to formulate periodic and annual development plans for its District. On the basis of the plans formulated, the NPC and GoN have to provide grants and the necessary policies and guidelines to the DDC within the month of Kartik. In doing so, they support: the economic development of the District, production options with comparative cost benefit, the mainstreaming of marginalized people and communities in development works, income-generating and skill-oriented development for women and children, and various sectoral short-term and long-term development works. In formulating the district development plan, the DDC has to follow the process of participatory planning. It is also necessary to hold discussions with the service centres, the sectoral plan formulation committees, the integrated plan formulation committee, DDC and the DC. Coordination meetings are held to enable effective collaboration between the DDC, GOs and NGOs in developing the integrated district development plan. In the same way, section, 209 of the LSGa provides for operation and implementation of projects by consumers group and NGOs where they maintain coordination with DDC. The consumers group and NGOs implementing such projects are obliged to keep the upto-date records of financial transactions made during project implementation. They are obliged to submit accounts of their transactions to the DDC. In executing all its functions and responsibilities the DDC has a fund, which consists of the amount received from the GoN, taxes, fees, duties and tariffs, twenty-five per cent of the land revenue collected, donations, grants, gifts or assistance obtained from any person or organization, and amounts obtained from any foreign government or international organization.11
11 Section 221 of LSGA
. . . .
to see whether the objectives, policies, and provisions of LSGa are being translated in to action; and to make the concerned bodies work as per the norms and spirit of local self governance.
The DImC has made some important decisions in this regard. For example the meeting of 2056/10/3 decided to: coordinate with the Local Development ministry and the ministry of Law and Justice by all other concerned ministries to initiate the action to identify and amend the laws and regulations that conflict with LSGa in ensuring effective implementation of LSGa. all sectoral ministries to include the District Development Plan (DDP) approved and forwarded by the District Council in their annual program as a high priority. The latest decision of DImC, during a meeting held in January 2010 (which is not documented yet and is based on the interview with one of the under-secretary of the mLD) reads: Sectoral ministries to determine the areas of devolution of their authorities to the local bodies. In the scenario where there are no elected representatives in the LBs,
. .
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the mechanism of co-ordination with political parties should be made. INGOs and NGOs should operate per the norms of devolution and the DDC and vDC mandates/circular.
. . .
The DImC, as formed according to the act, approved the Decentralization Implementation action Plan in 2001. The Decentralization Implementation Plan (DIP) is a progressive effort in tune with the governments commitment to decentralization. It was formulated to ensure effective implementation of DImC as per the decision of 2058/09/24, with short and long term implementation actions to enhance the reform process of decentralization. It was endorsed to operationalise the spirit and legal provision of LSGa so that the objectives and principles of LSGa could be materialized. It includes sectoral devolution as a mandatory provision, which would facilitate policy adoption and program initiatives in the long run. The core objectives of the DIP in embracing the spirit of LGSa to make local bodies more accountable to the people, include: demarcating their roles, responsibilities and functions, making service delivery a crucial function of local bodies, enhancing local participatory and inclusive democracy, developing the capacity and leadership of local bodies, and developing effective monitoring systems. However, DIP has not been implemented well. 4.2.3.2 Local Bodies Fiscal Commission (LBFC) various studies have shown that LBs have not been able to utilize their rights as stipulated by law in terms of fiscal matters. Thus the LBFC was established in order to resolve the issues and bring into practice a scientific fiscal and accounting system. Section 237 of the LSGa provides the GoN power to form a Fiscal Commission, and this was used on 2063/8/11 by the Council of ministers. The Commission was formed in order to:
Study and investigate the taxes to be imposed by the local bodies. Study and investigate how revenue is to be allocated between GoN and LBs. make suggestions on the policy to be adopted to make tax systems and accounting methods timely.
The LBFC had to carry out studies and make policy recommendations in matters relating to; tax to be levied by the LBs, revenues to be shared between the central government and the LBs, and policy to be adopted in order to keep the tax structure and accounting system of LBs efficient and updated. Therefore, the LBFC was entrusted with the authority to design policy on fiscal decentralization. With that, the LBFC took initiatives to institutionalize the performance-based funding system in DDCs. accordingly the mCPm has been in practice for 3 years now. The LBFC made suggestions regarding a performancebased-grant system, a formula based grant system, resource mobilization at local level, and potential resource identification for internal revenue generation.
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bodies, in terms of revenue generation and expenditure, and also by the structural and functional fiscal arrangements between the central and local bodies. The important components of fiscal decentralization are revenue and expenditure assignments, central grants, and the borrowing the local bodies are entitled to in order to deliver services to local people. The revenue to meet the expenditure requirements comes from revenue generated locally, grants provided by the central government and the other sources, and also from making favourable conditions for private agencies and NGOs to cooperate. The LSGa envisioned provision of revenue sharing between local and central government. It provided a devolution of authority to LBs to collect tax, non-tax and other sources of revenue. It also made provision for the optimum utilization of local resources, skills, knowledge and technology. as per the principle set forth in the LSGa itself, there is concern for the devolution of powers, responsibilities, means and resources to make LBs capable. To make this happen in practice, the LBs are entrusted with different fiscal authority and rights. The DDC and vDC /municipality work at different levels and are thus assigned different fiscal rights, which can be broadly classified under revenue, expenditure, revenue sharing/ inter-governmental transfer and borrowings for other agencies. With this there is a clear demarcation of revenue assignments entrusted at both levels of local government. Since, fiscal arrangement determines the sustainability of the LBs, the concern of fiscal decentralization is an important facet within decentralization. The central grant forms a major source of revenue (both conditional and non-conditional; non-matching grants), along with the locally generated revenue of the LBs from taxes, service charges, fees and royalties. Section 236 of LSGa makes the provision that the GoN can, beyond the
minimum grant to be provided to LBs, attain additional grants on the basis of population, development status, probability and capability of revenue generation/ mobilization, fiscal discipline, fiscal necessity, and income/expenditure accounts. Nepal now has an additional grant flow system from central to local levels, based on the evaluation of performance of the LBs, known as the Performance-Based Grant System. This evaluates local bodies based on indicators of minimum conditions and performance measures. In Likewise, the budget speech of 2063/64 announced grant delivery on the basis of performance and has come up (following recommendations of the LBFC) minimum Conditions and Performance measures. On the basis of monitoring and evaluation of the mCPm, the LBs get additional grants. Every DDC has to send a report of mCPm to the Secretariat of LBFC. It then awards the best performers, and the additional mCPm grant goes through LGCDP. a performance based grant system is in line with the approach of enhancing mobilization of local resources and ensuring their effective utilization. Thus the amount of grant from the central government increases or decreases on the basis of LBs performance evaluation. 4.2.4.2 Service Delivery The devolution model of decentralization endorsed by the LSGa promotes the delivery of services to people through local bodies in the right place and time, in right quantity with good quality. The Interim Constitution of Nepal, LSGa, LSGr, Local Bodies Financial administration regulation 2056 speaks about the decentralized model of service delivery whereby local needs are fulfilled at the local level, and the fruits of democracy reach every level, sex, caste, class in a proportional way so that justice is done. The LSGa sets out to develop local leadership, mobilize local resources and to ensure participation of people in local development initiatives. People expect government to be within their reach in
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terms of obtaining services and in times of need, and this is best ensured through a decentralized model of governance. Once service delivery becomes effective and efficient, the goal of decentralization is believed to have been achieved. Since the LBs are closer to people and their demands, the public service delivery can be an effective tool to ensure peoples faith in the government. However, often the LBs itself is not able to provide all the services alone, so it needs the support of peoples participation, private parties, NGOs and CBOs and the central government. The current trend of service delivery has focussed on social mobilization as the key tool to develop the demand (demand side approach) that becomes the entry point for any intervention to meet the needs of local people. moreover, satisfaction in terms of service delivery can be enhanced if people participate in planning, implementation and supervision of local development plans, and have a sense of ownership for a plan that is based on their needs. The involvement of the private sector in public service delivery makes it very important to the functioning of the LB itself. Private sector management and operation of an irrigation system through the Water users association following revised legislation that allowed them to levy water charges, is its illustrative example. The participation of the private sector, civil society, NGOs, and CBOs in service delivery makes them crucial agents of change, where sustainable development can be anticipated through the enhanced capacity of local people to shape their development path. In order to make the monitoring systematic and coherent, the mLD formulated Local Bodies and Local Development Programs monitoring and reporting Guidelines, 2063. monthly,
trimester, half-yearly and annual progress reporting to the Secretariat of the Prime minister and Cabinet, NPC, moF, is undertaken regularly. monitoring and evaluation of the LBs is even more important, to ensure that service delivery and other work is underway according to the plans and objectives. Different monitoring and review workshops are undertaken regionally and at the local level evaluate expenditure and service delivery.
4.3.1 Agriculture
The agriculture and livestock extension sector is a devolved sector. The DDC has a role in directing and coordinating it, and it remains a sector in the DDC, but in practice it operates as a distinct body. The District agriculture Office (DaO) prepares its annual Investment Plans in consultation with DDC and other concerned partners. Budget ceilings in principle should not flow to the DaO when it is a devolved sector, but in practice it does. The sector functions in its own manner and its service delivery remains under its own vertical chain. Initiatives taken by the GoN in service delivery to promote agriculture
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are through the devolution of agriculture and livestock extension services to local bodies, polycentric institutional arrangements agriculture input distribution by involving NGOs and private sector, and management and operation of irrigation systems through Water users associations through revising legislation to allow them to levy water charges. However, in practice, no difference is seen between devolved and non-devolved areas, except that funds flow from the DDC. In Principle, the three Fs; fund, functions and functionaries should be incorporated in any devolved sector. However, the present context shows that only funds are devolved, but not the other two. an interview with the programme officer of the DDC of Dhading shed light on the practical aspects of devolution of authority in matters pertaining to agriculture. Some of his reflections were: a. The DDC does not have the experts or required personnel to undertake its function. b. Functionaries of devolved sectors are not accountable to the DDC but to their own line ministries (no sense of ownership of the DDC) c. There is no directive and co-coordination role of DDCs seen in practice. d. Devolved areas are working in their own way, expect for getting fund authorization from the DDC. Thus, it was found that the existing functioning of the LBs in devolved sectors has not been more than in the authorization of funds. It has not been able to come under the DDC scrutiny, despite policy guidance being in place to show the way.
under a non-devolved sector, the DDC can not directly influence Community Forest user Groups. The DDC calls representatives of FECOFuN and the DFO to different meetings and plan development processes, so its overall agenda in the area of forestry is reflected, but the DDC does not work with CFuGs in the district. The identification, registration and operation of the CFuGs is overseen by the District Forest Office. In practice they are sometimes present in DDC meetings and sometimes not. Since, the DDC only has a coordinating role and cannot play a directing role, plan duplication is sometimes unavoidable.
4.4 Review of the Local Governance and Community Development Program (LGCDP)
When there were different programs running in Nepal for poverty reduction and community development, donor agency support was independent and uncoordinated. However, through the LGCDP, which was launched by the ministry of Local Development (mLD) in 2008, the donors came together under a national program. The principal uniqueness of the program is that the LGCDP is a basket fund programme, where almost all the donors of Nepal and the GoN came together to create a single fund. The program, from the beginning, gave the full management, control and operation of programs and projects to the GoN through the mLD. The program aims to support the GoN meet its poverty reduction and community development commitments. It is in line with Nepals national goal of poverty reduction and also the millennium Development Goals, through programs working in health, education and the delivery of other services. The program intends to work through accountable and transparent local governance, leading to participatory
4.3.2 Forestry
Forestry is a non-devolved sector. The planning and budgeting process does not go through the DDC. The only role the DDC plays in coordinating planning so that duplication is avoided. It does not have jurisdiction over the functioning of forestry. Since, it comes
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community development, through social mobilization and the inclusion of disadvantaged and marginalized groups. The use of a participatory approach to planning and implementation brings LBs (ie DDC, vDC and municipalities), CBOs, NGOs as implementation partners of the mLD. The program being executed by mLD at the national level has brought together the aDB, World Bank, uN System, DFID, DaNIDa, CIDa, Government of Norway, SDC, GTZ and JICa.
Treasury Office (DTO). after an authorization letter received from the moF is submitted to the DTO by the DDC and municipality, the fund goes to the District Development Fund (DDF) and municipality Development Fund (mDF). From the DDF, the fund then goes to the village Development Fund (vDF). From all of these the fund goes to CBOs and to the private bodies implementing the development plans as allocated. at least 33% of the vDC capital expenditure is allocated to projects selected by disadvantaged groups. It moreover, focuses on strengthening the institutions of marginalized groups and building their capacity. Within this, the funds are spent on carrying out information, education and communication (IEC) activities, providing training and information to media on local governance issues, implementing social audits, public audits and public hearing programs, strengthening the mechanism of community level advocacy, ensuring in-depth accountability mechanisms managed by local government, providing technical and capacity building support to institutions led by marginalized groups, and promoting fair and equitable distribution of natural resources. moreover, fund distribution is performancebased with minimum Conditions/Performance measures (mCPm) so that it ensures better performance of LBs in their public functions and duties as envisioned by LSGa.
. . . . . .
The main objectives of the program relate to: Empowerment of citizens and communities for active engagement with local governments and strengthening downward accountability. Working within the existing governmental framework. Local bodies enriched with block grants for community led local development. Capacity Development of local governments for effective service delivery. Policy Support for decentralization and Local Governance (Devolution, Fiscal decentralization, Human resources Development, action research etc.) Gender and Social Inclusion in local government affairs.
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Committees (PIC). Similarly, public auditing at community level is done annually. annual social audits at an institutional level and annual public hearings at local level are also undertaken. Similarly, at national or mLD level, monthly, trimesterly, and annual reviews are made by the mLD. In such a reporting system, accountability is upwards.
encompass different programs and policies to be executed by the GoN in enhancing decentralized governance. Therefore, the strong constitutional basis, legal frameworks and policy pronouncements are cornerstones of decentralization. Interviews with key LB personnel revealed that the co-ordination required between the different stakeholders at local level is almost nonexistent. Both devolved and non-devolved sectors are functioning in their own way, except for the delivery of the central grant via the DDF in the case of devolved sectors.
. . .. . . . .
4.6 Gaps
Observing the legal provisions and practice on the ground, there are some gaps and contradictions visible in the implementation of the legal pronouncements. There are acts and regulations that are in contradiction with the LSGa. There are 23 laws identified as being in contradiction with the LSGa, and thus being in
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need of amendment. They conflict with the power and jurisdiction issues of the existing central agencies and the LBs. moreover, LBs have often not been able to execute their work as mandated by the LSGa. To illustrate, LBs have been given the rights to monitor and supervise other government agencies , NGOs and CBOs at the local level, but they have not been able to do so. Since the power conferred by the act is not a compulsory function of the LBs, other agencies and organisations pay little attention to it. Thus it is that central agencies are not able to comply with the substance and process of local self-governance. Political interference in decision making has been a hindrance to the effective implementation of the legal provisions envisioned in decentralization. In light of this, some of the legal, policy and operational gaps are listed below:
. . . . . .
. . . . . .
The absence of elected representative in the local bodies leads to questions of theri legitimacy. Demolition of local infrastructure, services and records because of conflict hampers self governance. The lack of harmonization of acts that are contrary the LSGa hampers its implementation. The meetings of the different committees envisioned by LSGa such as the DImC are not being held regularly. Inadequate budget allocation to local bodies without considering the DPP has a negative impact on its implementation. The DIP could not be implemented successfully so has not been instrumental in promoting devolution.
Sectoral plans, programmes and budgets are not horizontally coordinated with the respective DDC development plans and programs. Central level planning has failed to integrate sectoral planning with local level planning. Despite legal and policy backup, the coordinating mechanisms for mobilising NGO, CBO and civil society is not effective. The planning process is still very centralised. The local bodies have weak institutional capacity in discharging their devolved functions and responsibilities. The devolved sectors are not yet owned by or accountable to local bodies, but to the line agencies. The mindset of line agencies, central ministries and even the local bodies has not changed yet in terms of the ownership of devolved sectors.
Thus, it can fairly be asserted that there are weaknesses in existing practices that have not been able to comply with the spirit of local-self governance. For instance, at the time of developing the LSGa it was not imagined that there would be the elected representative vacuum that currently exists. Downward accountability is questioned since there are no accountable elected bodies. Currently local bodies work with the administrative bodies and the citizen forums which comprise individuals from the political parties at the local level. There has overall been a challenge to the smooth functioning of local bodies as per the spirit of local self governance.
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DISCuSSION
Laws and rules viewed from a historical perspective show the evolutionary process of legal development, and the provisions regarding decentralization in Nepal have proven to be the same. In the context where decentralization was based in the grace of the central government some five decades earlier, it now shows strong evidence of being an expression of sovereign power residing in the hand of people exercising it from local level with a stronger constitutional source. Local Self-Governance act, 1999, which is regarded as the charter for decentralization in Nepal, has provided a participatory approach to governance from planning to implementation. However, this study found that the planning aspect is seen mostly as top down in practice. The most important aspect of this is the gradual development that Nepal experiences in decentralized governance. Even though Nepal has not been able to fully implement the LSGa because of the absence of local bodies, it seems to be working on its own. The LSGa did not anticipate local self governance without and local bodies, but the GoN has been trying to work within the constraints. Once the LBs are re-institutionalised the best implementation of the LSGa can be imagined. Thus, LSGa in its truest sense has not materialised due to the lack of LBs, the mindset of central government personnel, and the weak institutional capacities of LBs that do exist. One key evidence of good practice with the existing framework, is the participatory process of plan formulation. Even though there is excessive central level control with prescriptive budget and planning guidelines being sent from the central level, the actual task of formulating plans involves local level people in identifying their local priorities. Thus, it can be summed up that the practice of local governance is seen somewhat at the local level in Nepal, even though there are many issues to be resolved in order to bring about the desired outcome of decentralization in Nepal. In a situation where the decade of conflict dismantled local infrastructure and capacity, the beginnings of decentralisation and local self-governance are a great achievement in Nepals development. Community development can best be practiced in relation to the interaction between the community and the existing local governance structures. The unique aspect of Nepals case is that, at the point when all other institutional frameworks have been failing, community development through social mobilization, is working where NGOs and CBOs have become instrumental in making development a reality. Climate change is a global issue that disproportionally affects the most poor, and challenges the success of any development endeavours. Though global assessments of climate change impacts are made, it acutely affects people on a household and local level. Thus, although adaptation is recognized globally as an effective and essential response to climate change,
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it also needs to be addressed through local means and measures of adaptation. Every community in Nepal faces unique problems and risks and thus a community based approach seems to be the most effective response. This approach ensures the local communitys participation in formulating development plans and implementing programs that increase adaptive capacity. The communitys role in monitoring and evaluating is essential, to see whether programs are undertaken in line with plans they helped prepare and address the priorities they identified. Since climate change has been and will continue to be a key determining factor in development dynamics, mainstreaming of climate adaptation in the development planning framework of the country is imperative. adaptation to climate change as a national development goal is an emerging concept. In order to mainstream climate adaptation in to the existing development framework, it is necessary to fully understand the theory and practice of the framework. Since climate adaptation plans and programs need great flexibility to address the unpredictability of climate change, it is a great challenge. Policy and legal reviews have found that there are different community development approaches and models available in the existing framework in Nepal. The LSGa provides a congenial environment and participatory means to mainstream climate adaptation in to development planning. Since LBs are the lower most functional units in delivering public services, they are best explored and used in mainstreaming adaptation. Co-ordination between LBs, stakeholders and those most vulnerable to climate change in plan formulation and implementation is the best option that suits Nepals case. The participatory development planning framework of Nepal provides
for the inclusion of socially marginalized people and communities. adaptation requires a strong institutional framework, so there is an important role for institutional collaboration and partnership in climate adaptation related plans and programs. Since LSGa provides the legislative strength to institutional partnerships between the LBs and the NGOs, CBOs, private bodies and civil society, it can play a pivotal role in ensuring climate adaptation measures reaching local people. The mechanism of collaboration among those public, civic and private organizations helps address individual weaknesses, and results in highly effective and efficient interventions towards adaptation goals. Development plans, programs and strategies can be greatly affected by the impacts of climate change. Thus development plans must include climate change dimensions during development. If climate effects are not considered, development strategies can even worsen the situation for vulnerable people and resulting in increasing exposure to the risk of climate impacts. mainstreaming climate adaptation relies on the vertical and horizontal institutional linkages of public bodies. The local level planning framework should itself contribute to central level adaptation planning and policy development. Cooperation between the different sectoral agencies working at the local level is essential to maintain horizontal coordination in the planning and execution of adaptation plans and programs. The local level planning system will best meet the adaptation needs of local people if it truly is a participatory planning process. To further enhance the incorporation of climate adaptation in the development planning framework, the capacity building of local institutions is essential so that they can channel resources fairly and deliver their services effectively.
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CONCLuDING rEmarKS
The local governance system stipulated by the LSGa provides for mechanisms for budget to flow from the central level to local level, and for development plans and programs go upward from the local level. The budgetary and planning processes go through the DDC. In doing so, the DDC attains greater power in delivering public services, through new ways of directing, coordinating and playing other functional roles. However, in the current situation the DDCs co-ordinating function is lacking and therefore affects the effective operation of local bodies. under the LSGa, there are different service delivery functions operating at village, municipality and also district level. Since the vDC and municipality are the institutions that exist at the local level and are directly accountable to local people, it is most appropriate to entrust them with local operational functions. Since the DDC is the only intermediary body to operate at district level, it is appropriate and efficient to entrust the intermediary functions to it. If functions such as ensuring coordination between governmental and non-governmental agencies, identification of fiscal resources, plan and policy formulation, co-ordinating between vDCs/municipalities and the central government, monitoring and evaluation, and determining fiscal discipline, are entrusted to it, the true spirit of decentralization can be realized. LBs have differing capabilities, whereby some have built their capacity to handle public service delivery functions effectively, whilst others still lack. So, the important thing to be undertaken is the objective classification of LBs. The LBs with higher capability should be given the space to work, and the LBs with lesser capability should be given more protection whilst their capacity is built. In this regard, the centre or the existing intermediary body should refrain from undertaking service delivery functions where LBs are capable of doing so on their own, and should support the weaker LBs until they no longer need it. The objective assessment of the lower functioning LBs may require different legal. as the LBs envisioned by LSGa became defunct after losing their tenure, the central government appointees have become key players in the LBs. Since then, the most effective development model has been partnerships between LBs, NGOs, CBOs and donors through community or social mobilization in community development. Now, donor agencies and other support organization tend to intervene in the community through this model, which tends to favour participation in local planning. Through this model of community development local communities are mobilized, which itself becomes a boon for it respects local knowledge, addresses the local needs, and builds capacity. all of these are essential for the development and implementation of local adaptation plans. Therefore, it is a great success story in terms of community development approach so far, and the climate adaptation in the future. The model focused on targeted community mobilization for project
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delivery through national or international organizations. The setback of the model was the lack of effective co-ordination between NGOs and LBs. The DDC could not play an effective co-ordination role, and did not prioritise the plans and projects of the different organizations and include them within the periodic and annual plans of the district. The organizations were operating on their own, and implementing their project in the community directly, without the necessary coordination with the appropriate LBs. This created a setback in effective delivery of services to the community for there were overlapping projects in the community causing ineffectiveness and wastage of resources. The centrally strong budgetary and planning process was found to give little space to the actual decentralization process. The annual meeting of the DDCs to pass the DDP and budget, and identify programs and project, was found to normally take the form of an unprioritised shopping list. The DDCs then send the list to the ministry of Local Development (mLD) to be incorporated into the annual budget. a lump sum budget is allocated to the mLD, which is then distributed to the respective DDCs. Therefore, the present planning process is, in practice, more of a top-down process.
a lack of adequate funds and the weak institutional capacity of the LBs is a further hindrance. Because the planning process is effectively centralized and LBs depend heavily on central grants, the LBs do not have the independence to initiate new developmental plans and programs. That in turn makes the central body more powerful than the LBs, thus making a mockery of the principles of decentralization. Nepal has, however, been unique in marking a substantial change to community development through community mobilization (or social mobilization). Even when the overall situation shows a defunct institutional structure within the spirit of decentralization, the functioning of a community development pathway social mobilization bears witness to societys commitment towards decentralized governance. Since impacts of climate change are felt most heavily at the local level, adaptation must necessarily start from the same level. Just as community development has progressed through interaction between the government and CBOs and NGOs, so too will that be the most effective means of ensuring climate adaptation programs take place in the community and reach those who are poorest and most climate vulnerable.
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adhikari, mohan et.al, Decentralization, Local Institutions and Forest management in Chitwan District of Nepal, Paper Submitted to xII World Forestry Congress, Canada, 2003 Bardan, Pranab and mookherje, Dilip, Decentralization and accountability in Infrastructure Delivery in Developing Countries, The Economic Journal 116, 101-127, royal Economic Society, 2006 Decentralization in Nepal: Experiences and Prospects, a paper prepared by Donor Community in Nepal for purposes of the Nepal Development Forum, 2000 Designing Policies in a World of uncertainty, Change and Surprise: adaptive Policy-making for agriculture and Water resources in the Face of Climate Change, International Institute for Sustainable Development, research report, 2006 Dethier, Jean-Jacques, Some remarks on Fiscal Decentralization and Governance, Paper prepared for Presentation at the Conference on Decentralization Sequencing, Jakarta, Indonesia, 2000 Dhakal, ramji et.al, addressing the Challenges to Health sector Decentralization in Nepal: an inquiry into the Policy and Implementation Process, Nepal medical College Journal, 2009; 11(3):152-157 Grant allocation Formula, Performance-based allocation of an expanded block grant, urban development through local efforts (udle), 2009 Guidelines on Decentralization and Strengthening of Local authorities, united Nation resolution 21/3 Haug marit, Decentralization in Nepal- what are the alternatives?, Working Paper 2008:116, Norwegian Institute for urban and regional research, 2008 Incorporating Stakeholder Perceptions in Participatory Forest management in India: Perceptions of Panchayati raj Institutions on Joint Forest management in Harda, The Energy and resource Institute (TErI), Project report prepared for university of Cambridge Johnson W. ronald, minis P. Henry Jr., Toward Democratic Decentralization: approaches to Promoting Good Governance, research Traingle Institute, Joint GoN-Donor review in Decentralization in Nepal, 2001 Kotru, rajan, Community Forestry Governance and Conflict in Nepal: mitigating Problems and enhancing Opportunities in Terai, xIII World Forestry Congress, argentina, 2009 Linking Planning and Budgeting in Nepal: a Case of Education Sector, National Planning Commission, Prepared for the CoP mfDr/mLI Joint meeting, 2006 Local Bodies Fiscal Commission report, 2001, Local Bodies Fiscal Commission, Government of Nepal
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Local Governance and Community Development Program (LGCDP), Programme Document, ministry of Local Development, Government of Nepal, 2008 Local-Self Governance; Nepal Participatory Constitution Building, Centre for Constitutional Dialogue, 2009 ministry of Local Development: Key achievement of 2007, Government of Nepal, ministry of Local Development, 2008 Nepal: Poverty reduction Strategy Paper Progress report, ImF Country report, International monetary Fund, 2007 Planning and Budgetary Process, Economic management Division, National Planning Commission Secretariat, Policy Paper on Decentralization in Nepal and Service Delivery, ministry of Local Development, Government of Nepal, 2004 Shakya, Dr. rabindra Kumar, Formulation of Development Plans- Planning Techniques, administration and management review, volume 19, No.2, 2007 Shrestha, Bigyan, an analysis of Structure and Pattern of Budget in Nepal, a Thesis submitted to Central Department of Economics, 2008 Shrestha, Buddhiman , Fiscal Decentralization and Local resource mobilization in Nepal: The Case of District Development Committees and village Development Committees, Nepalese Journal of Public Policy and Governance, vol.xxx, No.2, December 2009 Shrestha, manoj, an Overview of Intergovernmental Fiscal relations in Nepal, Working Paper 02-05, International Studies Program, andrew young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State university, 2002 Tenth Five year Plan, 2002-2007, National Planning Commission, Government of Nepal The Constitution of Kingdom of Nepal, 1990 The Interim Constitution of Nepal, 2007 The Local Bodies Financial administration regulation (LBFar), 1999 The Local Self Governance act, 1999 The Local Self Governance regulation, 1999 Three-year Interim Plan, approach Paper, 2064/65-2066/67, National Planning Commission, Government of Nepal, 2007
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Designing LocaL aDaptation pLans for action for the agricuLture sector
Designing Local adaptation plans for action for the agriculture sector
Submitted to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
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ACKNoWLEDGEMENTS
The piloting of Local study on designing Local Adaptation Plans of Action for the Agriculture sector was completed with contributions from several people and organizations. Therefore we would like to thank everyone who has been directly or indirectly involved. First of all, we would like to express our sincere gratitude towards Dr. Deepak Rijal, National Facilitator, CADP-N, for providing supervision and guidance throughout the study. We are equally grateful to Mr. Bimal Raj Regmi, Natural Resources and Climate Change Advisor, DFID for enduring encouragement and valuable feedback despite his busy schedule. We would also like to thank Simon Anderson (Team Leader, Climate Change Group), Sibongile Pradhan, Jessica Ayers and Nanki Kaur from IIED for their feedback and support during this pilot. Further, the effort of Sibongile Pradhan in editing our report is highly appreciated. Binod Chapagain is also acknowledged for supporting us. We are also grateful to Ms. Basana Sapkota and whole CADP-N team for their support. We would like to extend our gratitude towards RIMS-Nepal, Executive Director Kalyan Gauli for his moral support and also his technical contribution to this pilot. We also acknowledge Gunga Dutta Awasthi, Rojee Suwal, Kiran Rijal and Hari Bhattarai for their involvement. This pilot could not have taken place without the support and co-operation of local people, farmers, VDC secretary and political party representatives from Tasarpu, Jeevanpur and Jogimara VDCs, and therefore we are highly indebted to them. Last, but not least, we would like to thank CADP-N, IIED and DFID/UKaid for providing financial and technical support to conduct this pilot. LAPA Team: Shree K. Maharjan Prativa Sapkota Ram B. Mijar Dhan B. Khadka Rakesna Basnet (RIMS-Nepal)
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TABLE oF CoNTENTS
Acknowledgements Table of Contents Executive Summary 1. Introduction 2. Objective 2.1. Specific objectives: 3. Methodology 3.1. Pilot sites 3.2. Tools, Methods and Approaches 4. Outputs / Findings / Analysis 4.1. Adaptation interventions, strategies and approaches 4. 2. Climate adaptive technical interventions and delivery mechanisms for increasing adaptive capacity 4.3. Tools and their uses in different activities and assessments 4.4. Adaptation plans at community and VDC level 4.5. Institutional mechanisms 4.6. Financial Delivery Mechanisms 4.7. Coordination and Synergy 4.8. Monitoring and Evaluation 4.9. Barriers, Gaps and Constraints to LAPA development and implementation 5. Conclusion: Proposed LAPA design for the agricultural sector 5.1. LAPA Development and Implementation Process 5.2. Institutional Framework for the LAPA Development and Implementation 5.3. Key Actors and their roles in LAPA process 5.4. Monitoring and Evaluation 5.5. The Way Forward 6. References ANNEXES
99 101 103 107 109 109 110 110 111 114 114 117 118 120 120 122 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 130 131 132 134-146
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ExECUTIVE SUMMARy
The Climate Adaptation Design and Pilot project Nepal (CADP-N) set out to design Local Adaptation Plans for Action (LAPA) and mechanisms for mainstreaming climate change adaptation into development planning across the different sectors identified by the National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA). The Resource Management and Identification Society (RIMS) Nepal had the opportunity to contribute to this in the agriculture and natural resources sector. This report provides insight and recommendations on increasing the capacity of individuals, households and communities to respond to climate variability, and on integrating climate foresight into the development planning processes. The analysis includes factors to be addressed from local to national level in order to mainstream climate change. It details potential climate change adaptation interventions to increase awareness and enhance adaptive capacity, along with institutional and financial mechanisms suitable for LAPA implementation. The pilot took an approach that was participatory and interdisciplinary, and involved partnership and learning-by-doing. Strategies used to ensure wide participation from different stakeholders included having the Village Development Committee (VDC) as the focal organization, and ensuring collaboration and co-ordination with government line agencies, the media and Civil Society organizations (CSos). Tools used in the pilot include vulnerability assessments, institutional mapping, workshops, interaction meetings, pair-wise ranking, participatory vulnerability ranking (PVR), cost benefit analysis and multi-criteria assessment. As poor people are highly vulnerable to climate change impacts, different strategies were applied to enhance their economic, social and environmental conditions and capacities to adapt to climate impacts. Assessments of vulnerability, adaptation interventions and implications of climate change were conducted to explore local adjustments made where people are confronted with a number of climatic stresses in their daily lives. It was found that climate adaptation measures must be context-specific, comprehensive, address a broad range of factors and be integrated into local planning processes. Given its complexity, climate change adaptation must be integrated in the development process through a holistic approach that addresses the physical risks and vulnerabilities posed by climate change and strengthens the adaptive capacity or resilience of communities. The report presents and discusses three case studies of interventions that enhance the capacity of communities to deal with climate stresses and their integration into VDC planning. These cases are: water collection ponds and micro irrigation for improving community access to depleting water resources; Farmers Field Schools for raising climate awareness and resilience capacity; and a Community Seed and Information Resource Center (CSIRC) for enhancing access to improved seeds and information along with a livestock compensation mechanism.
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Raising awareness of climate change and adaptation is a critical first step before any other part of the LAPA process can take place effectively. Participatory vulnerability assessment is vital in order to analyze the ground reality, local livelihood strategies and contexts of the most vulnerable people before designing and implementing any climate adaptation measures. Climate foresight is essential for adaptation planning to have the desired impact. Institutional mechanisms must ensure the flow of accurate and up-to-date information regarding global, national and local effects and predictions of climate change. Based on the pilot, RIMSs institutional experience and climate adaptation literature, the report suggests ways for mainstreaming climate adaptation into the development planning process. The VDC is the most appropriate local institution for mainstreaming climate change. It is here that adaptation plans developed by communities can best meet the funds and services from national, regional and district providers in the climate of national adaptation policy and guidelines. Adaptation should be incorporated into broader VDC and district level development efforts and plans, instead of separate plans for climate change adaptation. Climate sensitive development plans will ensure the vulnerability of individuals and communities is not inadvertently increased by development projects. Institution strengthening is a key part of building adaptive capacity. Local institutions are context specific, based on prevailing and possible climate change impacts. Many institutions have their own working areas and modalities, and institutional and financial mechanisms at the local level. Realizing this, it is important to develop a holistic development plan with a multistakeholder sharing and learning forum that should involve and empower local
actors in planning and implementation of adaptation and development activities. Specialized CSos working in the area are most appropriate for enhancing adaptive capacities of local actors and implementing climate sensitive development and adaptation initiatives in a collaborative way. For example, the establishment of Community Seed and Information Resource Centre in collaboration with the Agriculture Development Committee under the VDC, empowered the community to mainstream the centre into the local planning process. The capacity of vulnerable communities needs to be enhanced to reach up and draw down resources from VDC and district, and mechanisms need to be put in place to do that. Finance delivery mechanisms need to be carefully worked out to ensure downward accountability. It is suggested that separate LAPA facilitation units are created at VDC, hamlet and community levels. Through these units national finance can be channeled via the DDC towards vulnerable communities in response to their specific needs. Alongside this, local monetary or material contributions made by the community will ensure more effective implementation of adaptation activities as local people show concern that their investment is well spent. Tools and methods developed by the Livelihood Forestry Programme and Practical Action Nepal were reviewed, modified and contextualized for assessing vulnerabilities, planning adaptation and developing interventions. The tools involved in participatory vulnerability assessment and participatory planning provide understanding of what climate change means for individuals, communities and local institutions, and how appropriate responses can be designed and embedded in planning processes. Those same tools can additionally be used for monitoring
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progress and impacts of adaptation activities and plans. Climate hazard mapping and climate wellbeing ranking were found to be comparatively more efficient than other tools. The multi-criteria assessment tool was found to be the best tool for ensuring the inclusion of poor and vulnerable people in the planning process. The experiences and learning from the pilots in Dhading district are relevant and useful for designing, implementing and integrating adaptation plans that address current climate variability. This information is also relevant for preparing for adapting to future climate change, and can be used for the development of LAPA in other localities of the country as well. Climate change impacts are widespread and climatic uncertainties are likely to
increase with unpredictable precipitation and increased temperature. Climate change impacts are already creating additional challenges to development in Dhading and throughout Nepal such that additional resources are needed to deal with and adapt to the overwhelming poverty and vulnerability. It is in this context that this pilot report presents how LAPA can be developed in the agriculture sector and recommends that adaptation to climate change be mainstreamed into local planning processes, as well as into annual and periodic plans of private and not-forprofit organizations. National support for the development and implementation of LAPA will result in the adaptive capacity of local actors being strengthened to deal with climate change impacts and to reduce poverty in more efficient ways.
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INTRoDUCTIoN
Climate change poses additional threats to the existing challenges of development in Nepal. Climate change, in the form of increased temperature trends and variability in precipitation, is already leading to differentiated impacts across Nepal. Future climate induced changes are likely to exacerbate these impacts with higher temperatures and uncertain precipitation (MoE, 2010). Nepals development goals are set under the overriding goal of poverty reduction, which is largely a rural phenomenon (MoE, 2010). National periodic plans aim to achieve poverty reduction by providing a policy framework that encourages investments in key sectors such as agriculture, water and forestry to enhance the livelihoods of poor and vulnerable people. Given the fact that the main impacts of climate change are observed in these sectors and in the livelihoods of vulnerable groups, the effectiveness and the sustainability of development interventions largely depends on the extent to which these interventions address climate change impacts. Because adapting to the impacts of climate change is of key concern for Nepal, the Government of Nepal (GoN) has initiated the process of adaptation planning and developed a number of policy and institutional processes. In terms of policy planning, the GoN has prepared a National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA) document. In terms of institutional processes it has initiated the NAPA plus process, including a Knowledge Management Hub and a Multi-stakeholder Forum to support robust and iterative adaptation planning. The Government has established a Climate Change Management Division within the Ministry of Environment which has a mandate to coordinate the climate agenda in Nepal; the country also has a Prime Ministers Climate Change Council, which provides high level political support to the climate agenda. A climate change policy has recently been finalized and approved by the Council of Ministers. In addition to national level adaptation planning, the GoN is keen to support and develop local adaptation planning processes, which are important in order to address local climatic issues, build resilience and enhance local adaptive capacities. Though, Government planners, policy makers development partners including non government organizations have emphasized the integration of climate change into their planning, budgeting and decision-making to ensure effective and efficient adaptation measures at local to national level (Regmi and Karki, 2010), there is a big gap between national and local level planning scales. In order to address this gap, the GoN has identified the need to develop Local
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Adaptation Plans of Action (LAPA) as a means to mainstreaming climate change adaptation into development plans to reach up through the planning process and draw down resources. It is envisaged that LAPA will complement national level planning initiatives like the NAPA at the local level, and at the same time provide a mechanism via which local adaptation needs and capacities can be mainstreamed into development planning for the effective implementation of the most urgent and immediate adaptation needs as prioritized in the NAPA at different scales (MoE, 2010). As part of the LAPA process, Climate Adaptation Design and Pilot Nepal (CADP-N) aimed to design a local planning process to implement adaptation plans at the local level so as to build the adaptive capacity of the climate vulnerable. It has piloted planning processes, institutional and financial mechanisms and adaptation interventions that enable such communities to do that in collaboration with local to national institutions. CADP-N worked with institutions that had strengths in specific sectors, and thematic areas identified by NAPA to pilot the mainstreaming of locally identified adaptation needs and capacities into the development planning process to address the impacts faced by climate vulnerable communities (MoE, 2010). The agricultural sector is highly sensitive to climate change and therefore NAPA has
identified Agriculture and food security as one of its priority thematic areas. Despite being hard hit by climate change effects, local communities are trying to cope with the effect of climate change through their own initiative. There is, however, insufficient support to help them adjust to the changed environment. A lack of technical knowledge about climate change, a lack of climate integrated development planning and a lack of social security are the main factors that make them more vulnerable to climate change. In order to better adapt, there is a need to adopt adaptation integrated development planning along with strengthening effective existing practices. Resource Identification and Management Society-Nepal (RIMS-Nepal) is an NGo that has supported the design of LAPA in the agriculture, food security and natural resource sectors. RIMS piloted this in Dhading district, which is ranked as one of the most vulnerable districts to climate change impacts (MoE, 2010). For designing LAPA for agriculture, RIMS identified and piloted adaptation interventions, and assessed the effectiveness of specific adaptation interventions in enhancing the adaptive capacity of climate vulnerable communities. It has mapped and assessed institutions and mechanisms that enable adaptation and ultimately recommended effective adaptation interventions (process, mechanism and institutions) for mainstreaming LAPA into development plans.
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oBJECTIVES
The main aim of the scoping study and pilot was to inform the design of Local Adaptation Plans of Action under the Climate Adaptation and Design Project-Nepal (CADP-N). The main objective of the LAPA in turn was to mainstream adaptation plans into local planning processes in Nepal.
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METHoDoLoGy
Figure 1 Map of Dhading showing drought vulnerability (left) and overall vulnerability (right)
Source: MoE, 2010 out of 50 VDCs in Dhading, Jeevanpur, Jogimara and Tasarpu VDCs were selected for pilot sites, , covering subtropical to temperate conditions and different climatic contexts, climate effects and severity of impacts. These sites were selected based on RIMS Nepals past experience and also considering ethnic composition, and the drought, landslides, hailstones and windstorm conditions experienced by farmers with increased temperature and erratic rainfall patterns. The agricultural production of the identified sites had has been affected Figure 2 Map of Dhading district showing piloting VDCs
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by lack of water for irrigation, changes in local temperature, a shift of monsoon rain, occurrence of new diseases, and outbreaks of pest and diseases. The local communities are trying to cope with these effects of climate change on their own, but these efforts do not seem to be sufficient to adjust to the changed environment. Therefore, the mainstreaming of climate change into development and the provision of institutional support is thought to be essential in enhancing the adaptive capacity of these communities. Due to the unavailability of meteorological data, weather and climate information was as reported by local communities and from a review of locally available literatures. The major issue for the communities in these VDCs is food security as a result of drought, landslides and hail. Drought is perceived as the major climate change hazard in Jeevanpur VDC while landslide are the main hazard in Jogimara. Though comparatively less affected by drought and landslides, Tasarpu VDC was chosen based on the accessibility of farmers to gateway systems, as local communities have the least adaptive capacity. Agriculture is the mainstay of livelihoods in Dhading district, with more than 75% population dependent on it (DADo, 2065/66). Major additional challenges in Jogimara VDC are the low accessibility to livelihood assets, low education levels and awareness, expanded limestone mining, and unsustainable development interventions. It is dominated by Chepang communities and has experienced very slow development. Due to observed crop failures, communities have been drawn to livestock-raising with support from different agencies working in the area including RIMS-Nepal. Low accessibility to the livelihood assets is the main factor associated with the vulnerability of people living in Tasarpu VDC, in spite of it being very close to the capital city,
Kathmandu. This VDC is dominated by Tamang communities who were found to be less aware of improved agricultural practices. Jeevanpur VDC lies approximately 25 km from the Kathmandu valley, so vegetable cultivation is the main source of income, but it has been affected severely by drought, especially in the upland areas. Lower lands were irrigated until a few years ago, but now there is not sufficient water available for off-season vegetable cultivation. So, farmers have fewer options and must make the best of the little water available.
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Table 1 Steps applied for scoping and piloting LAPA in Dhading district
Step 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Method Review of the literature , adaptation interventions, institutional and financial mechanisms Identification of pilot sites based on review of climatic contexts Identification of stakeholders and interaction Inception workshop with district level stakeholders, media persons and communities Community sensitization, vulnerability assessments and identification of potential interventions for piloting Develop plan of action for piloting interventions (community and VDC) Village level workshops with local stakeholders in each pilot site Piloting interventions in the field in collaboration with VDC and local institutions including communities Strengthening Agriculture Development Committee in VDC and Agriculture, Environment, Forest and Industry Committee in DDC. Raise awareness and develop mechanisms to benefit poor and vulnerable people through each intervention Facilitate the integration of adaptation plans in VDC, DDC and other local institutions like AKo Cooperative Purpose To identify vulnerable sites and potential interventions, mechanisms for piloting To identify vulnerable sites and communities for piloting adaptation interventions To collaborate and develop synergy amongst stakeholders for effective piloting To share the LAPA concept and develop common understanding about the climate change issues To raise awareness and assess vulnerabilities and explore adaptation strategies at local level To ensure effective implementation of local adaptations and interventions To raise awareness, share and discuss plans of action with local communities, stakeholders and political parties To pilot adaptation interventions and analyse the effectiveness of targeting poor and vulnerable communities To raise awareness and build capacity of committees within VDC and DDC to address climate change issues and integrate adaptation in to their planning process To develop institutional and finance delivery mechanisms for the benefit of vulnerable communities To facilitate mainstreaming adaptation plans in the planning process of local institutions
6. 7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
The VDC was taken as the main focal institution during field assessments for approaching and communicating with DDC, communities and other stakeholders. During scoping phase, reviews of adaptation interventions took place in different forms such as institutions, mechanisms, technologies and practices co-ordinating and collaborating government line agencies, media and Civil Society organizations (CSo). Following the tools and methods explained in a manual of participatory vulnerability assessment (Regmi et. al., 2010), local climatic hazards and events, the impacts of climate change and local coping strategies were identified during ward level workshops. How the livelihood options were threatened
by these impacts was also analyzed using participatory tools. Pair-wise ranking was conducted to prioritize the adaptation practices and interventions. In addition to this, scale of implementation, potential implementing organizations and need for mainstreaming into VDC planning were also analyzed. Cost benefit analysis was used to assess the feasibility of adaptation interventions and prioritize them. Considering the distributional biasness that CBA poses towards different social categories such as vulnerability, gender, poverty and social inclusiveness (oHara 1999) multi criteria assessment as used in Tudela et. al., 2005, was then conducted
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Table 2 Approaches, strategies and tools used with different stakeholders during piloting
Approaches Participatory Gender and social inclusiveness Bottom up and Top down Shared learning dialogue Methods Sensitization to climate change and adaptation (prior to every activity at community, VDC and DDC level) Vulnerability assessment, well-being ranking, Hazard ranking, priority ranking, CBA, MCA, preparation of ward and VDC plan Developing mechanisms for livestock insurance and conducting literature review and assessment Piloting adaptation interventions Conducting Farmers Field School Methods Linkages and synergies of VDC were used while approaching and communicating with DDC, local organizations and communities Sensitization activities, Vulnerability assessment, Participatory planning, piloting of adaptation interventions Methods Assess existing adaptation practices, evaluate them and conduct SWoT analysis Identify existing institutions, their working modality and interventions in climate change Assess the vulnerability, impacts and coping strategies, identify vulnerable communities and households, map and rank hazards. Identify climate vulnerable households and rank their position in the hamlet tole and ward. Sensitise, interact and assess local context, prioritise local people's needs and interventions. Verify the information collected during field assessment Prioritise the adaptation intervention based on peoples preferences Examine the cost effectiveness of adaptation interventions Analyse the effectiveness of adaptation practices Analyse the strength, weakness, opportunity and threat of vulnerability assessment tools Stakeholders VDC Farmers, Communities, Local NGos, Radio Dhading, VDC, DDC Stakeholders Households, farmers, communities, VDC and DDC Households, Communities, VDC and DDC DDC and VDC
Interdisciplinary Partnership Learning by doing Strategies VDC as the focal organization Collaboration and co-ordination with government line agencies, media and CSos Tools Literature review Institutional Mapping Participatory vulnerability assessment tools
Ako agriculture and multipurpose cooperative Across different websites Communities and VDC Farmers
Stakeholders Websites of UNFCC and others Publications of RIMS and other organizations. Local level institutions Communities at ward level Communities, representative from political parties, VDC secretary and other NGos at VDC level Vulnerable communities, Farmers, representative political parties, VDC secretary, DDC representatives Vulnerable communities, Farmers, representative political parties, VDC secretary, DDC representatives VDC secretary, model farmers, senior citizens Vulnerable communities, Farmers, representative political parties, VDC secretary Farmers, representative political parties, VDC secretary Farmers, representative political parties, VDC secretary Vulnerable communities, Farmers, representative political parties, VDC secretary
Key informant survey Pair-wise or matrix ranking Cost Benefit Analysis Multi criteria assessment SWoT analysis
for all the adaptation interventions. The pair-wise ranking, cost benefit analysis and multi-criteria ranking were used to prioritize the adaptation interventions during VDC
planning. Participatory and Shared Learning Dialogue (as explained in Moench and Dixit, 2007) was another approach adopted during the assessments.
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Figure 3 Links between different local institutions and adaptation interventions in Dhading district Types of Institutions
PUBLIC
Government Agencies (DADO) Local Government (DDC, VDC)
CIVIC
Membership Organization (FG) Cooperatives (Farmers Coop)
MARKET/SERVICE
Service Organization (NGOs, CBOs) Private Business (Agrovets)
Mobility
Storage
Diversification
Communal Pooling
Market Exchange
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Most of the development interventions identified during the scoping phase could be put into the five categories of mobility, storage, livelihood diversification, communal pooling and market exchange (figure 3). Interventions that provided a regular means of income and that were linked with markets were found to be more sustainable in comparison with others. Both government and nongovernmental organizations were introducing these interventions in the district to benefit resource-poor communities. These organizations have developed their own working modalities and mechanisms for
both institutional and financial aspects. Most of the institutions were focused on development and livelihood interventions following high demand from communities. Many of these interventions, such as water collection ponds, hedgerow farming, and multiple water use systems (including drip and sprinkler irrigation), address climate change issues and are therefore relevant to adaptation as well. Several adaptation interventions were found to be in use by local people to cope with the ongoing climate change hazards. It is therefore clear that local people are not only
Case 1
Community Seed and Information Resource Centre (CSIRC) as a meansof increasing the adaptive capacity of vulnerable communities
As part of the pilot a Community Seed and Information Resource Centre (CSIRC) was established in Tasarpu VDC in coordination with the VDC. Tasarpu VDC is dominated by the Tamang Community, who are highly dependent on climate sensitive sectors for their sustenance such as agriculture and seasonal labor migration. Moreover, farmers do not easily get good quality seeds and reliable information regarding agriculture and climate change. In order to address water scarcity, the District Development Committee (DDC) had initiated the construction of water harvesting tanks both at household and community level. Realizing the need for access to seed and information, RIMS Nepal piloted a community seed and information resource centre (CSIRC) to increase farmers adaptive capacity under LAPA, in collaboration with the VDC and local communities. This has now been mainstreamed into the VDC planning process. RIMS focused on strengthening the Agriculture Development Committee (ADC) within the VDC structure. The ADC, which was formed under the Local Self Government Act 2055 for expanding agriculture development through a participatory and decentralized approach, is responsible for the research and development of interventions in agriculture. It is chaired by the VDC Secretary. Guidelines were developed through which the ADC has agreed to operate and manage the CSIRC, and seek additional funds from the VDC and integrate activities into VDC planning process. The DDC and DADO see it as a good initiative for strengthening farmers access to improved seeds and information related to sustainable agriculture and climate change issues. The whole intervention process has raised awareness of the farming community, party representatives and local stakeholders about climate change issues and LAPA. The ADC agreed to operate the resource centre and the VDC has integrated it into the development planning process. A total of 158 vulnerable households were identified for provision of subsidies and incentives in the working guidelines of CSRIC to encourage them to access improved seeds. In addition a business plan was prepared for the sustainability of the centre. The Agriculture Information and Communication Centre (AICC) also agreed to mainstream the centre into national agriculture networks such as Telecenters of Nepal (www.telecenters.org.np). The communities enthusiasm and positive feedback from the VDC have further strengthened the scope of CSIRCs in Tasarpu VDC.
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suffering from the hazards but also trying to cope on their own, and making the most of opportunities to adjust to the ongoing changes around them. Adaptation practices introduced as a response to the altered local environment have been tested and adopted through the generations. Traditional and innovative practices currently being adopted by local people are often more effective at increasing adaptive capacity than those from outside (also found in Ghimire and Bista, 2009). LAPA therefore should focus on assessing local adaptation practices, and strengthening and promoting them. At the same time, it is very important to consider the context and clients before attempting to replicate them. The interventions might need to be changed, based on local needs and the availability of the resources. Further, while implementing the plan, ground reality often turns out to be different; for instance, farmers who were extremely busy with crop harvesting activities were not able to effectively participate in the FFS.
Regarding the beneficiaries of LAPA, whilst the main target group would be vulnerable and marginalized people, participation of less-vulnerable people in decision-making and benefit sharing has to be ensured so as to get support from the wider community. Due to the short piloting period, it was not possible to evaluate the impacts of the piloted adaptation interventions; for example, how the plans increased income or how effectively they were integrated into VDC plans or their sustainability. Nevertheless this pilot can provide feedback to the LAPA design based on local perceptions, review of the past studies conducted in similar contexts, cost effectiveness analysis and the performance of adaptation practices in the short term. Water harvesting ponds were found to be a good option for areas of high water scarcity. CBA and MCA suggested that their use, along with drip irrigation, was the most cost effective practice. In order to evaluate the performance of water harvesting ponds more effectively (Annex 14), the pilot team needed to observe and analyze at least one crop cycle. Local farmers utilized barren and waste land for producing vegetables and valued the resulting increase in income. Upadhyaya (2004) revealed that drip-irrigation systems reduce womens workload and to have a significant positive impact on family food and nutrition. This is important for adaptation. The community seed and information resource centre (CSIRC) enhanced farmers access to improved seeds and information on sustainable agriculture for a reasonable price. However, the main lesson drawn from the CSIRC is that establishing resource centres alone is not enough, rather a local monitoring mechanism and links to the market are important in order to ensure the sustainability. Therefore, a business plan has been prepared to operate it well. Economic returns from seed sales will be used as a regular source of funds to run the CSIRC sustainably. In addition, external support from the VDC and external
Case 2
aKO livestock reserve fund to support livelihood diversification of communities in Jogimara VDC
Communities in Jogimara VDC suffered from reduced agriculture productivity due to climate induced hazards such as drought, landslides and especially hail stone. Loss of orange production due to hail is a major issue. As an alternative to fruit and crop production, people are getting attracted to livestock rearing which is comparatively less affected by climate induced hazards. In order to further promote livestock rearing as a means of livelihood diversification RIMSNepal, under the LAPA pilot, has just introduced the concept of a security or reserve fund. AKO agriculture and multipurpose co-operative has integrated a livestock reserve fund, initially for goat and buffalo. Series of orientations, meetings and village workshops organized for establishing and managing fund has enhanced and empowered the capacity of communities on CC issues. Guidelines have been prepared to involve vulnerable communities in the fund delivery mechanism. Though security/reserve fund has been taken as one of the adaptation interventions it does not address the vulnerability of poor and marginalised farmers as it require the farmers to pay the premium on the regular basis so as to be secured from the rare and emergency incident of livestock loss.
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agencies, and an attempt at connecting it to the National Telecenter Network provided further opottunities to strengthen the CSIRC. Though it is yet to connect with National Telecenter Network, the director of the National Agriculture Information and Communication Centre (AICC) supports the idea and agreed to mainstream it next year. The farmers field school was also piloted, as an effective way of sensitizing farmers to climate change and enhancing their capacity to tackle climate impacts. Integration of sessions on climate change and adaptation into the IPM curriculum helped farmers to understand the implications of climate change on agriculture and food production in relation to climate effects they have experienced in their lives. The reserve fund for livestock compensation adopted by the AKo cooperative was a further an important adaptation intervention against the impacts of climate change. Jogimara VDC agreed to allocate NRs. 25000 to operate the mechanism in addition to cooperative shares and CADP-N support. Long term impacts are still to be analyzed, but farmers are enthusiastic about its implementation and plan to expand to cover crops as well. Provision of a 50% premium to be paid by government (GoN/MoF, 2010; referring to the budget speech) for livestock insurance has further raised the scope of livestock and crop insurance in future.
Case 3
Water harvesting pond and drip irrigation as a means of adapting to water scarcity
Water harvesting ponds have been constructed for micro-irrigation of vegetable in Sigdel Village of Jeevanpur VDC and farmers are efficiently utilizing water in micro-irrigation for vegetable farming. In such areas of water scarcity this is an efficient way to conserve and use water for irrigation. If the flow rates are set correctly, water losses due to deep percolation can be minimised. Through the pilot intervention farmers fields, which used to be dry most of the time, are now utilized for vegetable farming. Farmers are positive about the intervention and expect to increase their income and the well-being of their families.
found to be an effective intervention to raise awareness of climate change issues. The community seed and information resource centre (CSIRC) enhanced access to quality seeds and information related to seeds and climate change, with mechanisms to support to vulnerable households. The livestock compensation mechanism, integrated through a separate regulation by AKo cooperative with facilities for poor and vulnerable households, was found to be promising. These practices, when scaled out, can play a significant role in enhancing the adaptive capacity of climate vulnerable communities (Annex 2). In terms of piloted interventions, a total of 12 households, including six vulnerable households benefited from water
4. 2. Climate adaptive technical interventions and delivery mechanisms for increasing adaptive capacity
Among documented and reviewed adaptation interventions, water collection ponds and micro-irrigation options were identified as effective mechanisms to include poor and vulnerable households. The farmer field school programme was
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harvesting ponds in Jeevanpur. Including these 12 households, a total of 27 farmers were sensitised to climate change and empowered to take action through the Farmers Field School (FFS) during a 12 week course on cucumber cultivation. Farmers are growing vegetables through utilizing water from ponds and practicing microirrigation and integrated pest management to address drought. In addition there are many climate-adaptive interventions implemented in the field as detailed in the scoping report. Though the piloting period was too short, piloted interventions were found to enhance the adaptive capacities of the vulnerable communities in the district. Almost all piloted interventions are climate sensitive with mechanisms to provide support and benefits to poor and vulnerable households. Farmers groups in Jeevanpur constructed water collection ponds and used water efficiently through micro irrigation. Farmers were sensitized to climate change issues and scenarios at local, national and international level. The community seed and information resource centre and the livestock compensation scheme also developed a mechanism to provide a certain percentage of the subsidy
to poor and vulnerable households in selected pilot sites. The pilot team facilitated VDCs to take initiatives to integrate adaptation interventions into their planning processes and to strengthen the Agriculture, Forest and Environment Committee within the VDC. The District Development Committee restructured the guidelines and working modality of the Agriculture, Environment, Forestry and Industry Committee within the DDC to address climate issues in the planning process and enable communities to reach up and draw down resources and services. (Annex 2).
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A SWoT analysis was carried out on the tools (see annex 3 for details). Among participatory tools and methods used (i.e., Hazard mapping, hazard trend analysis, hazard ranking, climate change impact assessment, vulnerability assessment), Climate hazard mapping and Climateincorporated participatory wellbeing ranking were found to be comparatively more efficient for identifying poor and vulnerable households for quick assessment of vulnerabilities at the levels of ward, hamlet, CFUG and VDC (Annex 4-5). While assessing vulnerabilities, tools have to be contextualized based on the local situations. Moreover, vulnerability assessment tools at different levels provided different emphasis; for example hamlet level assessment enhanced participation of vulnerable people, while VDC level assessment contributed to mainstreaming VDC planning (as corroborated in Regmi et. al., 2010). Cost effectiveness analysis is important for comparing adaptation interventions. Cost benefit analysis and multi criteria assessment were useful for analysing effectiveness when carried out with the participation of different stakeholders (Annex 14). They also effectively increased awareness of the issues and helped make interventions transparent. Some limitations
were observed while analysing the cost effectiveness of adaptation interventions. Valuation of non-market goods is not easy since peoples differing perceptions created difficulty for agreeing a common result. It was tedious to calculate all the costs and benefits when the impacts were not properly realized. Further the benefit: cost ratio alone could not give an accurate result. Thus the multi-criteria assessment matrix is very important. The facilitators role is crucial for meaningful results, as s/he must facilitate tactfully to avoid bias. In spite of the constraints, qualitative cost-benefit analysis and multi-criteria assessment can be very good tools while prioritizing adaptation interventions during planning. Gateway system analysis was found to be a useful concept for gathering data to be used in analysing adaptive capacity. However it could not be used fully because the concept was not fully clear and the pilot timeframe was too short. In LAPA design it can be used in the initial stages to assess accessibility to resources and assess vulnerability. The expected and hoped for changes in behaviour of key actors, in relation to increasing adaptive capacity, were identified at the outset of the pilot. They were assessed
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at the end and the results are shown in Table 4 below. Though behaviour change is difficult to monitor within a short period of time, the pilot identified useful progress markers which help to focus on and monitor the changes in behaviour of boundary actors towards increasing the adaptive capacity of poor and vulnerable communities.
Farming communities, farmers groups, CFUGs at community level VDC secretary, local political leaders, farmers groups at VDC level
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Table 5 Community adaptation plan to address the climate change impacts in ward-1, Jogimara VDC
Village/Tole Impacts/Hazards Adaptation plan Purpose When Resource contribution 25% (Community), 50% (VDC/DDC) and 25% (others) 20% (Community), 60% (VDC/DDC) and 30% (others)
Water harvesting and storage tanks Gabions, Retention wall, Plantation of trees, Napier, Amriso, Ipil-Ipil, Nigalo and Hedgerow plantation on sloping land (SALT) Water source maintenance and protection
Collect the rainwater and store to be used during drought Retaining unstable land, Soil conservation, Stop landslides by increasing land stability Increase drinking water availability and save time fetching water from greater distances. Manage and use livestock urine and reduce use of chemical fertilizers, promote biological pesticide and insecticide
Mathillo Laitaak
2067 Chaitra
10% (Community), 65% VDC/DDC) and 25% (others) 20% (Community), 50% (VDC/DDC) and 20% (others)
Integration of livestock and shed improvement, Implementation of IPM, conducting Farmers Field School
2067 PoushChaitra
level are more participatory, bottom up and inclusive when compared with government, but they are often short-term and project based, while government organizations have long-term and sustainable institutional mechanisms. That is why the public private partnership (PPP) modality is important for effective integration of climate change adaptation into development plans. There have been many development models over recent decades. However, they are not extensively used and will not be until they are mainstreamed into government structures such as the DDC and VDC. Thus mainstreaming adaptation plans into general development plans via the DDC and VDC is essential. In addition, other non-government organizations should integrate adaptational interventions, mechanisms, and processes into their annual and periodic plans. It was found that while integrating climate change adaptation options into VDC planning, there is a high chance of them appearing to compete with other development activities, and communities were found to prefer road construction over any of the climate adaptation interventions. At the same time, the roads themselves are often vulnerable to climate change effects. Thus
adaptation and development interventions should move together in addressing local climatic stresses for the benefit of climate vulnerable. (Annexes: 6 to 13). It is well recognised that mainstreaming requires guiding policy at the national level. As climate change and adaptation have only recently emerged as issues, there is a lack of national level policy to guide implementation on the ground. As a recent development after CoP 16, national policy on Climate Change has been approved under the special instruction from the Prime Minister. However, further initiative is now needed so as to promote LAPA as a means to implement the NAPA. Several governmental and non-governmental organizations are implementing development and/or adaptation interventions in Dhading district. The DDC and VDC are vital institutions that can effectively support LAPA implementation and influence the other line agencies to develop their own LAPA. Entering through DDC and VDC provides benefits such as reduced replication of interventions, and strengthened networking and synergy with other sectors. Moreover, other potential institutions and organizations at local level
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can be promoted. Community Forest User Groups are one such mechanism, having been widely praised for successfully integrating vulnerable households and communities. Establishment of sectorwise committees, such as the Agriculture Development (ADC), offers another opportunity to effectively implement and mainstream adaptation interventions. Though NGos are not properly recognized by government, they are playing a crucial role in improving the livelihoods of poor and marginalized communities. However, government bodies such as Ministry, DDC and VDC are permanent institutions with the mandate for making long term policies and implementing them. They can also guide the private sector and NGos. However, in the current political instability of the country where there is a vacuum of political leadership at the local level in government bodies such as VDC and DDC, mainstreaming of any activity in their planning and implementation process is a great challenge. In such situations where the government is less effective, NGos can facilitate and orient government organisations in the development of climate smart policies/activities and in implementing them. once political stability is established in Nepal, governmental institutions will be able to take a lead role in developing and implementing climate policies. Prioritizing the climate change adaptation options into VDC planning at times appeared to conflict with other developmental activities due to limited budget. For instance communities in Jogimara VDC preferred road construction more than any of the climate adaptation interventions. Sector wise planning, i.e. planning through existing sectoral committees such as agriculture, forestry, environment at DDC and VDC levels, can to some extent, reduce the chances of adaptation/development interventions
being focused only on infrastructure. It is equally important to ensure that development planning is climate proof, for example in places unplanned road construction is currently worsening soil stability and causing more landslides. It is essential to include climate foresight into adaptation planning in order to have the desired impact. Institutional mechanisms must ensure the flow of accurate and up to date information regarding global, national and local effects and predictions of climate change. However, the capacity of the local stakeholders needs to be enhanced so that they can understand the phenomena of climate change and its implications at different levels. Further, it is very important to ensure that the local implementers act wisely and accountably; for instance, when they implement any intervention they should ensure that it does not lead to some people being more vulnerable.
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fund. one of the conditions for funding is the inclusion of poor and vulnerable households in the cooperative membership. The structure is illustrated in figure 6 below. Considering the complexity and legal requirement associated with the term insurance, the term reserve fund (Surakshan Kosh) was used. The two financial delivery mechanisms of Poverty Alleviation Fund (PAF) and District Agriculture Development Fund (DADF) were identified for their potential to scale up LAPA implementation. Neither of the assessed mechanisms were found to be a failure nor completely successful, as each of them had strengths and limitations. For instance, the modality of PAF has been praised for its effective service delivery while it has been criticized for bypassing the DDC and VDC. The DADF has been unsuccessful in Rautahat, but its service delivery mechanism cannot be entirely blamed. Specific characteristics of DADF such as local decentralization and being centered
on vulnerable people are replicable. In an ideal situation of national political stability, the DADF model would work best, but in the present situation with low accountability of local governmental bodies, the LDo alone cannot withstand the likely pressure while selecting the implementing partner agencies. The DADF model adopted by Sustainable Soil Management Project (SSMP) has become quite successful in delivering services to poor and marginalized people. In the case of SSMP, implementing NGos at the local level are being selected by a high level technical team. A model similar to DADF replicated for LAPA implementation could promote local decentralization but it has to be ensured that local NGos, are selected by a national technical team. It is therefore explicit that no readymade modality can work clear perfectly in all situations, but rather funding mechanisms should be innovative and flexible enough to adjust to the factors associated with the specific locality. Along with mainstreaming
Reserve Fund for crop and Livestock Possible other sources of Funds/grants like livestock lnsurance, government grants
Executive Committee
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adaptation into the development planning process, separate LAPA facilitation units should be considered at VDC, hamlet and community levels so that finance can be channeled through the DDC directly to vulnerable communities based on their specific needs. Including monetary or material support from local people, though on a very small scale, will ensure more effective implementation of adaptation as they show concern for their investment. Construction of water harvesting ponds and establishment of community seed and information resource centre were examples of such an approach. Financial delivery mechanisms must be accountable whether private or public sector. National adaptation funding must have accountability built in at every level, especially to the most climate vulnerable. This goes together with transparency, responsiveness and general qualities of
good governance, to ensure funds meet the needs of the people who are most affected by climate change.
At VDC level
At DDC level
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Although co-ordination and collaboration with government line agencies, media partners and CSos was an important strategy adopted during the pilot, it was very difficult to work closely in practice with different stakeholders. For example, certain political party representatives did not work well with DDC personnel, thereby making it difficult to organize workshops. Climate change is a complex issue which has a wide range of impacts across sectors. Therefore coordination, sharing and synergy among sectoral experts and line agencies are necessary for effective design and implementation of the LAPA. In the present transitional political situation of the country, most development interventions are only possible with the approval of political mechanisms from local to national level. This demonstrates the importance of coordination and synergy among stakeholders at local level for mainstreaming LAPA in development planning processes.
Table 6 Practices and tools used for the monitoring of LAPA and learning
M & E Practices Vulnerability assessment Purpose Assessment information used as baseline to monitor Stakeholders Communities, farmers, tole, ward and VDC Overall learning VDC and DDC are important for mainstreaming CC adaptations in development plans Specific sensitization programme for specific community
Consultative meetings, review , participant observation, informal interaction meeting and workshops
Changes can be seen over time with repeated meetings with the same groups of participants.
Communities, tole, CFUG, ward representative, co-operative, VDC secretary, political parties, DDC representative LAPA team
Audio-Visual and pictures have more effects during sensitization Adaptive capacity should be enhanced for necessary dialogue and voices for planning in favour of poor and vulnerable people at VDC level.
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future. Discussion during public audit is a means of assessing change in ability to cope and adapt over time. Monitoring project activities against action plans helped the LAPA team track progress towards achievements (see also www. careclimatechange.org/cvca). Criteria of vulnerability and adaptive capacity were identified by community and VDC members with facilitation from the LAPA team. The criteria can become indicators, and they included levels of income, income diversity, access to land, productivity of land, crop diversity, household assets, means of communication, education, health, access to water, access to forest, and position of house (near river, landslide). It is very important that poor, marginal and vulnerable people help set the criteria/indicators as their situation can be very different to that of those with access to resources. The only element that could be assessed in the pilot timeframe was the change in levels of climate awareness. Indicators include farmers asking questions in the FFS, community and VDC members discussing climate change in other meetings, and VDC integrating elements of community adaptation plans into their development plans. Monitoring findings must feedback into planning cycles. The pilot timeframe was too short to do this. M&E needs to be an integral part of planning for adaptation because climate change effects are so unpredictable and programmes need to be flexible to adjust according to information from feedback and monitoring.
important to sensitize and build the capacity of local actors, including political party representatives, for successful implementation, development and mainstreaming of LAPA into local planning process. In most cases, more visible development interventions like road and construction get prioritized in VDC planning. So, mainstreaming climate adaptation sometimes creates conflicts with development interventions. Development interventions can appear to be undermined by climate change unless plans are climate proofed. Planning is important but it is not sufficient. Adaptation plans require implementation, mainstreaming, monitoring and sustainable development. It was not possible to do these and to give in-depth feedback for LAPA implementation in the short pilot period. In the absence of periodic plans at VDC level, development plans are more focused on infrastructure development rather than activities in sectors such as agriculture and climate change. No climatic data is available at the local level. In most cases, vulnerability assessments were done based on experience and assumptions of community members and key informants. The climate adaptive capacity of communities and local actors needs to be strengthened across all sectors (including, for example, health and education) for effective and efficient LAPA. All local institutions (local NGOs, CBOs, line agencies etc.) have their own programmes and priorities. So, climate adaptation should be integrated into all their plans through sensitizing and providing climate information. Delayed release of the national budget impacts on the timely planning at VDC and DDC levels, which in turn affects the implementation of community level plans.
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Understanding and analysing local climatic contexts, vulnerabilities and adaptation needs and initiatives
Sensitization workshops for different stakeholders (Community, political parties, line agencies, VDC)
Vulnerability Assessments at different levels (Tole, Community, Ward, VDC) with local stakeholders
Review of the literature, adaptation interventions, service and financial delivery mechanisms at different levels (local, national and international)
Identification and Prioritization of adaptation strategies and interventions Awareness raising, capacity building Shared learning meetings, workshops, exposure visits
Adaptation Planning
Effectiveness Analysis, Cost Benefit analysis, Muilt-Criteria Assessment, Public Audit M & E and Feedback
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District Development Committee (DDC) - Agriculture, Enviroment, Forest and Industry Chaired by LDO with the representatives from district line agencies, I/NGOs. CBOs Planning, coordination, implementation and integration of LAPAs at District level (District Council)
Sectoral plan formulation committee/ institutions (Line agencies, NGOs/ CSOs, Private sectors - Agriculture. Environment, Forest, Health, Water Sectors)
Cross Cutting Committees/institutions (Line agencies, NGOs/CSOs, Private sector - Agriculture. Environment, Forest, Health, and Water Sectors
Village Developement Committee (VDC) - Agriculture, Environment, Forest Committee Chaired by VDC staff with representatives from NGOs, CBOs, schools local political parties, farmers Planning, coordination, implementation and integration of LAPAs at VDC/Municipal and individual organization level (Village Council)
Farmers' cooperative
Irrigation Groups
Community Organizations
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5.3. Key Actors and their roles in LAPA process in the agriculture sector
Table 7: Key actors and their roles in the LAPA process Key Actors 1. Community level a. Farmers/User groups b. Irrigation groups c. Community organizations d. Farmers Cooperatives 2. VDC level a. Agriculture, Environment and Forestry Committee b. Local Political parties c. Local NGos, CBos, Clubs d. Schools and local agencies e. Cooperatives f. VDC 3. District Level a. District line agencies (agriculture, forestry, health, environment etc) b. NGos/CSos c. Private and Business sectors including Cooperatives and Banks d. DDC (Agriculture, Environment, Forestry and Industry Committee; District Energy and Environment Section etc.) e. Education sector f. Mass Media (News reporters, FMs, Radios, Local TV channels) Roles in the LAPA Process Informing vulnerability assessment, identifying CC hotspots, vulnerable households, community adaptation planning and integration in development plans Exploring links with markets and providing financial incentives for agricultural commodities
Identifying vulnerable hotspots, communities/households and prioritizing adaptation needs in agriculture, forestry and environment sector Influencing on the mainstreaming of LAPAs in VDC development plans Awareness raising and sensitization regarding climate change issues at local level Exploring links with markets and providing financial incentives for agricultural commodities Planning and integrating LAPAs into the VDC planning process through Village Council Preparing sectoral adaptation plans for implementation and integration into annual and periodic plans Raising Awareness, sensitising and enhancing adaptive capacity through meetings, workshops, seminars policy dialogues at district level Public awareness and policy dialogues on climate change concerns at local level Exploring links with markets and providing financial incentives for agricultural commodities Planning and integrating LAPAs into the DDC planning process through District Council Generating human resources on climate change adaptation through developing curriculums at schools and college level
service delivery mechanisms, financial mechanisms, agricultural technologies and interventions for enhancing the livelihoods of poor and vulnerable communities. Monitoring tools and approaches that assess empowerment of poor and vulnerable communities to access resources and services and to make development and adaptation plans in their favour. Monitoring changes in behaviour of boundary actors at different levels. Outputs from M&E being fed feed back into planning through annual reviews and regular amendment of LAPAs
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1.
Registers, Meeting minutes, VDC annual and periodic plans, adaption plans, institutional regulations, M & E reports, progress and final reports
2.
Meeting minutes, Training reports, Progress and final reports, M & E report, Annual and periodic district plans (DDC and DADo plans) Progress and Final Report, M & E report Progress and final report, M & E report Meeting Minutes, Registers, Reports
3.
Vulnerability assessment using Gateway system, shared learning dialogue participatory tools to identify climatic hotspots at district level. Scale up and scale out adaptaion adaptation measures learnt through LAPA piloting Develop district level climate change network and strengthening climate change resource centre for research, learning and sharing platforms on climate change issues
4.
At least 5 identified interventions implemented in 3 most vulnerable VDCs of the district targeting disadvantaged groups (DAG) and those vulnerable based on district level vulnerability assessment one district level CC network developed for awareness raising, sensitization, climate change campaign and learning/sharing about CC issues among local stakeholders and actors one regional level CC resource centre strengthened Regular research on CC in resource centres with climatic data recording and publications in local media
5.
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Regmi, B. R. and G. Karki. 2010. Local Adaptation Plans in Nepal. Tiempo a bulletin on climate and development. Issue 76, July 2010. Pp 21-25. www.
tiempocyberclimate.org
Regmi, B.R. and A. Morcrette, A. Paudyal, R. Bastakoti, and S. Pradhan. 2010. Participatory Tools and Techniques for Assessing Climate Change Impacts and Exploring Adaptation options: A Community based Tools for Practitioners. Livelihood Forestry Programme/UKaid. RIMS-Nepal (2010), Local Adaptation, Plan of Action Scoping report, submitted to CADP-N. (unpublished document) Tudela A. Natalia A. and Rene C. (2005) Comparing the output of cost benefit and multicriteria analysis: An application to urban transport investments, Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice Volume 40, Issue 5, June 2006, Pages 414-423 Upadhyay, B. 2004. Gender Aspects of Smallholder Irrigation Technology: Insights from Nepal. Journal of Applied Irrigation Science. Vol 39. No 2/2004, pp 315-327 GoN/MoF, 2067. Budget Speech. http//www.mof.gov.np
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Annex 1: Analysis of effectiveness of identified interventions based on literature reviews and field assessments Evidences/indicator/improvements in livelihood assets I Increased food and nutrition status Increased dietary diversity Improved family income by selling surplus vegetables, fruits Improved social relation among neighbors and farmers network by exchanging seeds and other materials Conservation and cultivation of landraces and stress tolerant crop/vegetables Improved soil fertility and reduced soil erosion in hills Integration of leguminous crops enrich soil quality and status, thus increased production Working VDCs of RIMS-Nepal in Dhading district and several other hilly districts Working VDCs of RIMS-Nepal in Dhading district and several other districts N L Level Scope of scale out
Good Interventions
Nutritional security Income generation options Use and conservation of landraces and stress tolerance
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collection, conservation and distribution of landraces, tolerant to stress condition, to the farmers collection an promotion of drought, flood resistant landraces improved access of farmers to landraces collection and utilization of waste water, rain water for agriculture, livestock and other household activities improved water use efficiency in water scarce areas improved trend to save in farmers level improved livelihoods getting loans from micro-credits and cooperatives with minimum interest rate improved accessibility to information on agriculture, marketing and other communication increased computer literacy of rural farmers in remote areas of Nepal increased water use efficiency in agriculture and vegetable farming increased livelihood of small holder by cultivating high value crop using micro irrigation increased yield of vegetables increased nutritional value of vegetables Decreased loss from hail Decreased loss of soil moisture due to evaporation
Farmers cultivating in sloping lands in wide bands between contour hedgerows of N2 fixing trees
Controls soil erosion and top soil run off Increased N2 to the soil.
collection and maintenance of both local and improved seeds of cereals, vegetables, wild foods, spices
Working VDCs of RIMS in Dhading and other more than 35 districts facing water scarcity Working VDCs of RIMS-Nepal in Dhading Remote VDCs of Dhading district
Collection of micro savings and providing credits and loans for resource poor farmers.
Rural farmers living in isolated village where almost no chance of modern communication
Intercropping (growing different crops in the same piece of land in the given season) Rotation cropping (planting of different crops in different seasons in same land) Cultivate fruit tree Bamboo, amriso, nigalo plantation Mulching Cultivate chayote Increased water use efficiency Efficient use of seeds, water and land More production per unit areas with minimum use of seeds increased availability of food and nutrition improved income generation provided a cost-effective way to produce vegetables Less water required for rice plantation Improved production of rice even during the period of drought Working VDCs of RIMS-Nepal in Dhading Potential of such garden increases as with considerable increase in waterlogging Working VDCs of RIMS-Nepal in Dhading and several other districts affected by drought Working VDCs of RIMS-Nepal in Dhading and chepang village Working VDCs of RIMS-Nepal in Dhading and throughout the country
increased water use efficiency increased crop yield decreased risks of crop failure preservation of traditional agriculture system improved livelihood through fruit production Increased source of income by selling amriso Decreased landslides and increased income from bamboo and nigalo Protection of houses from chayote during windstorm
Farmers suffering from water logged and increased salinity area and poor landless farmers
Growing of rice varieties that can tolerate drought (i.e. Bindeshwari, Taichung & Khumal 4
growing of under utilized crops i.e. Increased availability of food yam, taro in home garden Increased source of family nutrients and income Increased awareness regarding climatic hazards, their impacts and adaptation strategies Local level adaptation practices promoted Skill enhanced to cope with the changes due to climate change Reduced harm from hailstone and thus increased vegetable production Increased productivity Reduced risk from disease Increased accessibility of farmers to market Increased income from vegetable and fruits having low/no involvement of middle man Enhanced network between farmers thus enabling them to sharing their ideas
Use of nylon net to cover the vegetables to protect them from hailstone
Working VDCs of RIMS-Nepal in Dhading and districts affected by hailstone Working VDCs of RIMS-Nepal in Dhading and throughout the country Possible to scale out in RIMS working VDCs and mainstream in government line agencies and other partner organizations plans and programmes
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17. Collection and group marketing of agricultural commodities (Vegetables & fruit cooperative)
Farmers
18. River bed farming Government provided compensation to the farmers who suffered from maize crop failure due to low quality seed Provided the safety net to farmers during the failure of livestock It is the initiation of sharing and learning forum, creating information accessibility among farmers. Reduced damage to livestock due to extreme winter Increased income generating options, livelihood diversification through group saving, access to financial institution, marketing of produces. Enhanced capacity and skills of landless farmers through social inclusion, group saving, access to financial institution, marketing of produces. improved health with the consumption of healthy and fresh fruits and vegetables. Increased farm income to capital invested (reduced farm expenses) increased capacity and knowledge exchange. increased utilization of space and available resources decreased soil erosion increased access to knowledge, information, technologies and finance - increased capacity of farmers for their innovations through PID process locally adapted innovations with maximum use of locally available resources increased accessibility of fund and load for income generating and livelihood diversification options increase capacity of mobilizing funds, livelihood diversification and market promotion increased use of local potential crops Districts with extreme winter Possible to mainstream in government line agencies and other partner organizations plans and programmes Through out the country Working VDCs of RIMS Working VDCs of RIMS
Poor/landless farmers
Poor farmers
Poor farmers
Farmers
Farmers
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lease land and contract farming Livelihood diversification and improvement income generating options
Possible to mainstream in government line agencies and other partner organizations plans and programmes Possible to scale out in RIMS working VDCs and mainstream in government line agencies and other partner organizations plans and programmes Possible to scale out in RIMS working VDCs and mainstream in government line agencies and other partner organizations plans and programmes
25. Documentation and Promotion of local innovation relate to climate change coping and adaptation
Low cost, eco-friendly, culturally accepted, local technologies and innovations, Local innovation support fund (LISF)
Farming communities
Annex 2: Achievements , lesson learnt, issues and challenges associated with the piloting interventions. Lessons learnt Vulnerability assessment is important to understand local climatic stresses and prioritize adaptation needs at different level. Each tool has its own significance, which needs to contextualize based on local context. Vulnerability assessment at different levels has different purposes (for e.g. assessment at Tole level integrates the voices of poor and vulnerable and assessment at VDC level contributes in mainstreaming of climate adaptation plans in VDC planning Negotiation and cross verification is necessary while investing in such intervention. Regular monitoring and supervision is most. Community contribution ensured effective implementation of the intervention that support in finding out the real cost of construction. Participation of wider community including nonvulnerable is required for decision making and benefit sharing of the intervention. Farmers are experiencing climate change impacts at local level. Sensitizing farmers on climate change issues is important and FFS is effective option of sensitization. Festive and crop harvesting season and short period of piloting period Assessments are more based on assumptions of the communities, so triangulation is necessary. Issues and challenges
S.N.
Piloting interventions
Achievements
1.
Recommendation of appropriate tools and methods to identify vulnerable communities and households
Awareness and capacity of community enhanced in the issue of CC. Climate change vulnerability assessed and analyzed at tole, ward, community & VDC level. Strengths and weakness of used tools analysed. Climate hazard mapping and climate incorporated participatory well being ranking are found comparatively better tools for quick vulnerability assessment.
2.
Construction of water harvesting ponds and micro irrigation options to address water scarcity in vegetable farming in Sigdel Village, Jeevanpur VDC
A rain water harvesting and storage pond is constructed and 12 (6 are identified as climate vulnerable) households are benefited from it. operational Guideline prepared for efficient use of water 7 vulnerable HHs initiated vegetable production using drip and sprinkler irrigation utilizing water from pond.
3.
Widened knowledge of farmers on sustainable practice of agriculture. Farmers are sensitized on the issue of climate change and adaptation measures.
4.
Mainstreaming of adaptation plan in different agencies is difficult they have their own priority
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Communities, VDC secretary, local CBos and political party representatives are sensitized on the issue of climate change. CSIRC established with improved seeds and information sources. Agriculture development committee (under LSGA 1993) in Tasarpu strengthened and is agreed to operate and manage CSIRC CSIRC established. Guidelines and Business plan prepared and approved to operate. CSIRC incorporated in new VDC planning.
Types and degree of vulnerability varies even within the VDC. Planning and initiatives of VDC supported by local political mechanism have high priority on implementation. Effective implementation and integration of adaptation plans at VDC level needs to sensitize local community, political mechanism and VDC personnel. Participation from non vulnerable groups should also be ensured so as to strengthen the community harmony and thus resulting in effective implementation of adaptation practices.
5.
Crop/livestock compensation scheme developed with guidelines focusing on selected agriculture commodities
Ako agriculture multiple co-operative is agreed and develop separate regulation for livestock compensation mechanism (initially for Goat and Buffalo). VDC has allocated certain amount of fund for the implementation of compensation mechanism in Jogimara VDC Sensitization and exposure highly motivated VDCs and local political mechanism and leaders farmers to integrate adaptation plans in annual VDC planning (Exposure and observation of periodic plan in Ilam contributed to visualize the actions that could be taken in VDCs of Dhading)
Cooperatives are strong in financial management and interested in diversifying their activities other institutions have difficulties to diversify their actions that is related to financial management Involvement of poor and vulnerable communities into financial mechanism needs them to be empowered first. Regular monitoring and supervision is most
Mainstreaming of adaptation plan in different agencies is difficult since they have their own priority
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Guidelines and regulations of sectoral committees within DDC need to revised on periodic basis and allocate certain fund for implementation to make these committees functional and fruitful.
6.
Communities, VDC secretaries, local CBos and political parties realized importance of adaptation in development plans. Capacity of poor and vulnerable communities enhanced in assessing their priorities in developing plans. Communities prepared their plans and submitted to the VDC. VDC agreed and integrated CC adaptation plans into VDC planning process Adaptation plans (livestock compensation mechanism, awareness raising programs, micro irrigation, sustainable agriculture practices) were prioritized and incorporated into VDC planning based on Pair-wise ranking, CBA and MCA
High political influence in VDC planning and implementation processes In absence of periodic planning, VDC level plans are more focused on infrastructure development rather than sectoral issues like CC impacts (politicians want road construction) Mainstreaming of climate adaptation sometimes creates conflicts with development interventions. In most cases more visible development interventions get prioritized. Development interventions can be undermined by CC unless plans are climate proofed.
7.
Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Industry Committee under DDC strengthened to integrate climate change issues at district level
Many sectoral committees are formed under DDC but not functional High political influence in VDC and DDC planning and implementation processes
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Annex 3: Analysis of Strengths and Weakness of vulnerability assessment tools. Tools Climate hazard mapping Strengths Easy to use Physical distribution of hazards can be explained easily. Helps to sensitize communities about climate change impacts Stimulates discussion making easy for participants to relate climatic hazards with the resources. Provide the insight into the socio-economic and political changes in the past. Easy to get information about major climate induced hazards. Sensitize communities to become more alert and plan preventive and adaptive measures. Easy to find out local practices for adaptation and outside supports from VDC, DDC and other I/L/ NGo in different time. Easy to use Helps to categorize and compare which hazards are most critical for community and its members (According to more impacts in the past). Participants in most of the cases pay their full enthusiasm as they dont get bored as in lengthy assessment. Discussion helps in drawing analytical perspective of communities Gives overview of the climatic hazards and their sector wise effects. Detail information can be found from the formats Weakness People in all cases might not be able to precisely delineate the proper boundary of the area especially when the landscape is extended over varied slopes and aspects. Can sometimes provide incomplete information if fewer people are available. People feel hesitant to provide information on the historical event as they might not easily remember all the past events. Participation of age old people is must as they are the key informants of historical events of climate change. Participants feel bore to give periodic information by which they couldnt get any quick returns. Need to clarify to participants about the tools before discussion. People sometimes may not be able to compare and prioritize among climatic hazards. Precise information might not come in absence of proper facilitation.
Trend analysis
Vulnerability assessment
Time consuming Participants feel bore to give information about social factors and groups i.e. hazard impacts to young, elderly, adult, poor, middle, well-off, dalit, janajati, Brahmin. Time consuming Sometimes it creates debate among household people who lies on above mentioned 4 groups Complex process for ranking
CAPWBR
Complex but most important tool for ranking of vulnerable people and group Categorizes people actually who need to be focused/supported. Can be found vulnerable areas and household people and their status It can be guideline for every government and non government organizations Easy to facilitate for this tool with participants Can be found more information about vulnerability, economic condition of community people
Tole/Village ranking
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Annex 5: Result of vulnerability assessment, ranking of villages and hazards in Jogimara Ward 1 Village/Tole Wangrung Lamangdung Aanptar, Aaldanda Kharka Gaun Kami/Rijal Gaun Majh Gaun Gairi Gaun Tallo Laitak Mathillo Laitak Dukrang Dharmashala Shirdung Hugdikhola Jawang Takthali Manthali Jawang Mowakhola Randan Kaalbhan Chaaptar Jayapuri Kerali Ethnicity Chepang Chepang Brahmin, Chhetri Gurung, Newar Brahmin, Chhetri, Newar Gurung Chhetri Brahmin, Chhetri Brahmin, Chhetri Chepang, Magar Brahmin, Chetri Chepang, Gurung Chepang, Magar, Gurung Chepang, Gurung Chepang Chepang, Brahmin, Chhetri Chepang Newar, Brahmin, Magar, Tamang, Chepang Brahmin, Chhetri Brahmin, Magar, Chhetri Chepang Hazards Landslides Hailstone Drought Heavy rainfall
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Chilaune pani Thansing Dunkudanda Thapke Kote Sirantole Majh Gaun Dandabari Kurini Gairang Tallo Mangrang Mathillo Mangrang Simtesh Kuwapani Deurani ochrang Tekwang Marthali Totthar Hyakrang Dunge Beldanda Tautesh Khamtesh Gairi Gaun Kurindanda Makimdanda Jhaiwang Manakamana danda Tallo Rowang Mathillo Rowang Bharpang Jhiltung Thansing Dimrang Bitesh Dhusrang Goru Gaun Dobaling Peepal Danda Selangdung Panchling Kharsalam Besi Tole Thing bang Dakhali Gaun Majhimtar Chaukitar Phajimtar
Kaami Magar, Kaami Magar, Chepang Magar Magar, Damai Gurung Gurung Gurung Chepang Gurung Chepang/Magar Chepang/Magar Chepang Chepang Magar Chepang/Gurung Magar/Chepang Magar Chepang Chepang Magar Bharati, Giri, Puri Chepang Chepang Chepang Chepang Chepang Newar Bharati, Giri, Puri Chepang Chepang Newar Newar Chepang Newar, Magar Magar Chepang Chepang Magar
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Annex 6: Pair-wise ranking conducted to compare and rank the villages based on the climate vulnerabilities in Jogimara -1 WR WR WR WR * * * * * * * * * * 12 8 7 4 2 10 11 * * * * * * * * * * * * * 3 * * * * * * * * * * * * * Lamangdung * * * * * LD Aanptar, * * * * Aanptar LD Dukrang Bagaincha Aanptar Lamangdung Dukrang * * 0 * * * Mathillo Laitak Aanptar LD Mathillo Laitak Mathillo Laitak * * Majh Gaun Majh Gaun Aanptar LD Majh Gaun * Kami Gaun Kami Gaun Kami Gaun Aanptar LD Kami Gaun Kami Gaun WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR WR Kami Gaun Majh Gaun Mathillo Laitak Bagaincha Aanptar Lamangdung Dukrang Shirdung * Kami Gaun Majh Gaun Tallo Laitak Tallo Laitak Aanptar LD Tallo Laitak Tallo Laitak Tallo Laitak Kami Gaun Majh Gaun Gairi Gaunl Gairi Gaun Aanptar, LD Gairi Gaun Gairi Gaun Gairi Gaun Kharka Gaun Kharka Gaun Kharka Gaun Kharka Gaun Aanptar, LD Kharka Gaun Kharka Gaun Kharka Gaun Kami Gaun Majh Gaun Mathillo Laitak Bagaincha Aanptar, LD Dukrang Hugdikhola Shirdung
Kharka Gaun
Gairi Gaun
Tallo Laitak
Kharka Gaun
Kharka Gaun
Kharka Gaun
Gairi Gaun
Gairi Gaun
Tallo Laitak
Wangrung (WR)
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Kami Gaun
Majh Gaun
Mathillo Laitak
Bagaincha
Aanptar
Lamangdung (LD)
Dukrang
Hugdikhola
Shirdung
Total
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Annex 7: Result of pair-wise ranking of Villages based upon the climate change vulnerability in ward 1 of Jogimara VDC Village Name Wangrung Lamangdung Aanptar, Aaldanda Kharka Gaun Kami/Rijal Gaun Majh Gaun/Tallo Phundri Gaun Gairi Gaun/Pokharel Tallo Laitak Mathillo Laitak Dukrang Dharmashala/Bagaincha Shirdung Hugdikhola Total score 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Ranking 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Annex 8: Hazard ranking in Jogimara 1 Landslides Hailstones Landslides Hailstones Drought Heavy rainfall * * * * Hailstones * * * Drought Drought Drought * * Heavy rainfall Landslides Hailstones Drought *
Annex 9: Result of hazard ranking in Jogimara 1 Total score Drought Hailstone Landslides Heavy rainfall 3 2 1 0 Ranking 1 2 3 4
Annex 10: Different hazards, their impacts and adopted coping strategies Timeline 2011 2017 2031 Hazards Landslides Landslides Floods Impacts Agricultural land converted into unproductive land Livestock loss and damage to the physical property Swept away agricultural land, losses to the agricultural commodities and livestock Fragmentation and sweeping away of some agricultural land Local coping strategies Create small plots for agricultural purpose Communal pooling Clearing the debris to create the land suitable for agricultural purpose, retaining unstable land with wall, plantation of grass species Clearing the debrises to create the land suitable for agricultural purpose, retaining unstable land with wall, plantation of grass species Diversion canal, Plantation of Simali, bamboo, nigalo, ipil-ipil, tanki, napier Attempted to protect organges using net but not successful Cultivating maize for the second time Outer interventions
2036
Landslides
2050
DDC provided monetary and food support DADo provided vegetable seeds
2059 2064
Damages to the fruits (oranges) and fodder Livestock loss Damages to the shoots of Sal (Shorea robusta), damages to the vegetables, fruits, maize, life loss of birds Dried water sources, agricultural productivity limited only to the 1/4th
2066
Fetching water from greater distances, loans from local creditor to buy foods, labour work, migration for work
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Annex 11: Community adaptation plan to address the climate change impacts Purpose Communities Collect the rainwater and store to be used during drought Retaining unstable land, Soil conservation, Stop landslide by increasing land stability 2067 Chaitra 20% 60% 2067 Chaitra 25% 50% VDC/DDC When Resource contribution others 25% 20%
Village/Tole
Impacts/Hazards
Adaptation practice
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Increase drinking water availability and save time needed to fetch water from grater distances. Manage and use livestocks urine and reduce use of chemical fertilizers, promote biological pesticide and insecticide 2067 PoushChaitra 30% 2067 Chaitra 25% 65% 50% 3 2 1 Drought Hailstone Landslide Use of net Alternate timing to avoid hailstone Crop diversification Crop insurance Mixed cropping Rain water collection and storage Irrigation Efficient use of water and management Mixed cropping/crop diversification Select drought resilient agricultural crop Plantation of fruit trees Mulching Plantation and protection of forest Water source protection Use of water pump Agro forestry practices Plantation and forest protection Gabion box Retention wall Plantation of fast growing species such as Amriso, Napier, Nigalo, Bamboo, Simali etc Hedgerow plantation Stopping mine blasting Mine management Awareness raising activities
Landslides
Gabion Box, Retention wall Plantation of trees, Napier, Amriso, Ipil-Ipil, Nigalo and Hedgerow plantation (SALT)
Mathillo Laitaak
10% 20%
Annex 12: Hazards and relevant adaptation measures analysed during VDC level workshop S. No. Hazards Adaptation Measures
Annex 13: Pair-wise ranking at VDC level of adaptation interventions Irrigation Irrigation Irrigation Irrigation * * * * * * 6 5 7 1 * * * * * * * * * * * CropLivestock insurance * * 8 * Crop-Livestock insurance Sustainable agriculture Public awareness Public awareness Public awareness Irrigation Crop-Livestock insurance Irrigation Public awareness Sustainable agriculture Crop-Livestock insurance Retention wall Public awareness Sustainable agriculture Crop-Livestock insurance Plantation Public awareness Alternative energy Alternative energy Irrigation Sustainable agriculture Crop/Livestock insurance Alternative energy Public awareness * 4 Sustainable agriculture Crop-Livestock insurance Water source protection Public awareness Alternative energy Sustainable agriculture Livestock crop insurance Retention wall Public awareness Alternative energy
Plantation
Plantation
Plantation
Plantation
Irrigation
Sustainable agriculture
Crop/Livestock insurance
Retention wall
Public awareness
Alternative energy
Total scoring
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Ranking of adaptation interventions at VDC level resulting from pair-wise ranking; the top 4 were integrated into VDC plans. 1. Public Awareness 2. Crop and Livestock Insurance 3. Irrigation 4. Sustainable Agriculture 5. Alternative energy 6. Plantation 7. Retention wall 8. Rain water harvesting and storage pond
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Annex 14: An example of showing how Cost Benefit Analysis and multi-criteria assessment was conducted for adaptation interventions
Table: Result of cost-benefit analysis conducted for adaptation interventions Options Irrigation Water harvesting pond CSIRC* Costs Economic 0.22 0.28 3.28 Social 0.001 2.05 0.5 Environment 1.602 0.23 0.5 Total 1.823 2.56 4.28 Benefits Eco 10 4 2.5 Social 2.4 1.1 2.4 Env 1.5 0.3 0.2 Total 13.9 5.4 5.1 13.9/1.823 = 7.62 5.4/2.56 = 2.1 5.1/4.28 = 1.19 B/C ratio
Table: Result of multi-criteria assessment conducted for adaptation interventions Criteria B/C ratio Vulnerability Gender Social inclusion/Poverty Poor and marginalized HH Total Irrigation Scheme 3 1 2 1 1 8 Water harvesting pond 2 3 3 2 2 12 CSIRC 1 2 1 3 3 10
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Designing Local adaptation plans for action for the forestry sector
submitteD to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
February, 2011
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Climate Adaptation Design and Pilot - Nepal (CADP-N) is a DFID supported study that aims at mainstreaming climate change adaptation into development planning. We acknowledge the support of the Climate Change Adaptation Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) for giving us the responsibility and entrusting us to carry out the piloting and scoping the Local Adaptation Plan of Action in Nawalparasi, Pyuthan and Rukum districts. We take this opportunity to express our gratitude to Dr Deepak Rijal - National Facilitator, CADP-N for help in designing the study. Similarly, we would also like to acknowledge the continual contribution and support of Mr. Yogendra Bijukchhen - CADP-N Office manager, for timely release of finances and other necessary arrangements. Similarly we would like to acknowledge Ms Sibongile Pradhan for editing and constructing the report. We would like to thank the Department for International Development (DFID) for providing necessary suggestions and feedback while conducting the scoping study. Thanks are due to Mr Bimal Regmi, Climate Change and Natural Resources Advisor, DFID, for providing valuable suggestions during the study. We would like to thank the Livelihoods and Forestry Programme (LFP) for the partial financial support and its involvement during the scoping study. It would have been impossible to carry out the study without the support of LFP central, regional and district offices. Thanks are due to LFP central team namely Mr Vijay Narayan Shrestha - Programme Manager, Mr Ramu Subedi - Deputy Programme Manager, Mr Bishwas Rana - Planning and Monitoring Advisor for their support during the study. Similarly, Rupantaran Nepal would like to acknowledge the support RB Shrestha and LFP Terai team, LFP Mid west team and Mr Jhalak Poudel-District Programme Coordinator, Pyuthan for their extensive support of in the field. We thank Ms Nanki Kaur and Dr Simon Anderson from IIED for inputs and guidance during the study and writing up. Support of partner NGOs, namely SAHAMATI-Nawalparasi, FIRDO-Pyuthan, and MIC-RUKUM is acknowledged with appreciation. And last but not the least, we are thankful for all the organizations and people of Sukrouli, Dhungegadi and Ransi VDCs who took time out of their busy schedule to provide us with their valuable inputs and suggestions during the study. Rupantaran Nepal February, 2011
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ExECUTIVE SUMMARY
The design of the Local Adaptation Plan of Action (LAPA) for the forestry sector was commissioned by Rupantaran Nepal in Sukrouli VDC of Nawalparasi district, Dhungegadi VDC of Pyuthan District and Ransi VDC of Rukum district. The broad aim of the pilot was to explore the adaptation interventions and mechanisms in the forestry sector. Specifically, the study aimed to assess the effectiveness of adaptation interventions in the forestry sector, and to assess the institutional mechanisms to reach up and draw down resources and implement the activities of the LAPA. The purpose of the pilot was to prepare LAPAs in three distinct ecological zones and assess any constraints, assess the mechanisms to reach up and draw down, and to document the key lessons learnt from this exercise. The key steps pertaining to this study included sensitization, identifying poor and vulnerable households, facilitating the preparation of the LAPA, identifying and assessing the different mechanisms, assessing the role of key and boundary actors and mainstreaming the LAPA into the local planning process. Two different modalities were adopted during the LAPA process: Community Adaptation Plans of Action (CAPA) to LAPA and a direct LAPA. The CAPA, which was prepared at Community Forest User Group (CFUG) level and then synthesized into the Village Development Committee (VDC) level LAPA, was more effective than developing the LAPA directly, which was only prepared at VDC level. This was because the chances of duplication of activities were nullified and the activities were more realistic and needs based. Communities prepare plans on their own in a CAPA to LAPA modality, showing enhanced ownership within each community. CFUGs were identified as the most effective way to reach the climate vulnerable. Private, public and civil institutions can reach the poor through Village Forestry Coordination Committees (VFCCs), who often have a direct link to poor and vulnerable households. VFCCs deliver the activities to the identified poor and vulnerable either directly or through the CFUGs. Adaptation plans drawn up by CFUGs are shared with the citizen forum (of VDC) and forwarded to the VFCC. The individual CAPAs are synthesised by the VFCCs to form a VDC level LAPA. The VFCC shares the plan with the VDC and Ilaka, and after approval from the VDC council they submit it to the District Forestry Coordination Committee (DFCC). In order to develop the district level LAPA, the DFCC, Activity Management Committee (AMC) and the Forestry Committee compile all the VDC level LAPA, prioritize the activities, set the implementation modality and incorporate the activities into the annual planning cycle of government and non government agencies. The findings from this pilot showed that the LAPA should be mainstreamed into the planning cycle of VDC and DDC for its sustainability. The financial plans are prepared by the communities and financial resources are pulled down from the district. In the normal scenario, funds from the central level are channelled through an established basket fund from the DFCC to VFCCs for effective implementation of the LAPA.
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In places where the DFCC or VFCC does not exist, the fund from the central level should be channelled through the DDC/VDC, or through NGOs. In the case of conflict areas, funds should flow through a multi stakeholder forum at the district and village level. A total of 20 technical interventions were identified and grouped into four broad categories: 1. enhancing ecosystem resilience that increase adaptive capacity, 2. enhancing community resilience, 3. knowledge management and climate foresight, and 4. social protection and safety nets. These interventions are classified according to the three ecological zones: the high mountains, the mid hills and the lowlands of the Terai. The roles of key stakeholders in the LAPA preparation and implementation were also identified and assessed. CFUGs at the community level, VFCCs at the VDC level and the DFCC at district level were found to be the most viable institutions for LAPA preparation. These are all are resource based, viable, locally accepted and have vertical and horizontal linkages with stakeholders. Amongst them, the VFCCs are regarded as the most important institution for LAPA preparation. Where VFCCs and DFCCs are not functional, other bodies that can be used are the VDCs, DDC, or a multi-stakeholder forum to prepare and implement the LAPA. The major constraints during the LAPA preparation were: inclusion of people who are not included in any institutions, ensuring the fund flow continues even in a conflict situation, representing the poor and vulnerable in preparing the plans, and mainstreaming the LAPA into the planning of the DDC and other stakeholders (or boundary partners). Key lessons learnt during the LAPA preparation include: Sensitization of stakeholders and involvement from the initial phase help to create an enabling environment to carry out climate change related activities, building local ownership and bringing in support for delivering the programme. LAPAs should be commissioned through resourceful and viable institutions which have a wide geological coverage in addition to vertical and horizontal linkages to other stakeholders. VFCCs at village level and the DFCC at district level have been identified as the multistakeholder forum that is most viable to prepare and implement LAPAs for the forestry sector, as well as in other sectors. Establishing a basket fund and emergency fund at village and district level is a good initiative; fund disbursement will be flexible enough to provide immediate financial support to the poor and vulnerable who will be better placed to access them. Leveraging financial and technical resources from various government line agencies and local government was found to be one of the main principles for the sustainability of the programme. Income source of climate vulnerable households and groups should be diversified to increase their adaptive capacity. A clear policy at the local level is required that will allocate a certain percentage of funds to address climate change issues. It has been observed that despite the allocation, the influence of some groups can divert the funds to non prioritized areas. A central level policy or directive is required to commission the LAPA at district level. The Ministry of Environment (MoE) should prepare this policy with support from other government line agencies.
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Key recommendations for LAPA preparation and implementation include: Identification of climate change vulnerable households is the most important step in designing a LAPA. These can be identified by using Climate Change Sensitive Participatory Well Being Ranking (PWBR) tools. The participation of identified poor and vulnerable households and communities during the CAPA preparation should be ensured. Activities identified by them to increase their adaptive capacity should be well documented and prioritized during the CAPA preparation. Members of VFCCs should be capacitated to prepare and implement the LAPA. Once they are capacitated, they can use the available funds (either self generated or through a basket fund) to prepare CAPAs at community level. Representatives from stakeholders of different organizations play a greater role in the drawing down of resources. Public, private and civil society organization representation in the service delivery mechanisms makes the reach up and draw down process more simple. The communities and households that are not organized in any forestry management system should be linked to an institution. This part is not explicitly mentioned during the LAPA preparation. One option could be the formulation of a multi stakeholder forum (VDC, local NGOs, private institutions) that can address the needs of excluded households and communities.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY TAbLE Of CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 Background 1.2 Rationale 1.3 Study Objectives
2.
METHODOLOGY 159 2.1 Activities 159 2.2 Approaches and Tools 160 2.2.1 Review and Assess the Existing Tools 160 2.2.2 Review and Assess the Community Adaptation Planning Process 160 2.2.3 Reviewing and Assessing the Role of Local Institutions 160 2.2.4 LAPA Preparation 160 2.2.5 Integrating LAPA in Local Development Planning Cycle 161 2.2.6 Assessing and Identifying Finance and Service Delivery Mechanism 161 2.2.7 Assessing the Existing Forestry Interventions 161 2.2.8 Synthesizing the adaptation Priorities of CAPA and LAPA 161 2.2.9 Cross Cutting: Monitoring and Evaluation 162 2.2.10 Cross Cutting: Cost Benefit Analysis 162 2.2.11 Reporting 162 2.3 Pilot Area- Geographic and Socioeconomic Overview 162 fINDINGS AND ANALYSIS 3.1 Review and Update of Tools 3.1.1 Tools of Vulnerability Assessment: 3.1.2 Review of CAPA Process and Tools 3.2 Assessing the Roles of Forestry Institutions in Integrating CCA into Local Development Planning 3.2.1 Assessing Roles of Existing Institutions 3.2.2 LAPA Preparation 3.2.3 Integration of LAPA into Local Development Planning 3.3 Assessing the Appropriate Financial and Service Delivery Mechanism to Reach the Most Vulnerable. 164 164 164 166 167 167 168 170 171
3.
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Identifying Specific Interventions to Build Adaptive Capacity of the most vulnerable Communities in Midwest Region. 3.4.1 Monitoring and Evaluation 3.5 Identifying and Addressing Barriers and Gaps 3.6 Learning 4. CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION 4.1 Conclusion 4.2 Recommendations
3.4
173 174 175 175 178 178 180 182 183 187
REfERENCES Annex 1: Adaptation interventions Annex 2: Logical Framework List of Pictures Picture 1: Overall Vulnerability Map of Nepal (MoE/NAPA 2010) List of figures Figure 1: LAPA preparation process Figure 2: Mechanism to reach-up the plan Figure 3: Fund flow mechanism as identified during scoping Figure 4: A five year adaptation plan as presented by CFUGs during consultation meeting at Dhungegadi VDC. List of Tables Table 1: Consultation with different stakeholders at different levels Table 2: Tools used during LAPA preparation Table 3: Description of three piloting sites under different parameters Table 4: Gaps identified in the indicators are given in the table below Table 5: Shifting of Households Table 6: Roles of Institutions Table 7: Illustrated example of LAPA Dhungegadi Table 8: Lists of interventions
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INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background
Climate Change (CC) has become a global concern and Nepal needs to be prepared to face the impacts on its undulating landscape and geographical fragility together with the countrys rising poverty. Climate change effects include increased and variable temperature patterns and changes in precipitation patterns, which in turn will impact a number of sectors and livelihoods across Nepal. Poor people, excluded groups and marginalised communities are highly vulnerable to these effects and a national integrated effort is needed to address climate change adaptation and mitigation activities. The Government of Nepal (GoN) aims to address climate-induced vulnerability and has initiated the process of adaptation planning, which takes the form of the National Adaptation Programmes of Action (NAPA). However, the GoN realised that this process needs to reflect the diverse ecological and planning zones in Nepal thus proposed the concept of Local Adaptation Plan of Action (LAPA). This pilot contributes to understanding what a LAPA would entail. Among the six thematic areas set by the NAPA process in Nepal, Forest and Biodiversity is one of the crucial themes to be addressed under climate change adaptation. Nepal comprises 29% of total land area covered by forests (HMGN/MoFSC 2002) and about 40% of the total population of Nepal are involved in community based forest management systems. About 14,500 Community Forest User Groups (CFUGs) are managing 1.25 million hectares of National Forest (Department of Forest 2010). CFUGS are resource-based institutions and many have already contributed to reduced vulnerability and improved livelihoods, they also have a huge potential to contribute to mitigation and adaptation simultaneously as a co-benefit of each intervention. Within the forest and biodiversity sector, there are a number of initiatives that can contribute to the design of the LAPA or what a LAPA can build on. Rupantaran Nepal (RN) has specifically focused on one such approach adopted by the Livelihoods and Forestry Programme (LFP) - namely the Community Adaptation Plans of Action (CAPA) process. CAPA is an adaptation plan prepared by CFUGs. CAPA is considered as the best practice to ensure the bottom up planning process because the plans are prepared and prioritized by the communities themselves. RN is an independent, not-for-profit company founded by a group of development professionals and social activists. Its broad aim is to use the long-term development experience of likeminded forestry sector professionals and contribute to the national
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development goals. The key working areas of the organisation are social empowerment, economic development and empowerment, natural resource management and climate change.
and mainstreaming the plan into the development planning process so that its sustainability can be ensured. In this regard, the GoN specifically asked for the design of the LAPA as an implementation modality which will capture local conditions. Based on this, Rupantaran Nepals (and other pilots) objective was to identify effective local adaptation interventions and to identify the mechanism for bottom-up planning to ensure the reach up of plans and draw down of resources that will cater to local adaptation needs.
1.2 Rationale
There is ample ambiguity between adaptation interventions and development, largely due to the fact that climate change is very often difficult to separate from development plans, specifically in least developed countries like Nepal. Therefore a clear understanding of climate change adaptation is necessary before implementing adaptation or development projects. At the same time, a broader understanding of sectoral planning and monitoring systems is required that can easily feed in to the tools and mechanisms for adaptation design and piloting. LFP has delivered several adaptation interventions that target the poor and vulnerable in the pilot sites; they have supported the development of 978 CAPAs in 2,292 community groups covering 223,963 households in 512 VDCs of Nepal. Most of the CAPAs have been endorsed by an assembly of each community and are now in the process of implementation. There still remains an issue of up-scaling
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METHODOLOGY
A literature review was conducted to understand climate induced changes in the forestry sector. Some of the reviewed literatures included GoN/MoE 2010a, GoN/MoE 2009, District Forestry Sector Plan of Pyuthan, LFP 2009, Regmi and Subedi 2010, Regmi et al. 2010 & prepared CAPAs. Initial scoping field visits and interactions were conducted to identify study sites & variables that could contribute to the design of a LAPA.
2.1 Activities
The following activities were carried out under each objective. Objective 1: Review and update tools for climate change vulnerability assessment Existing vulnerability assessment and monitoring and evaluation tools reviewed and assessed in the context of climate change. Specific tools reviewed were Participatory Well Being Ranking (PWBR) tool and Forest User Groups (FUG) categorization tool. Existing community adaptation planning process reviewed to assess its effectiveness. Objective 2: Assess the role of forestry institutions in integrating climate change adaptation into development planning Assessed the role of local institutions vis-a-vis climate change adaptation planning. Forestry institutions reviewed included: CFUG; PILMG; VFCC; DFCC; MoFSC Line Agency (DFO & DSCO). Broader planning institutions included: VDC; DDC; MoA Line Agency (DADO & DLSO); MoH Line Agency (DHO). Planning facilitated by local NGOs and cooperatives was also assessed. LAPA Preparation Integrating LAPA into local development planning cycle. Objective 3: Assess the appropriate finance and service delivery mechanisms to reach the most vulnerable. Assessed and identified the most appropriate finance and service delivery mechanisms that will reach the climate vulnerable. Objective 4: Identify specific interventions to build the adaptive capacity of the most vulnerable communities in the Midwest region. Assessed the relevance of existing forestry interventions in enhancing adaptive capacity Synthesised adaptation priorities identified by local communities while preparing the CAPA and LAPA
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District Development Committee (DDC), District Forest Office (DFO), District Forest Coordination Committee (DFCC), LFP, District Agricultural Development office (DADO), District Livestock Service Office (DLSO), District Soil Conservation Office (DSCO), representatives of political parties Village Development Committee (VDC), Village Forest Coordination Committee (VFCC), Partner NGOs, Health Posts, Range Posts, government service centres C/FUGs, Public and Institutional Land Management Groups (PILMG), Cooperatives, Local Communities (focusing on poor and vulnerable), Interest groups (Tole level committee)
2 3
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the inclusion of monitoring and evaluation indicators in CAPA/ LAPA. Prioritization of activities was based on the feasibility of the programme, the cost of the intervention and the number of beneficiaries, and how the activities addresses the climate impact. Activities that received the highest score from these criteria were chosen as the intervention in community and village level LAPAs. Cost effectiveness of the programme was assessed through a Cost Benefit Analysis. Assess and Identify Fund Flow and Service Delivery Mechanisms: the fund flow and service delivery mechanism was assessed and identified for the effective implementation of Lapa. the mechanism was also identified for the transition and critical stage. the identified mechanism focused on reaching the climate change poor and vulnerable households.
resources. A few of the communities plans can be incorporated in the annual plans of boundary actors) and government line agencies (VDC, DDC). Efforts were paid to endorse the activities through the VDC assembly and the VFCC general meeting.
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2.2.11 Reporting
The information collected during the scoping study was analyzed, the LAPA process from two different methods (CAPA to LAPA, and direct LAPA) were discussed, climate-friendly technical interventions were identified and key lessons learnt were discussed.
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Districts
Mean max and min Temp* 4937 (M-2518; F-2419) Washing away of trees due to flooding, flooding of houses, loss of lives, water logging and alteration in rainfall pattern Agriculture is main source of income besides foreign employment especially from Gulf countries found widely in this VDC VFCC, Sub Health Post, Post Office, Primary School, SAHAMATI, Sukrouli Cooperative, Clubs, Women Groups, and 11 PILMGs
Sukrouli, Nawalparasi
36oC-15 oC
2145
Dhungegadi, 5899 (M-2892; F-3007) 45 Decrease in rainfall duration, rise in temperature, increased incidence of forest fire, landslides and introduction of tropical diseases like malaria and cholera (consultation with sub health post in-charge, Dhungegadi) Main source of income is farm based in addition to which foreign employment especially from India is common. Local agriculture collection ccentre facilitates the sale of agricultural products.
24.1 oC -14.8 oC
1300
86
Pyuthan
VFCC, Sub-Health Post, Post Office, Agriculture Service Centre, Livestock Service Centre, Temporary Police Post, Primary, Lower secondary and secondary school, Sub District Level FNCCI, FIRDO, Malla Rani Youth club, Kalimati, Sharmarani, Airawati Multipurpose Cooperatives.
24.7 oC -13.8 oC
3076.1
100
2266
64
Landslides due to irregular rainfall, increased infestation of disease and pests (due to rise in temperature) in agriculture and livestock
Livestock (pig, goat, sheep, buffalo,)rearing is main source of income in this VDC, enterprises of handmade paper and weaving of bag, clothes from Allo is common.
VFCC, Sub Health Post, Primary and Secondary school, Range Post, Livestock Service Centre, MEAC Nepal, UMN, Care-CSP
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* The weather details of the piloted VDC are not available therefore the records of the corresponding districts were taken as a case. ** The population was higher in Dhungegadi VDC but the ratios of male to female were almost same in three piloted VDCs. Tharu are the major ethnic composition of Sukrouli VDC but migration from hills has made the VDC diverse in ethnicity. Magar are the major ethnic community of Dhungegadi VDC while other communities like Brahmin, Chhetri and Dalits live harmoniously in the VDC. Ransi is a mixed Magar and Dalit community. *** It takes 8 hours by bus to reach to Musikot, district headquarter, Rukum from Ghorahi, Dang. Then 3 hours drive to Chamabagar and 8 hours walk to reach to Ransi Village. Dhungegadi VDC is about 25 Km from Bhaluwang (East-West Highway) and takes about one hour by bus to reach to VDC. Similarly, blacktopped road connects Sukrouli from Bhairawaha and Nawalparasi.
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This section outlines the findings within the four objectives of the study.
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Table 4: Gaps identified in the indicators are given in the table below
Existing Criteria and Indicators Economic capital Land House Livestock Income sources Indicators to be considered to make them climate sensitive (as mentioned in literature) Location of the land and house i.e. slope, river bank, erosion susceptible area, geology (stability, types of soil and rocks) etc Rain fed or Irrigated land Effect of heat and cold on the house Livestock that depend on rangelands or CF for grazing or have alternate feeds, Availability of water to livestock Major sources of income. Farmers vulnerability towards CC. Capacity to cope with shocks and failures / climate hazards or in other words purchasing power or capitalization of assets to adapt to CC Social capital Education Health Access to social institutions that deal with climate hazards, risks and vulnerability Social network and cohesion that helps to adapt the climate change impacts Access to climate related information and media. Human capital Access to training, education, knowledge Health condition Information on climate change, its impacts and adaptation measures Experience and knowledge on adaptation activities Education was limited to academic degree. Access to knowledge on climate change adaptation and adaptation measures were lacking Health related issues were more focused on chronic types of disease and disability rather than considering climate change induced water and air borne diseases. Access and types of irrigation canal, road, electricity, communication, educational institutions, health service centres, toilets, improved cooking stoves. Types of the services were not considered Qualitative analysis was missing. Impact of CC on physical capital and assets was not considered. Distance to the river system (opportunity and threats from the river) Drinking water source and its permanence Forest types and dependence Location of these resources was not analyzed. Access and use rights of poor and marginalized communities were not properly addressed Access and use of the social assets that makes people aware of climate change were not considered.
Gaps Identified
Location of land needs to be considered along with the area. types of houses were mentioned (but previously it did not mention whether it is heat or cold sensitive) Location of the house (river banks, erosion susceptible areas etc) needs to be considered. Indicators were based on the number of livestock. Management and accessibility of grazing land, source of water for livestock etc were not considered. Existing PWBR considers source of income and ranked accordingly. Livelihood diversification and alternative sources of income were not addressed.
Physical capital Irrigation facilities, Access to health and education infrastructures Natural capital Rivers, forest and access to other natural resources
impacts of climate change. This enables communities to understand CC, its role in vulnerability analysis and helps them to be better prepared. Categorizing households into different classes is a serious and critical task and therefore cross-validation of the information after the PWBR is necessary. Cross-validation is completed through individual or group meetings of the concerned and surrounding
households, it is important for the proper execution of climate sensitive PWBR. The nine CFUGs of Dhungegadi VDC already identified poor and vulnerable households with the general PWBR tools. The updated tool was tested in nine CFUGs during the piloting. Table 5 shows the shifting of households by applying the general PWBR and then the climate sensitive PWBR.
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However, embedding is required in order to make the indicators more climate sensitive. It was realised that this tool can be used to identify climate vulnerable FUGs by incorporating the severity of hazards, climate impacts and access to services to enhance adaptive capacity.
LFP introduced CAPA preparation1 in 2009 to identify community adaptation priorities, to respond to climate change impacts, and to build the adaptive capacity of the poor and vulnerable. The CAPA process ensured the scaling out of climate change adaptation issues to the community level, and simultaneously helped in sensitizing communities towards issues on climate change. A study team reviewed the CAPA preparation process to identify gaps in the existing planning process and tools to draw out lessons to inform future actions during the LAPA preparation. The review also aimed at understanding the concerns and feedbacks regarding the CAPA process. The review identified CAPA as a timely initiative, as well as a first in the forestry sector. The tools and processes of CAPA are relatively simple, practicable and replicable, although the review recommended modifying the vulnerability assessment tools. For example, the vulnerability matrix should be revised to make it simpler. The review recommended ten out of 13 tools that are applicable during the LAPA preparation and Rupantaran Nepal followed these ten tools. Please refer to table 2 for the list of ten tools used (separate report on CAPA Review).
Climate change induced poor and vulnerable households were segregated from the updated PWBR tool. The tool was simple and it was believed that CFUGs can identify climate change induced poor and vulnerable with the facilitation of LRPs. It was observed that changing household numbers in CFUGs makes the assessment challenging. FUG Categorization tools Reviewed FUG categorization tools were used in assessing the change in terms of forest development, FUGs governance and livelihoods improvement. The Livelihoods and Forestry Programme (LFP) categorises the FUGs once every two years to assess their relative capacity. During the review it was observed that separate indicators that target the poor, excluded and vulnerable from a climate perspective are not required.
CAPA preparation process involves vulnerability assessment, identify adaptation priorities and prepare a Adaptation plan at community level.
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3.2 Assessing the Roles of Forestry Institutions in Integrating Climate Change Adaptation into Local Development Planning
In order to assess the roles of forestry institutions in integrating Climate Change Adaptation (CCA) into local development planning, a number of activities were carried out; assessing the roles of existing institutions, LAPA preparation and the integration of this into local development planning.
of the VFCC were identified to facilitate climate change adaptation: scale up the prepared CAPAs or initiate CAPA planning, synthesise and prioritise CAPAs into a single LAPA, integrate LAPA into VDC / DDC / DFO planning cycle (or have it endorsed), identify service providers to implement the prioritized activities, scale up the plans and draw down the financial resources (from GOs, NGOs, private sectors, etc) to implement the LAPA, manage and disburse financial resources so that they are accessible to the poor and vulnerable, influence district level policy on adaptation, and monitor and evaluate to ensure continued adaptive management. VFCCs can establish vertical and horizontal linkages with all stakeholders. VFCCs deliver the activities to the identified poor and vulnerable; either through the CFUGs from the established adaptation fund, or directly to the vulnerable households that are not affiliated to any groups. The VFCC was identified as the most viable institution to prepare and implement LAPAs at village level. In such cases where VFCCs are not functional, VDCs or boundary partners (NGOs working at grass root level) are the potential organizations that can carry out the function of VFCC. A multi stakeholder forum that is represented by the VDC, local government offices, local NGOs, boundary partners and local politicians should be established to carry out CCA activities in such areas. At District level: DFCC is a multi stakeholder forum formulated under the LSGA, 2055. An Activity Management Committee (AMC) is formed as a core body under the DFCC to coordinate and make immediate decisions. The DFCC facilitates coordinated planning, synthesizes the forestry sector plan and helps to incorporate plans into the annual programmes of all concerned stakeholders/ Government line agencies/NGOs, which subsequently help to endorse the plans during DDC planning. The DFCC can compile all the VDC level LAPAs and synthesize them to develop a district level LAPA (for example:
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in Nawalparasi). The DFCC can allocate programmes and funds to address climate change vulnerable households and groups, mostly through VFCC and CBOs working in the forestry sector. Where the DFCC is not present or not functioning, the DDC is the ideal institution to play a coordinating role in its place.
VFCC and DFCC can go beyond the forestry sectors and implement cross sectoral activities. DFCC and VFCC have profound roles in mainstreaming climate change in the annual plans of VDC and DDC. Poor and vulnerable communities have better access to these institutions so they can more easily participate in the decision making process. FUG, VFCC and DFCC are flexible to address CC uncertainty. A list of stakeholders, along with CFUG, VFCC and DFCC and their roles in LAPA preparation and implementation is given table 6.
Development of adaptation plan & setting up adaption fund at FUG / group level Setting up adaptation fund at VFCC with contribution from FUGs, other groups, VDCs, donors etc Vfcc, gon and ngos service providers advisory support to implement the plans monitoring by HH, FUG, VFCC and other service providers
implementation Vulnerable HHs, FUGs and other community groups access fund from CFUG/VFCCs Adaptation fund with submitting a plan - based on certain criteria
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have access to institutions it is essential to mobilize communities to establish new ones. For example, in Rangsi, where there is no institutional mechanism, the team supported the community to formulate a multi-stakeholder forum which included the participation of a local body (VDC), representatives of line agencies (DFO, DADO), a local community based organization (CFUGs) and political party representatives as advisers. Sensitising stakeholders on climate change issues is essential to ensure climate change is included in the decision-making process. Sensitisation activities included district level, village level and community level workshops and training on climate change and adaptation. Plan Preparation A number of steps were followed to prepare the LAPAs, including a vulnerability assessment, identifying adaptation options and prioritising these options. See table 7 for an example in Dhungegadi. Various tools were used during the plan preparation (refer to table 2) and two approaches were piloted during the plan preparation. In areas where community institutions are weak, a top down approach (direct LAPA preparation) was adopted. Under this approach, LAPA was prepared directly at VDC level. For example, VDC level institutions identified climate vulnerable areas and adaptation options in Ransi and Sukrouli VDCs were presented.
In areas where strong local institutions exist, a bottom up approach was adopted for LAPA preparation. Adaptation plans were prepared by community level institutions (CFUGs). This plan is shared with the citizen forum2 and forwarded to VFCC. The individual CAPAs are synthesised by the VFCCs to form a VDC level LAPA. The VFCC shares the plan with VDC and Ilaka, after approval from VDC council this is then submitted to the DFCC. Synthesisation is based on clustering of common adaptation options and prioritisation based on pair wise ranking and cost benefit analysis. The CAPA-LAPA modality can help to avoid the duplication of activities and all the past activities are comprehensively incorporated. Communities experienced ownership of the plans in the CAPA-LAPA approach, since they were the ones who prepared the CAPA. Conflicts during the implementation of activities did not occur because the plans were prepared with the participation of communities. This modality can be applied in places where community based organizations are strong, but it requires a prolonged timeframe and higher cost for the CAPA to LAPA process. The direct LAPA preparation requires less time and carries a lower economic cost. This modality can be adopted in areas where active CBOs do not exists and can be prepared with fewer participants. Therefore all the past incidents and needs
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based activities are harder to incorporate. Similarly, it can create disputes during the implementation because it has been observed that some activities are forcefully included in the plans.
plan to the DDC through the Illaka Level planning workshop. VFCC Ransi presented their plan during the District Climate Change Coordination Committee (DCCCC) meeting to incorporate the plan into the district level development agencys plan. DFO-Rukum, division engineers of the community water supply office and the LDO committed to make the LAPA top priority to integrate the plan in their upcoming planning process. In addition, CA members of Rukum mentioned that if local priorities are linked with the CA members Fund, then the priorities will be incorporated into the national level plans and policies. DDC Pyuthan made a decision in preplanning workshop (planning processes from the start) to keep CC as a crosscutting issue- whereby each sector incorporates in their plan as planning guidelines. Scaling Up Scaling up can be understood in two ways; one is the conventional geographical extension of the programmes or activities,
forestry Sector Mechanisms National Forestry Strategy National Level Work Plan Policy District Level Adaptation Plan
n n n
Develop district Level Adaptation Plan Integrate into DDC and sectoral plan Endorsed District Level Adaptation Plan through DDC council Synthesis community level adaptation plan Endorsement LAPA through VDC council Integrate plan into VDC plan and Illaka Level planning to integrate DDC plan Community level adaptation plan preparation Endorsed Annual general meeting and integrate into annual plan
n n n
Community
Citizen Forum
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the other is increasing the resilience of a particular household or community by providing support until they have substantial income for their own livelihood support. The geographical expansion of LAPA is planned to be carried out by the Ministry of Environment following the implementation of the NAPA. Efforts should be made to increase the resilience of vulnerable households by providing continuous support. This is possible with the coordinated planning of CBOs, VDC, DDC, NGOs and other civil, public and private institutions. So far, this component has been neglected, even from the policy level perspective.
resourceful institutions, CFUGs can invest their own resources in adaptation plans. However, most of the financial resources are drawn from the district level to carry out climate change adaptation activities. Currently, there are different channels that are being used to channel the funds (diagram 2). The funds from the central level should be channelled through an established basket fund from the DFCC to VFCC for effective implementation of the LAPA. Alternatively, the funding can be channelled directly to the VFCC from the central level. In places where DFCC or VFCC do not exist, the central level funds should be channelled through the DDC/VDC or through the NGOs.
3.3 Assessing the Appropriate Financial and Service Delivery Mechanism to Reach the Most Vulnerable.
Financial plans are prepared by the communities and the financial resources are drawn down from the district level. As
Ransi communities rank the GTZRehabilitation and Reintegration Programme top among the development programmes because GTZ has easy processes, makes quick decisions, goes into the actions and delivers programmes according to local needs.
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National
MoFSC/DoF FECOFUN/ NGOs RDF DFCC/AMC Forestry committee DFO, NGO, FECOFUN Illaka, Range Post Forestry sector coordination
District
District Forest Sector Plan(DFSP)/ District Five Year Operation Plan(DFOP) DFCC Fund/ District Forest Development Fund(DFDF) VDC level forestry/ adaptation plan Annual Plan VFCC fund CFUG Categorization
District Level Coordination and cross sectoral linkage Resource Pulling and Generate Leverage Strategies Decision -making Policy Feedback M and E to ensure effectiveness? Development and implementation of LAPA-VFCC Sectoral Linkage at local government, stakeholder Resource Pulling and leverage M and E of Programme Facilitate LAPA preparation SHs Capacity Building Ensuring Fund M and E Implementation LAPA Generate ResourcesM and E Facilitate LAPA preparation Capacity Building
Village
VFCC
NGOs
Community
CFUG - OP and Constitution Annual Plan FUG fund Pro poorstrategy PWBR Public Auditing
It is easier to monitor fund flow mechanisms that have shorter channels. The vulnerability and socio-economic contexts are different in the three ecological regions (Terai, Mid Hills and High Hills) therefore the finance delivery mechanism should be flexible according to the context and nature of each programme. Nepal is facing constant political changes and each change has a profound impact on the finance delivery mechanism. As there is an absence of elected and publicly accountable representatives in the VDC and DDC, there is a high level of influence from politicians and other elite groups, so funds might be channelled to other non beneficial sectors, regardless of priorities. In the case of conflict, funds should flow through a multi stakeholder forum at district and
village level. the multi stakeholder concept was coined during the VFCC Dhungegadi meeting, the forum should consist of representatives from government offices, line agencies, politicians, and community members (for example Dhungegadi VFCC). The NAPA set out provisions to spend at least 80% of the total resources at the community level (GoN/MoE 2010). To achieve the above goal, the funding mechanism should be efficient, simple, avoid any lengthy processes and more importantly, should be accessible to the poor and vulnerable. The diagram given below (Diagram 3) provides the fund flow mechanism from the centre to the community level. For the effective implementation of the LAPA and to ensure the funds reach the poor and vulnerable, the fund flow should follow the bold lines in the diagram. The most efficient and effective means of fund flow (as given by bold lines) are proposed by the Dhungegadi VFCC members, DDC Pyuthan and concerned stakeholders. Lfp used a different finance delivery model
Dhungegadi VFCC chairman and members stressed that the fund should flow via short channels. The existing mechanism for fund flow requires high administrative and transaction costs, which can be minimized by short fund flow channels.
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according to the local context. the model carries a lower transaction cost that was proven by Lfp analysis; moreover it was institutionalised and recognised by local people and groups. the model can be replicated to deliver the adaptation programme. the financial plan was prepared at grass roots level, with the facilitation of local partners. rn adopted the finance delivery model of Lfp during the piloting and found it was appropriate. Public hearing and auditing must be conducted to ensure the effective utilization of resources, increase accountability and maintain the transparency of the programme and projects. The public auditing process practiced in the CFUGs of Dhungegadi VDC was found to be very effective. The service delivery mechanism is almost same as that of the financial delivery mechanism; the DFCC delivers services to communities and poor and vulnerable households through VFCC and CFUGs. The mechanism also acts as a pool
to transfer information from local to district level and vice versa, and occasionally up to the national level. The proposed mechanism ensures coordinated planning at the district and village level, as well as synergy development in a cross-sectoral programme.
3.4 Identifying Specific Interventions to Build the Adaptive Capacity of the most vulnerable Communities in Midwest Region.
Impacts of Climate Change adaptation interventions were studied and analysed critically in the piloting sites. The lists of interventions given in table 8 were drawn from practices in the field (practiced by LFP), from relevant literature (NAPA 2010), and as per the priority interventions listed by communities in their CAPA and LAPA. The interventions listed should be cost effective, needs based, flexible, ensure an equitable share of the benefit to the poor and vulnerable, and moreover
Establishment of community Weather Monitoring and information dissemination Centre (All) Establishment of Early warning system (All) Information and Resource Centre Development and Strengthening (All)
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address the adaptation strategies. Livelihood opportunities for the poor and vulnerable should be diversified by providing alternative income generation activities. Allocating a small area within the community forest (or similar areas) to cultivate NTFPs or cash crops will help to increase their income. Income generating activities such as bee keeping, livestock and poultry farming, providing them with training on forest based micro enterprises and transferring them to skilful entrepreneurs will help to increase the adaptive capacity rather than providing them with financial support. Broadly four different categories of climate friendly technical interventions are identified; details of these interventions are given in annex 1.
format was taken as a baseline because it was widely used by different stakeholders and governed by policies. It was realized that the format itself was exploratory and useful to assess the effectiveness and efficiency of CFUGs in service delivery and resource management. However, more attention is needed to make the format climate friendly with due consideration to be paid to the importance of the existing process and the capacity of the user group in this regard. The logical framework analysis tool was also used and tested in the field but it is realized that the process should be iterative and only needs to be facilitated in the initial phases (annex 2). These tools are all effective and used in measuring the effectiveness of the process and programme. The process and tools should be flexible enough and context specific, based on local knowledge and practice. In Pyuthan the CFUG was encouraged to consider how to assess change. They outlined a 5 year plan for floods and were asked how this would be assessed at years 1, 3 & 5 if the investment were delivering adaptation/ reducing their vulnerability to CC impacts. They came up with the following plan:
Figure 4: A five year adaptation plan as presented by CfUGs during consultation meeting at Dhungegadi VDC
Year 1 Outcomes RISH REDUCTION (flood wall constructed, Indicator-Less harm to assets
Year 3 VULNERAbILITY REDUCTION (IGA setup - Indicator - better purchasing power-ability to buy medicine to address health impact of flood
Year 5 RESILIENCE HH will not suffer from adverse health impact even if there is a flood
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plan, but they are often administered without any form of consultation. Sometimes it is understood that VFCC and DFCC are parallel to VDC and DDC and therefore district level decision makers are reluctant towards the institutionalization of VFCC and DFCC. The roles and functions of the development committee and forest coordination committee are quite different. The forest coordination committees are formed under their respective development committee and facilitate the integration of services to the village level service providers and deliver to the forest user groups. Most of the vulnerable communities and households are not organized in any local institution, which causes difficulty in reaching them. A local level initiative by VDC and CBOs is needed to incorporate them into existing organizations.
3.6 Learning
Key learning during the scoping and piloting study is given below. Sensitization to stakeholders and the involvement from the initial phase helps in creating an enabling environment to carry out climate change related activities, building local ownership and receiving support in delivering the programme. Sensitization helps to incorporate climate change adaptation activities into the decision making process (of VDC, DDC, NGOs etc) and furthermore helps to foresee future impacts of climate change and be better prepared. It is hard to reach groups and households who are not organized under any of the institutions. They are often the poorest of the poor so should be included in forestry institutions and their basic needs incorporated into the LAPA with high priority.
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Tools developed by LFP to prepare the LAPA are comprehensive, but the skill of the facilitator determines the effectiveness. Facilitators must be acquainted with the training to prepare a good LAPA. The CAPA prepared at community level and later synthesized into VDC level LAPA is more effective compared to preparing a LAPA directly at the village level. Communities prepare plans on their own in the CAPA to LAPA modality, showing an enhanced feeling of ownership amongst themselves. In both processes, reaching the poor and vulnerable and addressing climate change adaptation interventions should be ensured. The LAPA should commission resourceful and viable institutions which have a wide geological coverage as well as vertical and horizontal linkages. Institutions with such profiles can influence local decision makers for the effective implementation of the LAPA. Being a cross sector theme, the LAPA should adopt a multi stakeholder approach. VFCC at village level and DFCC at district level have been identified for the multi stakeholder forum; they are the most viable to prepare and implement LAPAs for the forestry sector, as well as other sectors too. In places where VFCC does not exist or is not functional, a multi stakeholder forum should be formulated under the VDC to carry out the LAPA. Service providers should facilitate in the LAPA preparation. Groups which have a good plan is a first step to scaling up. An institutional mechanism is also important in scaling up the LAPA. However groups should also be locally acceptable, have influential capacity to integrate the plan into the local planning process and ensure financial support and technical services. CFUGs and VFCC can provide this institutional mechanism to scale up the LAPA.
Establishment of a basket fund and emergency fund at village and district level is a good initiative. The fund disbursement is flexible enough to provide immediate financial support to poor and vulnerable people and enable communities to better access them. VFCCs have limited human resources and require the skill to prepare and implement the LAPA, as well as to disburse the fund. VFCC members should be provided with relevant training (financial and accounting, human resources, front desk, administration) to perform the assigned task. Differentiating between normal development practices and adaptation activities to the changing climate is very important, but it is challenging. The financial delivery mechanism should be flexible enough to address the immediate and prioritised needs of poor and vulnerable communities so that different mechanisms should be practiced while implementing the LAPA according to the local context and political situation of the country. Leveraging financial and technical resources from various government line agencies and local government has been considered one of the main principles for the sustainability of the programme. The sustainability of the programme exists only if the local, district and national level institutions are mobilised and plans are mainstreamed. Incorporating an adaptation plan in the CF constitution and operational Plan, VDC plan and DDC plan and the concept of mobilising key stakeholders such as DFO, DDC, and VDC can bring sustainability to the programme. Small scale adaptation projects that the community can manage by themselves using local resources and local knowledge are found to be more
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effective. These adaptation projects need to be promoted and strengthened in future LAPAs. The income source of climate vulnerable households and groups should be diversified to increase their adaptive capacity. The allocation of land for farming NTFPs/MAPs/Cash Crops, bee keeping, goat exchange programmes, fisheries, livestock etc are livelihood diversification options that that can be adopted with very little financial support. The existing PWBR tool was updated with climate sensitive criteria and indicators to identify the poor and vulnerable in climate vulnerable regions. It demonstrates that it is effective when the existing tools are updated with
climate sensitive indicators rather than administering the current one. Cost Benefit Analysis (CBA) is an effective tool to prioritize activities, plan them according to the budget and provide options based on the available resources. A central level policy or directive is required to commission the LAPA at district level. MoE should prepare this policy and other government line agencies should agree to providing support. A clear policy at the local level is required that will allocate a certain percentage of funds to address climate change adaptation for communities. It has been observed that despite the allocation, the influence of some groups can divert the fund to non prioritized areas.
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4.1 Conclusion
Rupantaran Nepal, in collaboration with Livelihoods and Forestry Programme, initiated the scoping study and pilot for Local Adaptation Plans of Action in the Midwest region. The funding for this was provided by the DFID CADP-N. Three VDCs, each from distinct ecological zones were selected for piloting, with the forestry sector as an entry point. The CAPA was prepared at CFUG level and later synthesized to VDC level LAPA in Dhungegadi VDC, whereas the LAPA at VDC level was prepared directly at VDC level in Sukrouli and Ransi. This emphasised that LAPA preparation is not a mechanical process, but should be site and context specific. Rupantaran Nepal piloted the CAPA and LAPA preparation at Dhungegadi VDC and the conclusions drawn below are based on the experiences gained during the LAPA preparation at Dhungegadi VDC, with forests and biodiversity as a thematic area. Key processes and steps carried out during the preparation of VDC level LAPA (at Dhungegadi VDC) are outlined as follows: a) Sensitization: Rural communities, village and district level stakeholders were sensitized on the issues of climate change, its anticipated impacts and adaptation measures. Sensitization was helpful during CAPA and LAPA preparation because participants of all levels showed interest during plan preparation. b) Vulnerability Assessment: Climate sensitive criteria and indicators were incorporated into the existing Participatory Well Being Ranking (PWBR) to identify the households that are vulnerable to climate change. c) CAPA preparation: The tools and processes prepared by LFP were adopted during the CAPA preparation. Two to three day group meetings were organized in each CFUG to prepare the CAPA. Out of the 13 different tools given, the adopted tools included timeline, seasonal calendar, hazard maps, identification of households and communities in climate vulnerable areas, sectoral and asset impact analysis, identification and prioritization of adaptive measures, institutional mapping, action plans and monitoring and evaluation to measure the adaptive capacity. These tools were applied either unchanged or with slight modifications to ensure they were climate sensitive. d) LAPA preparation: The LAPA was prepared by synthesizing the prepared CAPA. A consultation meeting was held with representatives of VFCC and CFUGs, LFP Pyuthan staff and RN staff as participants. Compilation was done in the same forum to ensure their ownership on the prepared LAPA. A Cost Benefit Analysis was tested during the LAPA preparation to assess the effectiveness among the prioritized programmes. VFCC Pyuthan
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submitted the LAPA to the VDC council and it was approved after a multistakeholder consultation. Addressing the prioritized activities and the sustainability of plans: Climate change adaptation activities enlisted in the LAPA should be integrated in the VDC and DDC plans. These prioritized activities should be incorporated into the plans of other stakeholders and supporting organizations. A basket fund established at village (VFCC) and district level (DFCC) will provide immediate financial support in emergency cases. As CFUGs are a resourcebased organisation, they can mobilize its internal resource to carry out adaptation activities. The proactive participation of CFUGs is necessary to develop and implement the plans effectively. Regular review and reflection meetings should be organized to assess the development of implemented activities. Local technologies should be promoted to address climate change adaptation issues where applicable. Utilization of existing institutions will be effective in delivering adaptation activities. This will reduce the cost and time and create ease in reaching the poor and vulnerable. These activities will ensure the sustainability of the LAPA implementation. Identifying Key Actors and their Roles: Key actors were identified during the CAPA and LAPA preparation. Their roles were identified during the consultation with concerned actors. Three tiers were identified: community level, VDC level and district level. Key actors and their roles are identified as follows: a) CFUG (community level): CFUG are community level organisations which prepare and implement the plans, ensure the programme reaches the poor and vulnerable, and carried out monitoring and evaluation activities. CFUGs can consult with vulnerable communities to
ensure their needs in the adaption plan. b) Cooperatives, Agro vets (VDC level): These are addressed by private institutions that deliver the financial services, provide technical support and buy back guarantee for products. c) VFCC (VDC level): VFCC are involved in sensitization, local level policy formulation, scaling up the LAPA and integrating them into the annual plans of VDC, disseminating findings with the district level policy makers, DDC and district level NGOs, drawing down the technical and financial resources, synthesizing the CAPA to prepare VDC level LAPA, fund disbursement to the poor and vulnerable via CFUGs, and monitoring and evaluation. It will be difficult for VFCC members to manage the LAPA activities with their current capability so they should be capacitated with administration and accountant training to carry out the functions and roles. d) Local NGOs (VDC level): They capacitate VFCC and CFUGs to prepare plans and create an enabling environment, horizontal linkage with service providers, and ensuring the proper utilization of fund and reach to the poor and vulnerable. e) Range Posts, DADO, DLSO, HP (VDC level): These government organizations can support the integration of the identified activities in the annual programme of the district, provide technical support, and carry out M&E activities. f ) DFCC (district level): The role of the DFCC is crucial in coordinating planning and mainstreaming, incorporating climate change related activities and interventions during planning, policies and strategy development, capacity building, M&E (Joint monitoring) and policy feedback. g) Service Providers (district level): NGOs are the identified service providers that can
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assist in preparing plans and allocating activities to communities via local level NGOs. They are also responsible for monitoring and evaluation of ongoing activities. LFP also acts as a district level service provider who will disburse funds and ensure the proper utilization of resources by regular monitoring. LFP is a pioneer in developing CAPAs and LAPAs in the district and is involved in capacity building and facilitation, implementation of plans and activities and moreover diffusion of learning to replicate and scale up to the national level. h) DFO (district level): District Forest Office governs the DFCC and VFCC. DFO endorses the plan, helps to integrate and incorporate the climate change related activities into the district level stakeholders annual plan, ensures the implementation of plans and policies and carries out M&E through Ilaka and range posts. Policy and Institutional Reform: as the napa has already been approved by the government of nepal, the prepared Lapa has to fit according to the napas structure. therefore the usefulness of the prepared Lapa can be influenced by the governments policies.
2.
3.
4.
4.2 Recommendations
A set of interventions are listed in Climate Friendly Technical Interventions, which are the recommended interventions. Along with these, the following recommendations are drawn from the pilot. 1. Sensitization on impacts of climate change should be organized for community to district level stakeholders and decision makers, in order to develop their capacity to work with the existing and future climate change effects. Sensitization to VFCC, VFCC, VDC and DDC members enables them
5.
to incorporate climate change related activities into planning cycles and use climate foresight in decision making processes for the long run. Identifying poor and vulnerable households and communities in climate vulnerable areas is the most important step in designing a LAPA, which can be identified using Climate Sensitive PWBR tools. The updated tool has been prepared by Rupantaran Nepal and can be used with slight modifications according to space and time. The Climate Sensitive PWBR tool assesses vulnerability based on five assets and assesses the services that are available at VDC, local and district level. The participation of identified poor and vulnerable households and communities during CAPA preparation should be ensured. Activities identified by them to increase their adaptive capacity should be well documented and prioritized during CAPA preparation. Their access to available services should be ensured to cope with the expected climatic hazards. The policies (of CF, VFCC, VDC) should address the need of the poor and vulnerable to increase their resilience. Poor and vulnerable households have limited income generating opportunities. Their livelihood opportunities should be diversified by engaging them in income generating activities. This can be achieved by establishing forest based micro enterprises, allocating some areas of CF or LF for the cultivation of NTFPs, MAPs and high value crops and linking the products to the market. The activities that needs to be addressed immediately can be identified through cost benefit analysis and multi criteria matrix. VFCC is the potential VDC level institution to prepare and implement the LAPA. Members of VFCC should be capacitated to prepare and implement this. Once they are capacitated, they can use the available funds (either self generated or through a basket fund) to prepare the
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CAPA at community level. Communities should feel the necessity of plans that can help them cope with and adapt to the impacts of climate change. Once the community members and VDC secretaries are sensitized, CF or VDC can use their internal resource for CAPA or LAPA preparation. Some VDCs of Pyuthan district (Udaypurkot and Bangesal VDCs) have already allocated Rs 50,000 each to prepare a village level LAPA, a good indication of upscaling. 6. VFCCs are responsible for scaling out the plan and drawing down the technical and financial resources. As the NAPA has already been approved, the VFCC in most of the districts can take responsibility for preparing the LAPA. The current capability of VFCC members restricts them in handling big amounts (above 1 million rupees) and makes it equally hard for them to implement activities. Therefore they should be trained in accounting, administration, recordkeeping and coordination. The provision of recruiting staff and hiring consulting services for VFCC should be included in the plans. VFCC should be capacitated to advocate at the district level to amend certain clauses in the policies that restrict them from implementing the LAPA. 7. Representatives of stakeholders from different organisations play a key role in scaling up and drawing down resources. Public, civil and private organizations representation in service delivery mechanisms makes the scaling up and drawing down process simple. To keep to the multidisciplinary nature of climate change adaptation, coordination among the government and other organizations should be mandatory. 8. DFOs, DFCC and DDC members should know about the issues of climate change. Similarly, district level stakeholders should include climate foresight in their annual planning cycles and coordinate with DDC, DFCC and DFO to mainstream
the activities. Once a LAPA has been prepared and sent up to the DFCC or DDC for approval, these institutions can replicate the process of LAPA preparation in other sites. Similarly, district level decision making institutions can ensure the continuous support for VFCCs that have already prepared LAPA to upscale their activities. 9. Preparation of monitoring and evaluation (a logical framework) based on the intervention and thematic area could set baseline information about the poor and vulnerable. Similarly adaptive capacity and existing vulnerability could be analyzed by comparing now and then, using participatory tools like a vulnerability matrix and graph of vulnerability versus resilience for particular types of hazard. Communities should prepare a monitoring and evaluation framework to assess their increase in adaptive capacity. 10. The assessment tools mostly explore human vulnerability and pay little attention to flora and fauna. A new tool that assesses the vulnerability of natural resources is recommended. The new tool should assess the loss of biodiversity (flora and fauna) and the geographical shrinkage of habitat due to increased temperature, over exploitation, etc. 11. The communities and households that are not organized in any forestry management system should be included in forestry institutions. This part is not explicitly mentioned during the LAPA preparation. One option could be the formulation of a multi stakeholder forum (VDC, local NGOs, private institutions) that can address the needs of excluded households and communities. 12. Government should subsidise community based enterprises for their sustainability by giving tax holidays during the initial period. These micro enterprises are hard to run without government support which can be achieved by developing favourable plans and policies.
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REFERENCES
DDc pyuthan, 2009. District Forestry Sector Plan of Pyuthan. District Development committee, pyuthan. unpublished report. Dof, 2010. Country Report Nepal: Status of Forestry in Nepal, A Synopsis Report. government of nepal / ministry of forest and soil conservation / Department of forests. gon/moe, 2009. National Climate Change Policy; Draft. government of nepal/ministry of environment. gon/moe, 2010. National Adaptation Plan of Action for Climate Change. government of nepal / ministry of environment. hmgn/mfsc, 2002. Nepal Biodiversity Strategy. ministry of forest and soil conservation. Lfp, 2009. Impact of Climate Change on Forestry and Livelihood: Issues and Options for Nepal. Livelihoods and forestry programme, Kathmandu, nepal. regmi b.r. & subedi r., 2010. Mainstreaming Climate Change Adaptation through Community Based Planning Concept, Process and Tools. uK aid/Lfp. regmi b.r., morcrette a., paudyal a., bastakoti r. & pradhan s., 2010. Participatory Tools and Techniques for Assessing Climate Change Impact and Exploring Adaptation Options. DfiD/ Lfp.
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ANNEx 1:
ADAPTATION INTERVENTIONS
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5. Conservation and Plantation of Riverine forest along Riverside (Terai): flooding and drought caused by climate change has destroyed riverine forests (napa forest and biodiversity thematic working group 2010). management of riverine forest helps to reduce the deposition of sedimentation, control flooding and increase access to forest resources.
Locals of Nadiya tole of Sukrauli VDC say after managing the forest, the river rarely enters the village and now we are safe.
6. High Altitude Range Land Conservation (Mountains): the habitat and altitudinal range of high altitude flora and fauna has been shrinking due to prolonged drought in autumn and winter (napa tWg fbD 2010). managing these highland habitats in collaboration with indigenous and local people helps to conserve the habitat, and opens new arenas for income generating activities (cultivation and conservation of high valued ntfps, management of grasslands for grazing etc). Enhancing Communities Resilience 1. Promotion of NTFPs/MAPs/Cash crops in barren areas (All): fug/ piLmg can allocate some areas within the community forest, leasehold forest or public land to poor and vulnerable communities. non timber forest products/ medicinal and aromatic plants/ cash crops can be planted in those areas to generate income. this would help to diversify income sources, provides off-farm income generation opportunities, increase
access to natural resources for poor and vulnerable, foster and proper use of unused land. this intervention can be up scaled in all ecological regions. 2. Income Generating Activities Support (All): poor and vulnerable communities have minimum chances of income generating activities and are more susceptible to climate change impacts. identification of income generating activities on a needs basis will help to alleviate poverty and enhance adaptation to climate change impacts. Providing the poor and vulnerable with training on forest based micro enterprises and transferring them to skilful entrepreneurs will help to increase adaptative capacity rather than providing them with financial support.
Focussing on the poor and vulnerable, Rupantaran Nepal has supported bee keeping and ginger plantations in Dhungegadi VDC.
3. Small Scale Enterprise Development (All): small scale enterprises will help improve livelihoods and support diversification of livelihood options. this can be promoted both at individual and community level. the enterprises can be either forest based or non forest based. allo weaving, bamboo crafting, small furniture, chiuri (Diploknema butyracea) processing and bee keeping are found to be effective and sustainable in the Lfp midwest areas. Handmade paper was established with the support of LFP in Setecharpate CFUGs of Ransi VDC, providing additional employment for ten poor and vulnerable households.
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4. Revolving Fund Establishment and mobilization (All): in order to provide loans and grants to the poor and vulnerable, fugs established the revolving fund within cfugs as a separate fund. in the piloting sites almost all fugs had established such a fund and were providing loans to vulnerable households, which resulted in better access to credit by the poor and vulnerable. on an annual basis fugs are adding a certain percentage of funds from their annual income into this fund. in 2007/08 a fund of rupees 15 million rupees was established by fugs by contributing both the Lfp support fund and users group fund (Lfp 2009). 5. Small Scale Infrastructure support (All): small scale infrastructure support includes water source protection, drinking water systems, water harvesting tanks, small scale irrigation (lift irrigation, sprinkle irrigation and renovation of irrigation canals and structures). this has helped improve and diversifying the livelihoods of the poor and vulnerable by improving their access to drinking water, increasing productivity and diversify crops that secure livelihoods. in addition such types of intervention build greater acceptance within communities. 6. Forest Land Allocation to Poor and vulnerable (Terai and Mid hills): Land allocation is found to be a good intervention to diversify income, access the land as a natural resource and empower the poor and excluded. more than 700 hectares of land have been allocated to 7400 poor and vulnerable households for agro-forestry, fodder grass cultivation and ntfp farming. 7. Assurance of Market and development of market outlets (Mid hills and high hills): the market for manufactured products should be guaranteed by linking the product to
the market. establishing the sales outlet in road head areas or collective market centres (especially for ntfps) with the support of cooperatives will ensure the market in the long run. a market information system should be developed to assure a better price for products for farmers and producers. Knowledge Management and Climate Foresight 1. Awareness raising and Capacity Building around to climate change (All): this activity is found to be useful to enhance the level of understanding of climate change among stakeholders. after sensitization and capacity building, c/fug members will be able to develop a cap on their own. such activities would help to enhance coordination among stakeholders make it easier to implement the interventions, and help to prepare the plan and implement the activities accordingly. 2. Develop different tools and manuals regarding CC adaptation (All): Dissemination of cc related planning tools, manuals, posters etc will help to sensitize and develop understanding within communities and build confidence to cope with as well as respond to climate change impacts. 3. Strengthening local institutions (All): institutions and social networks are playing important roles in shaping vulnerability and mediating in recovery after disaster. c/fugs, Vfcc and Dfcc and local clubs, schools and private institutions (cooperative) are found to be effective local institutions into influencing the adaptive capacity of communities and their adaptation choices. in the forestry sector cfugs, Vfcc and Dfcc are very important to prepare the adaptation plan, up scale the plans and share the information across the boundary institutions but need to build their capacity.
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4. Establishment of community Weather Monitoring and information dissemination Centre (All): cfugs use different information systems among the users to dissemination information related to decision and general notices by using different means: Wall newspaper, fm broadcast and KatuWaL (a person told information centre spot by loud voice). this process can be strengthened to disseminate weather information to users if there is an established community weather monitoring system. 5. Establishment of Early warning system (All): to defend against flooding and the effects of heavy rain an early warning system will effectively reduce the exposure of human lives and other assets and property (livestock and equipment) such as sarong bell tower to monitor long distance of floods. 6. Information and Resource Centre Development and Strengthening (All): a community learning centre is found to be an effective information
dissemination tool in any sector ? Jaspur cfug established forestry Learning centre for better access to information and to empower women. these types of learning centre can be established by Vfcc at VDc level to collect and disseminate climate change related information. in addition this resource centre can provide market information to people but need to link with other institutions who provide market information. 7. Social Protection and Safety Net Emergency Fund (All): to respond quickly to climactic hazards, most fugs have policies in their operational plan and constitutions. fugs established an emergency fund and provide quick responses into the emergency in the piloted sites. this fund can be upscaled and strengthened to provide community iinsurance on a small scale. however, a clear guiding procedure is needed. in addition, a similar type of fund established in the VDc level can be established under the Vfcc which gives better access to local communities.
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Thematic Areas
Outputs
Increased of understanding level of climate change and use of foresight in decision making
Natural Resource
Improved NRM
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Physical Infrastructure
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Health
Strengthening health Facility ManageMent coMMitteeS to Back Up eSSential health adaptation initiativeS oF cliMate change vUlneraBle coMMUnitieS
Strengthening health Facility Management committees to Back Up essential health adaptation initiatives of climate change vulnerable communities
Submitted to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
Submitted by The Britain Nepal Medical Trust (BNMT) Lazimpat, Kathmandu, Nepal
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FOREWARD
Climate change is happening and bringing with it alterations in climatic risk patterns. The impacts of climate change threaten the food security, health and wellbeing of millions of people, especially those living in Least Developed Countries (LDCs) like Nepal. The predicted trend of increased climate variability and more extreme weather events is likely to have a range of direct effects on Nepals rural communities. The health sector is climate sensitive, and is under pressure to develop sustainable adaptation strategies to counterbalance future impacts of climate change on human health. It is essential that mechanisms are institutionalised to enable the most vulnerable local communities to cope with climate change impacts. This means that local communities must be supported in preparing themselves for changing situations and taking steps that will improve their ability to protect their livelihoods, health and wellbeing. There is, however, no one-size-fits-all solution. Awareness-raising and capacity-building processes are urgently needed at all levels to support long-term learning processes and take the eco-systems and socio-economic conditions into consideration. Decentralized programmes seem most appropriate to promote local adaptation, within the framework of coherent national policies. With this in mind, particular attention should be given to the development of location-specific adaptation options that can manage future anticipated risks and take bio-physical, socio-economic and socio-cultural factors into consideration. A systematic and consistent application of practices that strengthen local health governance may serve as a suitable entry point to adapt to and mitigate the impacts of climate change on human health. Knowledge gaps remain as to how sustainably these practices would be, and how best to design and promote adaptation processes. However, immediate action is needed to manage the risks within the framework of broader understanding. Studies of adaptation processes are needed that will add to the dissemination and replication of good practices. This report presents the findings of a pilot undertaken in Ghodasain VDC of Achham and Danabari VDC of Ilam districts jointly by BNMT and CADP-N. It provides a summary of the approaches and processes used to inform community people about climate change and support the development of their local adaptation strategies. It also presents the lessons learned, as well as good practice options identified and valued by community people for climate induced health risk management in the context of climate change.
Dr. Bhanu B. Niraula and Sadhana Shrestha Country Directors, The Britain Nepal Medical Trust (BNMT)
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This report is the result of the team effort of the people involved in the LAPA pilot. First of all I would like to express my sincere gratitude to Dr. Bhanu B. Niraula and Sadhana Shrestha, Country Directors of BNMT, for their invaluable input and regular encouragement for this pilot project. I would like to thank to Mr. Bimal Regmi, Advisor of DFID; Mr. Gyanendra Karki, Dr. Deepak Rijal, National Facilitator of CADP-N and Jessica Ayers for their mentoring of this pilot. My sincere thanks go to DPHO/DHO, DDC, DADO, DLDO, DFO and HFMCs members, health workers, teachers in the LAPA clusters and VDCs and district partners NGOs for their cooperation and tireless effort, without their generous support the given task would not have been possible. Likewise, I appreciate the generous and invaluable input pilot of Mr. Bhupendra B. Shahi and Mr. Manoj Kumar Khadka for the facilitation of this LAPA at field level. Finally, I am grateful to all BNMT staff for their kind cooperation from the very initial stage to the report preparation.
Mahendra Bikram Shah National Project Coordinator (NPC) The Britain Nepal Medical Trust (BNMT) January 15, 2011
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreword Acknowledgements Table of contents Executive Summary Introduction 1.1 General objectives 1.2 Specific objectives Methodology 2.1 Pilot areaGeographic and socioeconomic overview 2.1.1 Geography 2.1.2 Population 2.1.3 Occupation 2.1.4 Climate 2.2 Approaches and tools 2.2.1. Institutional assessment 2.2.2. Consultation with district level stakeholders 2.2.3 Orientation to HFMC on climate change vulnerability assessment tools 2.2.4 Focus group discussion 2.2.5 Household Survey 2.2.6 Cost benefit analysis 2.2.7 Joint planning workshop on climate change adaptive initiatives at VDC level 2.2.8 Gateway Analysis 2.2.9 Monitoring and Evaluation team formation Outputs / Findings 3.1. Climate friendly technical interventions 3.1.1. Strengthening the health system at the local level 3.1.2. Community mobilization for water resource management 3.1.3. Enhancing lthe livlihood options of climate change vulnerable households 3.2. Good practices vis. mainstreaming 3.3. Socio-economic Service delivery mechanism/gateway systems in the LAPA clusters 3.4. Finance delivery mechanism 3.5. Effectiveness of tools and approaches 3.6. Mechanism to reach the climate vulnerable
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Developing and implementing LAPAs Barriers and Gaps to developing and delivering LAPAs 5.1 Areas of weakness 5.2 Ways forward Conclusion Recommendations References Annexes Annex- I : Time trend of Ghodasain VDC of Achham since 1950 Annex- II : Time trend of Danabari, Ilam since 1950 Annex III : Climate change effects in different sectors Annex: IV : Community defined vulnerability assessment criteria Annex V : Seasonal calendar of LAPA clusters Annex-VI : Cost benefit analysis Annex-VII : Information related to boundary actors Annex-VIII : Local Adaptation Plan of Action of Danabari VDC, Ilam Annex-IX : Local Adaptation Plan of Action of Ghodasain VDC, Achham
222 223 223 223 224 225 226 227 227 228 229 230 230 231 234 238 241
List of tables Table 1 : Population of LAPA cluster by ethnicity Table 2 : Organizational development (OD) status of HFMC Table 3 : Vulnerability assessment matrix Table 4 : Institutions involved in rural development activities
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EXECuTIVE SuMMARy
Introduction
The Local Adaptation Plan of Action (LAPA) pilot is a process to gauge and acquire experiential learning of planning processes for adaptation interventins that support the most climate vulnerable communities. Through this process, sensitisation and knowledge generation on climate change issues, assessment of climate induced vulnerability, testing the comprehensive process of the planning and mainstreaming local level climate change issues, were planned and executed. The pilot resulted in concrete findings related to climate change impacts on human health and how communities can plan to adapt to them. Initially, the institutional capacity of the Britain Nepal Medical Trust (BNMT) was assessed regarding the organization as an experienced civil society organisation working for health and development in Nepal. The assessment was facilitated by CADP-N. The strategic plan (2009-2013) and thematic areas of BNMT, along with its organisational and administrative structure, were assessed for this purpose. Responding to the effect of Climate Change, environment and disaster on human health is one of BNMTs key thematic areas. BNMTs existing network of development partners (GOs and NGOs) and boundary actors (public, private and CSOs) was identified as an asset for maximizing adaptation options to combat climate change impacts on human health. Hence, the LAPA pilot to assess the adaptive capacity of vulnerable communities and the effects of climate change on health, was very appropriate and timely.
II. To strengthen the capacity of Health Facility Management Committees (HFMC) to mainstream community-identified climate change and health priorities within health system governance and development process.
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Methodology
The LAPA pilot was conducted in Ghodasain and Danabari VDCs of Achham and Ilam respectively. The districts were selected so that Ghodasain VDC of Achham district represented the Mid-hills eco-zone of Far Western Nepal, whilst Danabari VDC of Ilam represented the Chure region of Eastern Nepal. Different participatory methods were adopted to carry out pilot activities, such as an institutional assessment of HFMC using the spider web model, functional coordination with local level boundary actors, knowledge generation and sensitisation about climate change effects on human health, participatory M&E team formation, along with orientation on their roles and responsibilities. In addition vulnerability assessments took place using participatory tools and techniques such as time lines, social maps, preference ranking, seasonal calendar, focus group discussion and household survey and vulnerable site visits, cost benefit analysis using multi-criteria assessment matrix, and gateway analysis. Functional coordination and gateway systems analysis: A consultation with district level stakeholders took place whereby background information about the LAPA pilot in reference to the NAPA and the Nepalese context was shared. The consultation was instrumental for formalizing the pilot project at the district level. At the same time, the gateway systems at VDC, ward and hamlet level were assessed to find out about access to the socio-economic services delivered by public, private, CSOs and self-help groups. Both supplier and demand side initiatives were reinforced in order to plan and execute the climate change adaptation plans of action. Knowledge generation and sensitisation: All the BNMT staff, government line agencies, VDC, HFMC and other concerned stakeholders, LAPA monitoring and evaluation team, and community people were orientated and sensitised about health vulnerability in relation to climate change. In this process, local experiences were reflected on and scientific facts discussed. Climate change vulnerability assessment: Climatic hazards, risks and resilience capacity of local communities was discussed among HFMC members, M&E team members and community people. The roles of different types of resources in increasing vulnerability and enhancing resilience were assessed. The participants were facilitated to consider how different types of resources are affected by climatic hazards and what resources are drawn on to adapt to the change. They were also asked to assess the degree to which natural, physical, financial, human and social resources or assets are affected by each hazard, and were prioritised through preference ranking. Likewise, the socio-economic impact of each hazard, along with a rating for the frequency of the hazard happening, was assessed. Social maps, time lines, preference ranking, hazard matrix, FGD and onsite monitoring were the assessment tools used for this purpose. Climate change issues in the local context and adaptation options for the vulnerable communities were identified. Issues and options for putting forward to the joint planning workshops were also discussed. Cost benefit analysis and multi-criteria assessment matrix: These tools were used to prioritise selected adaptation options and interventions under this LAPA pilot. The Multi-criteria Assessment Matrix was also applied for prioritising the interventions, especially for selecting cross-cutting and value-added activities.
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Joint planning workshop on climate change adaptive initiatives at VDC level: A joint planning workshop was conducted in each LAPA VDC. The workshop was attended by different VDC level boundary actors and the representatives of DDC, DHO, DADO, DLDO, DADO, DDWSO, VDC, HFMCs, Agriculture Services Centre, Water user Groups, Forestry Ranger Posts and Community Based Organizations, Mother Groups, Women groups, Saving Credit Groups, Political Party representatives, and representatives of P1 discussed mainstreaming climatesensitive health priorities into local level planning processes. This joint planning workshop gave a sense of ownership for continuation and support to the initiatives identified to improve the adaptive capacity of vulnerable people to climate change. Monitoring and Evaluation team formation: A total of 3 M&E committees in each LAPA cluster/ VDC were formed. A total of seven members were on the committees as representatives of HFMC and local stakeholders, and their roles were clearly identified. An orientation was conducted on the role and responsibility of the committee for effective implementation of LAPA. The committees were facilitated in their role of advocating the needs of the most vulnerable people and the supporting smooth execution of planned LAPA activities.
Interventions
Diarrhoea, vector borne diseases, malaria, eye infections and malnutrition are major local health issues in the LAPA clusters that are influenced by climatic factors. The issues are directly and indirectly linked to drought, landslides, floods, temperature, water pollution, all climate-related hazards likely to be exacerbated by climate change. It was also found that climate change hazards like flooding impede access to DDC level health facilities and put extra pressure on VDC facilities because of climate-related injuries and diseases. During these times VDC health facilities do not have the resources to cope with the additional requirements. Therefore strengthening VDC HFMC and VDC health infrastructure is highlighted as an adaptation priority. In this regard, the following technical interventions were facilitated during the LAPA pilot: 1. Strengthening the health system at local level: Capacity building of HFMC to increase their response capacity to climate change effects was initiated for effective future planning. These initiatives include both small infrastructural developments (buildings, furniture, medical equipment, etc) at institution level and awareness programs at community level about the health impacts of climate change. The vulnerability and hazard assessments highlighted that during rainy seasons, the roads are blocked for hours, days and sometimes weeks as well. Health services become inaccessible (geographically and economically) for the cases that need secondary and tertiary level services. In consideration of this a Climate Change Adaptation Emergency Fund was established, which will be mobilised by HFMC for emergency services to vulnerable people and communities. One priority identified by the community was the need for an improved delivery room so that during flooding and heat stressed conditions, P1 women (as one of the most vulnerable groups) are able to access safe delivery services. Therefore a delivery room was constructed in the health facility in SHP of Danabari, Ilam through the LAPA pilot project, through the collaboration of the VDC, WWS and BNMT.
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As an immediate need identified by the community, support to construct a building of PHC/ORC was given by the LAPA pilot at Ghodasain, Achham to increase the out-reach services to vulnerable people. 2. Community mobilization for water resource management: Increasing incidences of water borne and vector born diseases were identified during vulnerability assessments. These common water borne diseases found in LAPA clusters are: worm infestations, enteric fever, diarrhoea, dysentery and hepatitis. These diseases are related to intake of drinking water of degraded quality. Natural springs are damaged or drying up each year through likely climate change effects such as droughts, landslides and floods, and this is adding strain to the local health system. So the community has planned the following technical interventions using allocated resources for community support under the LAPA pilot: Two drinking water supply system maintenance programs were identified as priority needs of the vulnerable within the LAPA cluster. The present pilot project has channelled resources for this purposes. A construction committee and a monitoring and evaluation committee in each ward/cluster and VDC were formed for the facilitation of the program. Water is a major common property resource of community people in the LAPA clusters. The resource is being used for different purposes (drinking water, irrigation, water mill, etc) in the VDCs. The community people of the LAPA cluster in Ghodasain, Achham were facilitated to make a small project in relation to their felt needs, and they agreed to install an improved water mill. It was assumed that the technology makes it easy for women in the community to grind grains. It also facilitates male individuals in the grinding work too. Soil erosion and degradation of cultivated land due to flooding is a major issue in the LAPA clusters. Cultivated land is being destroyed day by day, often resulting in vulnerable households being landless and homeless. In this regard a joint effort has been made for gabion construction to control the flooding in the VDCs. 3. Enhancing livelihood options of climate change vulnerable households: Frequencies of climatic hazards and their risks are higher than the resilience capacity of the communities in LAPA clusters. The access of communities in LAPA clusters to livelihoods assets (natural, physical, financial, human and social) is very low. Safe drinking water, skills-based trainings and material support for on-farm and off-farm income generation activities, networking with local level boundary actors in the VDC and DDC, institutional capacity building through small infrastructural support and emergency funds are all activities for increasing the resilience of the communities in the LAPA clusters. The vulnerable households benefit from the intervention because of the multiplier effect of the activities. For this purpose animal husbandry (goat, pig, cow and buffalo) was promoted in the LAPA cluster during the pilot. Effort was made to link vulnerable households with different local and district authorities and gateway systems.
Key findings
The key findings of the LAPA pilot are as follows: 1. Droughts, exposure to infectious disease, and more frequent landslides and flooding are adding strain on an already overstressed health system. This could be observed in the LAPA clusters in general and vulnerable communities in particular. Climate change hazards like flooding impede access to DDC level health facilities and put extra pressure
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2.
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on VDC facilities because of climate-related injuries and diseases. During these times VDC health facilities do not have the resources to cope with the additional requirements. Therefore strengthening VDC HFMC and VDC health infrastructure is highlighted as an adaptation priority. The incidence of pyrexia of unknown origin (PuO), dengue fever, malaria (p. falciferum and p. vivex), mental illness and psychosocial stress, headaches, worm infestations, enteric fever, diarrhoea, dysentery, malnutrition, epidemic conjunctivitis and hepatitis are increasing. This increase was identified by the community as related to direct and indirect impacts of increasing climate stresses, as well as other compounding factors. Out of these, some health problems, such as pyrexia of unknown origin (PuO), dengue fever, malaria (p. falciferum and p. vivex) are vector born diseases that seem associated with increasing temperature. Community people noticed that mosquitoes are now found at higher altitude. Other health problems, such as worm infestations, enteric fever, diarrhoea, dysentery, and hepatitis, are water borne diseases related to the intake of drinking water of degraded quality. The non-infectious health problems of mental health and headaches were associated by community members with the loss of family members and damaged assets resulting from increasing climate hazards. An epidemic of conjunctivitis was identified as related with the microbial situation in changing environmental condition that lead to poor hygiene and sanitation. The village women and opinion leaders also expressed feeling that uterus prolapse cases might be associated with fetching water from far from their residence. Natural springs are drying up each year, likely due to climate change effects like drought, frequent landslides and flooding. HIV/AIDS and STIs are also associated with labour migration abroad which, among other factors, is linked to loss of capital and reduced livelihoods options associated with climate change. Accumulated effects of temperature rise, drought, less and high precipitation and natural calamities and disasters have created psychosocial distress, decreased grain and legumes production, animal diseases (Khoret) and chicken (Ranikhet), miscarriage/abortion of goats, attack of insects (Butterfly, Berea, Aduwa) on crops and diseases in banana, ginger and tiger grass, and decreasing sources of water. These are all harmful to the community in the long run since they decrease their resilience capacity. Local level adaptation planning also contributes to VDC level plans, which in turn is shared and fed into the district and national level planning. So an integrated approach and multi-sectoral issues are addressed while tackling climate change impacts on human health at local level. In this sense, HFMC is an appropriate institution for climate change adaptation planning to address climate change impacts on human health. It enables local peoples voices to be heard at higher levels by advocating issues of climate health vulnerability and planning, and executing and monitoring the climate change adaptation programme at household, hamlet, ward and VDC level. HFMC also can refer the issues to the DDC and centre level authorities, as the Chairperson of VDC leads the HFMC for executing the health activities. Health issues are directly related to the drinking water, food security and education sectors. These sectors are also led by VDC chairs in the local context. The institutional assessment and outcome mapping assessments showed that the chairperson and deputy-chairperson of each VDC acts as a member of District Council in which the mayor, deputy mayor of municipality, members of DDC and members of House of Representatives are also involved. The chair of the committee could advocate and coordinate at different levels for approving budgets for planning and programming, monitoring and evaluation of the program. So, any health sector intervention at the
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local level could be effective if the leading role is taken by the HFMC. This suggest that community adaptation plans could be scaled up in terms of public health issues, at VDC, DDC and central level through the HFMC/VDC chairperson. It also facilitates the drawing down of resources from VDC, DDC and other development partners to implement locally identified priority activities. 7. The HFMC is an effective institution for planning and implementation climate change adaptive health initiatives at the local level. However, the institutional assessment and outcome mapping assessments showed that functional coordination between wider stakeholders in the VDCs and DDCs is essential to address climatic health vulnerability, and for multi-disciplinary efforts reach up to partners who could facilitate the drawing down of resources for the execution of adaptation plans of action. 8. Mainstreaming the climate change health issues of the most vulnerable people into planning and implementing adaptation programmes can be done under the leadership of local governing bodies(VDC/DDC), government line agencies, CSOs and other development partners. Resources for infrastructure support are best channelled through the public sector (governing authorities and line agencies), whereas social mobilization and capacity building related activities are best facilitated by CSOs and I/NGOs. 9. Biodiversity losses in surroundings of the LAPA clusters were noticed by local communities. They reported that some medicinal plants, local breeds of cow Nau-muthe Gai (Achham), A3-size special butterflies (Ilam Danabari), plants with high values like Salish- Sal, an occupational ethnic group -chadara (Danabari Ilam) have been decreasing and disappearing. They suggested that local species and breeds of are more adaptive to the respective environment and local setting. 10. It was found that people have various good practices, such as fodder and bamboo plantation on farm land and stream bank,s along with disaster risk mapping and preparedness planning with the facilitation of CSOs. People also care and share with each other during the hard times of floods, landslides and epidemics.
Conclusion
Realistic planning of public health issues through the LAPA process and in LAPA design and execution is possible by strengthening and building the capacity of HFMCs. Involvement of HFMC in climate change vulnerability assessment gives them an idea of the health issues for planning adaptive options. Since HFMC comprises representatives from different boundary actors (VDC, schools, FCHV, health facility) in the VDC, it could contribute to building the capacity of vulnerable communities and draw down resources to implement locally identified priorities. The local governance bodies direct the HFMC in the execution of activities related to health services. Health issues are directly interrelated to drinking water supply, food security policies, purchasing capacity, livelihood options and awareness level and education. To manage sectoral and inter-sectoral development, the role of local governing authorities, CSOs, CBOs, self- help groups and communities themselves is very significant. These sectors are also led by the VDC chairperson. The chair-person and deputy-chair-person of the VDC act as the District Council in which the mayor, deputy mayor of municipality, members of DDC and members of the House of Representatives are also involved. So, any climate change interventions at the local level could be effective if the leading role is taken by the HFMC. The chairperson of the committee could advocate and coordinate levels for the passing of the
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budget for planning and programming, monitoring and evaluation. Functional coordination between boundary actors in the VDCs and DDCs is essential to address climatic change impacts on human health. Climate change issues are complex and therefore demand the participation of targeted vulnerable communities and multiple stakeholders at every stage of LAPA (vulnerability assessment, planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation). Likewise, proper attention is needed in the service delivery mechanism. The capacity of HFMC for responding to climate change health vulnerability and building the resilience capacity of vulnerable communities is to be emphasized. So the capacity of both duty bearers and rights holders should be enhanced. Also their relationship should be harmonised so that service delivery and utilisation mechanisms meet the needs of the vulnerable and addresses the climate change impacts (cardio respiratory diseases, injuries, nutritional deficiencies, diarrhoeal diseases, vector borne disease and psychological stress) on human health. Health being the end and means, it further helps vulnerable people to maximise their assets (natural, physical, financial, human and social) and thereby enhance adaptive capacity.
Recommendations
1. Health rights programming through RBA approach could be effective if designed so that boundary actors and community people are involved in vulnerability assessment and participatory monitoring and evaluation that ensures synergy between bottom-up and top-down planning processes. 2. HFMC is an effective gateway system for maximizing climate change adaptive options, but it needs capacity building initiatives and technical back-up from CSOs. 3. Finance disbursement through formal institutions such as GO or I/NGO is recommended. In the case of support to vulnerable households, it should be distributed to them directly through CSOs. It was seen that climate vulnerable people (P1) are able to contribute to setting vulnerability assessment criteria to unanimously select the most needy people and distribute resources. They also become knowledgeable about climate change and able to dialogue with public-private and CSOs communities and monitor the LAPA execution.
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4. The role of the monitoring and evaluation committee should be expanded and replicated to increase its involvement in implementation and advocacy of public health issues at different levels. 5. Drought, landslides and floods are major climate change hazards which act as predisposing factors for most vulnerable people to malnutrition, diarrhoea, typhoid, jaundice, malaria, skin disease, tapeworm and dengue, STD, HIV and AIDS in the selected LAPA clusters. Thus the interventions should be designed and implemented in consideration of these facts. Climate change affects people differently because of their social and economic status. Poor, marginalized and disadvantaged groups and women tend to suffer more from these effects. The participation of people most at risk needs to be recognized as a critical element of any successful intervention. 6. Climate has always played a crucial role in human life, hence changes in the climate affect health, substantively making it a means as well as an end in itself. So efforts at global, national, regional and local levels should make health service mechanisms an entry point for Climate Change adaptation plans.
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INTRODuCTION
Climate change is an emerging and significant threat to human health, affecting national, regional, and local communities. The government of Nepal has introduced a National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA) for Climate Change through a consultative process. The NAPA has been introduced to help Nepal understand and predict the likely impacts of climate change and improve its capacity to mitigate the negative effects. NAPA has identified six thematic areas and nine combined project profiles to respond to Nepals diversity of ecosystems, micro-climates and cultural and socio-economic circumstances. The inception workshop suggested the preparation of Local Adaptation Plan of Action (LAPA) pilots within the framework of NAPA1. To materialise this LAPA piloting, a joint effort was created among Ministry of Environment, CSOs, funding agencies and the facilitating agency - Climate Adaptation Design and Piloting (CADP/N). BNMT was identified as an appropriate health sector civil society organisation to pilot the LAPA with a special focus on the effect of climate change on health. BNMT has been working in the health sector in Nepal since 1967, especially with disadvantaged communities. BNMTs programme and operations are guided by its vision, goal and objectives through strategic plans for certain periods of time which also take into account current organisational policies and priorities. BNMTs new strategic plan( 2009-2013) has indentified and prioritised programmatic interventions on four major thematic areas Health; Livelihoods; Effects of Climate Change, Environment, Disaster on Health; and Peace Building. Within BNMTs programme themes, health programmes will remain pivotal. BNMTs experience in the health sector has revealed the complex dynamics between health and economic development at the individual and family level. While poor health directly contributes to poverty, poverty suppresses health seeking behaviour. Nutrition and infectious diseases as well have a synergistic relationship. Lack of food, in terms of low nutritional dietary intake, leads to malnutrition, which increases vulnerability to infection and disease, while infection and illness contributes to decreased food intake. Risk of death from infections such as acute respiratory infection, malaria, TB, and diarrhoeal diseases is increased with poor nutritional status. And, with evidence of human-induced global warming and climate change now irrefutable, the probability of natural disasters is on the rise, increasing the risk for already vulnerable populations living at the margins in rural Nepal.
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Therefore, in order to translate its experiential learning and address the problems at the community level, BNMT is expanding its programme to include the fields of nutrition, food security, livelihoods, and effects of climate change, environment and disasters on human health and peace building. These programme areas form the basis for BNMTs integrated health improvement programme; continuing to improve the health status of Nepali people. This will further its maturation as a developmental public health organisation. Categorically, BNMT` has been executing programme in the following thematic areas: 1. Promoting quality health services and ensuring health rights: under this thematic area, BNMT has been implementing programmes of TB, Lungs Health and HIV/AIDS, ensuring reproductive Health Rights, child Health and Development and promoting Mental Health, strengthening Health Service System, Consolidating and Promoting Health Financing Schemes. 2. Maximizing Livelihood Opportunities: under this, BNMT attempts to promote and strengthen Self- Help Groups, food security and income generation, building market linkages and support health micro infrastructure. 3. Responding to Effects of Climate Change, Environment and Disaster on Human Health: under this thematic area, BNMT is initiating environmental disaster preparedness and risk reduction and supporting socioeconomically vulnerable people to develop adaptive capacity. 44. Peace Building, Social Harmonization and Solidarity: BNMT supports conflict affected vulnerable women, children and people through Eu funded projects Rehabilitating children and supporting families and communities affected by armed conflict in Nepal and Vulnerable
community package project with essential health, livelihoods promotion education support and community empowerment. This LAPA piloting process concentrates on planning adaptation initiatives related to climate change impacts on human health. The LAPA pilot was conducted in Ghodasain and Danabari VDCs of Achham and Ilam districts respectively. On the basis of a vulnerability analysis map, the districts were selected purposively to compare and contrast the climate change related health issues and responses at local level. The selected VDC of Achham district represents the Mid-Hills eco-zones and Far West Nepal; whereas the VDC of Ilam represents the villages of Chure regions and Eastern part of Nepal. Basically, this pilot supports capacity building and the implementation of projects to strengthen the health systems ability to respond to climate change through a bottom-up approach. It enables communities to understand the uncertainties of future climatic conditions and engage them effectively in a process of developing adaptation plans of action. The findings of the pilot will inform planning and the implementation of climate resilient initiatives that are flexible enough to respond to changing climate and vulnerability conditions. This pilot has also generated knowledge on programmes of the health sector and analyses an integrated response to climatic change across different sectors. Many of the health problems experienced by the poorest and most vulnerable groups in the LAPA clusters can be linked to the direct and indirect impacts of climate change. However, linking health problems to any one climate impact is problematic because all health issues are multi-faceted. There is evidence of links between climate change and health through the impacts of droughts, floods and landslides on human wellbeing and security. There is also evidence of the
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relationship between climate change hazards and access to effective health services. Despite strong indications that the adverse effects of climate change can exacerbate present health challenges in the villages, existing local health systems have not addressed health issues adequately as they interact with changes in climate. Furthermore, the threats posed to human wellbeing and sustainable development by climate change and infectious diseases, such as the HIV/ AIDS epidemic, are similar and interlinked. Therefore increasing climatic hazards are linked to both increased incidence of poor health and at the same time decreased capacity of health services to meet the needs of vulnerable people. The LAPA piloting pilot comprises: 1. Training and orientation to community members on climate sensitive health services.
2.
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Assessment of climate change health vulnerabilities with participatory tools by applying community defined vulnerability criteria. Support to the most vulnerable households with income generation activities for increasing their adaptive capacity. Similarly, ward level and VDC level climate change adaptive initiatives were supported for ensuring accessibility of the most vulnerable households. The HFMC at the VDC level was supported with sensitisation to climate change and in the identification of the adaptation needs of vulnerable communities to ensure their priorities are integrated local climate change priorities of the poor and vulnerable are integrated into local health planning.
Approaches/ strategies
LAPA Preparation: Capacity assessment, Vulnerability assessment, CC knowledge generation, LAPA at Ward and VDC level and final endorsement from VDC assembly and sharing at different levels
Financial mechanism: formal institutions GO and support directly to plans of action Technology/good practices: fodder , bamboo plantation in farm & bank of streams, disaster risk mapping, preparedness plan in the facilitation of CSOs, caring /sharing in the hard time of floods, landslides & epidemics.
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Institutional mechanism: BNMT / partner sensitization, PROME Committee at VDC and Ward level, HFMC, involvement of district line agencies,
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METHODOLOGy
2.1.2 Population
Altogether these VDCs comprise a population of 20004 (CBS, 2001). A total of 70 percent of the population is in Danabari VDC of Ilam District, and 30% of the population is in Ghodasain VDC of Achham district. Of the total of the population of Ghodasain VDC (5973), 79% are Brahmin and Chhetri, followed by 21% Dalit. Likewise, in Danabari the majority of the population (69%) are Janajati, followed by 24% Brahmin and Chhetri and 7% Dalit. The LAPA cluster in Ghodasain, Achham is concentrated in the wards where the Dalit population is higher, and the cluster of Danabari Ilam is concentrated in the wards where the population of Janajati is higher. The pilot focused on the socio-economic and climate change vulnerable communities, particularly rural poor, children, women, Dalits and Janajati people affected by climate change. The key LAPA beneficiaries are the poor and marginalized people living in
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the LAPA clusters, who have socio-economic vulnerability including low access to health, livelihoods and other socio-economic gateway systems.
2.1.3 Occupation
Agriculture, wage labour and labour migration are the major sources of earnings for the people in LAPA clusters. During the LAPA pilot period, a household survey was conducted for 28 climate change vulnerable households. The study shows that household economies of rural areas rely on diverse sources of income, i.e. agriculture, wage labour/labour migration, business, tailoring and driving. Agriculture is a source of livelihood for 39% (11) families among the surveyed households. They are subsistence farmers. According to the respondents, the food sufficiency level of the households is very low, i.e. less than three months. Similarly, wage labour or labour migration is the major means of earning for 46% (13) surveyed households. Of the total surveyed households very few were found to be involved in small scale business (7%), tailoring (4%) or in transport (4%). Although agriculture was the major occupation of all caste ethnic groups in the LAPA clusters, they were also involved in all categories of occupations. The vulnerable people (p1) are not fully dependent on a particular occupation; they accept any available work, irrespective of their skills.
2.1.4 Climate
The average annual rainfall of Achham district is 1891 millimetre, whereas the rainfall of Ilam district is 2625 millimetre annually. Similarly, the temperature of Ghodasain VDC ranges from 200c to 300c, and of Danabari is 250c on average. According to village people of Ghodasain, Achham snow falls during the winter season in the upper parts of the VDC. The topography of the VDC covers 540 metre to 3820 metre in altitude.
They are the representatives of DDC,DHO, DADO, DLDO, DFO, DDWSO, and civil society organizations
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inclusion issues) of the HFMC in responding to climate change vulnerabilities. The climate change effects on the health of community people were assessed. Scientific facts and reflection of daily life of local individuals was discussed. The following vulnerability assessment tools were used. Time line The timeline is a key tool for collecting information related to climate-induced disasters. The required information was gathered from elderly people in the VDCs, teachers, and leaders of political parties and members of HFMC. Landslide, floods, drought and cholera were the major calamities faced by community members over the last 60 years3. The district-wise details of the assessment are presented in Annex-I and Annex-II. Social mapping preparation This tool was used to identify natural features (streams, forests, barren land, and landslides) of the LAPA clusters. Physical features identified on the map included housing settlements, location of services outlets such as schools, health facilities, agriculture centres, veterinary service centres, saving credit groups, local pharmacy, and female community health volunteers. Facilitation helped identify the visible impacts of climate change on human health and livelihoods. The participants were asked to locate landslide, flood and drought affected wards and vulnerable households in the LAPA cluster. The criteria used to select vulnerable households are presented in Annex-IV. Participatory hazards ranking This tool was used to compare and prioritise the most critical local climatic hazards and differentiate between climate change induced and other
3
natural hazards. It was also useful to understand how communities perceive and evaluate local hazards. Climatic hazards were listed during the discussion with participants. Then, climatic hazards were arranged in both row and column headings of a square table, as seen in the photographs. The participants considered every pair of hazards in turn and decided by consensus the most critical hazard and entered this into the box. When the table was complete, the number of times each hazard was chosen was added up. These scores suggested a chronologic order of priorities.
The collected incidences happened in different points of time during the period of 1950 to 2010.
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Vulnerability Matrix This tool was used to get an overview and quantify climatic hazard risks and the resilience capacity of local communities. This was useful for the identification of the roles of different types of resources in increasing vulnerability and enhancing resilience. The participants were facilitated to consider how different types of resources are affected by climatic hazards and what resources are drawn on to adapt to the changes. They were also asked to assess the degree to which natural and physical resources are affected by each hazard, and these were prioritised through preference ranking. Likewise, the socioeconomic impact of each hazard, along with its experienced frequency rating, was assessed. The details of the matrix are presented in Table 3. Seasonal Calendar This tool was used to explore the changes during the year. It was instrumental in generating information about seasonal trends within a community and identifying periods of particular stress and vulnerability. Key informants were asked to make diagrams to illustrate trends and changes in specific activities over different periods.
preparation at ward level. The accessibility of the households to different livelihood assets and gateway systems in the wards and VDC was assessed during the discussion. At the same time they were facilitated to plan a scheme so that their adaptive capacity could be increased.
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conclusions. The tool was used to prioritize the proposed different adaptive initiatives. The detail of the analysis of different proposed activities is presented in AnnexVI. Multi-criteria Assessment was used to prioritise the interventions. It was found particularly useful for selecting cross-cutting and value added activities.
III. This joint planning workshop strategically gave a sense of ownership for continuation and support to initiatives identified to improve the adaptive capacity of vulnerable people. Details of the pilot boundary actors is presented in Annex-VII
2.2.7 Joint planning workshop on climate change adaptive initiatives at the VDC level
A joint planning workshop was conducted in each LAPA VDC. The workshop was attended by different boundary actors in the VDCs and the representatives of DDC, DHO, DADO, DLDO, DADO, DDWSO, VDC, HFMCs, Agriculture Services Centre, Water user Groups, Forestry Ranger Posts and Community Based Organizations, Mothers Groups, Womens groups, Saving Credit Groups, Political Party representatives, and representatives of P1 for mainstreaming climate sensitive health priorities into local level planning processes. The findings of vulnerability assessments were discussed in relation to different sectors (health, forest, biodiversity, water resource, agriculture, land). The details are presented in Annex-
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OuTPuTS / FINDINGS
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and Population, there is one SHP in each VDC from which safe motherhood and newborn health, child health, vector borne disease control, family planning, health education, out-patient services, nutrition, community health service, immunisation, infectious disease control, out-reach clinic operation and essential drug supply is provided. The overall management and resource mobilisation of HFMC, in collaboration with boundary actors, governance bodies (VDC/DDC) and district line agencies, are crucial to address the climate change health vulnerability in local communities. Some of the activities which have been initiated are described below: Establishment of a climate change adaptation emergency fund During rainy seasons, the roads are blocked for hours, days and sometimes weeks. Health services become inaccessible (geographically and economically) for the cases that need secondary and tertiary level services. To support vulnerable people in such cases Climate Change Adaptation Emergency Funds have been established. In consideration to this a climate change adaptation emergency fund was established, which will be mobilised by the HFMC in emergency situations. A fund mobilization guideline has been made for its effective mobilization. The fund recovery will be done from stakeholders (VDC and CSOs) in the VDC.
Delivery room construction in health facility Capacity building of HFMC for responding to increasing climate change effects has been initiated for effective future planning. These initiatives include both small infrastructural development (building, furniture, medical equipment, etc) at institution level, and awareness programs at community level about health impacts of climate change. In this regard, support for the construction of a delivery room in the SHP of Danabari, Ilam was made through the LAPA pilot project. The room was constructed with the collaboration of VDC, WWS and BNMT. PHC/ORC building construction In response to immediate needs identified by the community, support to construct a building of PHC/ORC was made by LAPA pilot in Ghodasain VDC. This will increase the provision of out-reach services to the doorsteps of vulnerable people, which will further help to address the climate change vulnerability.
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and p. vivex), worm infestations, enteric fever, diarrhoea, dysentery and hepatitis. Out of these some health problems such as pyrexia of unknown origin (PuO), dengue fever, malaria (p. falciferum and p. vivex) are vector borne diseases which seem associated with increasing temperature. Community members noticed that mosquitoes have been found at higher altitudes in recent years. Other health problems like worm infestations, enteric fever, diarrhoea, dysentery, and hepatitis are water borne disease related to the intake of drinking water of degraded quality. Natural springs are drying year by year due to climate change effects such as droughts, frequent landslides and flooding, and these are adding strain to the local health system. Thus the community planned the following technical interventions using allocated resources for community support through the LAPA pilot: Maintenance/renovation of Drinking water Supply Systems Two drinking water supply system maintenance programs are identified as priority needs of the vulnerable within the LAPA cluster. It was found that water borne diseases are the major diseases in the LAPA clusters. In this regard LAPA included activities to support the renovation of water supply and sanitation systems. So the pilot channelled its resources for the same purposes. A construction committee and a monitoring and evaluation committee in each ward/cluster and VDC were formed to facilitate the program. A contractual agreement was made with the HFMC. Improved water mill (IWM) installation Water is a major common property in the LAPA clusters. The resource is being used for different purposes (drinking water, irrigation, water mill, etc). The community in Ghodasain, Achham agreed to install an improved water mill (IWM). The IWM
is a technology which makes it easy for women to grind grains but the device (IWM) could mobilize male individuals in the grinding work too. Gabion construction Soil erosion and degradation of cultivated land due to flooding is a major issue in Danabari VDC of Ilam district. The cultivated land is being destroyed, often resulting in vulnerable households being landless and homeless. In this regard a joint effort has been made for gabion construction to control the flooding.
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households and different local and district authorities or gateway systems. A total of 28 families benefited from the activity. The cost of an animal was equivalent to 6,000 rupees. The support was directly provided to the selected vulnerable households through the stewardship of the HFMC and monitoring and evaluation committee members. The details of proposed climate change adaptive activities of Danabari VDC of Ilam and Ghodasain VDC of Achham district are presented in Annex-VIII and Annex-IX respectively.
sports, irrigation and soil conservation and river basin control, language and culture, tourism and cottage industry, and others. The Chairperson of the VDC looks to the HFMC for executing the activities related to health services. Health issues are directly interrelated to the drinking water, agriculture/food supply and education sectors. The sectors are also led by VDC chairs. The chairperson and deputy-chairperson of each VDC acts as a member of the District Council in which members of DDC and members of House of Representatives are also involved. So, any health sector intervention at local level could be effective if the leading role was taken by HFMC. And also the chair of VDCs could advocate and coordinate at different levels for approving planning, budgeting, implementing, monitoring, evaluating and reinforcing the programme and policies.
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mechanism is the SHP, as part of the government provision under the local self-governance act. under the local self-governance system, there is high participation of local people in bringing social equality in mobilizing and allocating resources for the all-round development in their localities. The DDC coordinates all the local level development initiatives. In the case of health related activities D/PHO provides technical support to them. The table 3 shows that the involvement of HFMC and CSOs in development activities related to health services at local level is high in comparison to other sector services. It also suggests that the HFMC is one of the more effective gateway systems for implementing health programmes at the local level for maximizing climate change adaptive options in vulnerable communities for health and wellbeing. Capacity building
initiatives are to be emphasized in the technical backup of CSOs for the time being. Health issues are linked with livelihood options, food security, water sources, environment and sanitation. In this sense, health services to address climatic hazards are best channelled through HFMCs in close coordination with other gateway systems or stakeholders in the VDCs and DDCs. This mechanism has been effective while implementing technical interventions during this LAPA pilot.
Climate Hazards induced health vulnerability Diarrhoea Malnutrition Eye infection Jaundice 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 3 4 2 2 4 2 4 4 12 8 8 8 2 1 2 1 1 1 3 3 2 2 2 1 1.6 1.3 2.3 1.3
4 It is an assessment of access of community to economic resources, natural, physical, economic, human capital and social network to cope with climate change impacts based on given a score of 1- 4 to identify the total risk of climatic hazards and resilience capacity of the communities
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interaction with different individuals and stakeholders in the LAPA cluster suggests that channelling financial resources could be effective through local governing bodies for infrastructural support, whereas social mobilization for capacity building activities to enhance adaptive options of vulnerable communities could be effective if financial resources are channelled through the HFMC. The HFMC is a semi-authoritarian organization. There is a specific protocol for formation and operation of the HFMC. It is a mandatory committee for every health institution. There is a provision that at least one SHP should be in every VDC. In this sense the following channels are suggested for the purpose of financial delivery for implementing LAPA: I. Formal institution/VDC: If the magnitude of the fund is large and the nature of the project is complex (having more than three sectoral interventions). II. Semi-authoritarian or intermediary organization/HFMC III. CBOs, self-help groups and user groups. IV. Directly to principle beneficiaries to support their household adaptation plan of action.
The spider web model, social mapping, time lines, seasonal calendars, resource estimation and sharing, body mapping, preference/pair-wise ranking, vulnerability matrix and gateway analysis tools were used for the vulnerability assessment and facilitation of the LAPA process. Almost all tools used were found to be effective and relevant except the body mapping. The body mapping tool was found appropriate for BCC activities but less useful for vulnerability assessments. The cost benefit analysis tool was also used for prioritizing selected adaptation options. This tool is very useful to prioritise activities. It was also found effective for awareness rising on costs and benefits of the proposed activities, harmful impacts to society, environment and other issues. It could provide a vision to planners, though it is a little difficult to facilitate in larger and heterogeneous groups. It needs guidelines and experienced facilitators as it is difficult to carry out by community groups themselves.
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options for reducing impacts. The research must contribute to finding the best coping strategies and protecting the health of people, rather than just focusing on avoiding the negative consequences of climate change and setting targets for greater use of new energy technologies. Likewise, it is important to improve understanding of the process of climate change adaptation. This includes gaining
better knowledge of the process of adaptation decisionmaking, roles and responsibilities in the adaptation of individuals, communities and monitoring and evaluation committee. The involvement of M&E committees enriches every step of the adaptation planning cycle, including the climate vulnerability assessment, as their involvement has been instrumental in the technical activities developed under the pilot LAPA.
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The LAPA pilot has shown that adaptive options related to public health issues can be mainstreamed through the development of the of HFMCs. The climate adaptation options are to be planned and implemented involving vulnerable people and communities, and contribute to bottom-up planning. The implementation of technical interventions within LAPA suggests that any planning on the bases of first hand information is quite practical. The information collected through the use of vulnerability assessment tools (time line, social mapping, preference ranking, and vulnerability matrix, cost benefit analysis) is reliable and highly relevant to climate adaptation planning. The priority issues to be addressed are identified by people who are the primary concern of the planning. The Chairperson of the VDC leads the HFMC for executing the health activities in the respective VDC. Health issues are directly related to the drinking water, food security and education sectors. These sectors are also led by VDC chairs. The chairperson and deputychairperson of each VDC acts as a member of the District Council in which mayor, deputy mayor of municipality, members of DDC and members of House of Representatives are also involved. So, any health sector intervention at local level could be effective if the leading role was taken by the HFMC. The chair of the committee could advocate and coordinate at different levels for approving budgets for the planning and implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the program. These facts suggest that community adaptation plan could be up-scaled in terms of public health issues at VDC, DDC and central level through the HFMC/ VDC chairperson. They also facilitate the drawing down of resources from VDC, DDC and other development partners to implement locally identified priorities. The piloted LAPA technical interventions show that participation of target groups and boundary actors in the VDC and DDC level planning and process facilitation of the adaptive activities makes it easy to monitor and evaluate the programme. It also suggests that involvement of representatives of user groups, HFMC and gateway systems/boundary actors in monitoring and evaluation committee is effective. The M&E committee is to be facilitated for advocating climate issues for planning, resource generation for implementing LAPA, and participation in LAPA implementation themselves.
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The emergence and re-emergence of a number of diseases in recent times can be attributed in varying degrees to climate change induced environmental and ecological factors, derived mainly from human interactions with ecosystems and consequent changes in biodiversity and habitat through greenhouse gas emission, deforestation, use of pesticides and overgrazing, etc. This is linked to poor governance in responding to the impacts of climate change on human wellbeing and security, on the one hand, and the less effective health governance to address major health issues which exist predominantly in the LAPA clusters, on the other. This leads to the observation that the combination of the two interlinked problems of poor climate change governance and inappropriate health governance could have a devastating impact on livelihoods and human wellbeing. The absence of elected representatives and VDC secretaries is one of the major barriers to developing and delivering LAPAs. In this context, coordination with political parties in the VDCs is essential. Planned activities at district level during the LAPA pilot were not sufficient. Participation of the DDC and DHO is to be emphasized. Some information has to be generated on health vulnerability by carrying out research on health ecosystems, medical geography and an epidemiological study of infectious and non-infectious disease and health problems.
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CONCLuSION
Realistic incorporation of public health issues in LAPA design and sound implementation is possible by capacitating district and local health system governance including HFMCs by establishing a systematic process. Involvement of HFMCs in climate change vulnerability assessments gives an opportunity to link and integrate health issues into the planning of adaptive options at local level and beyond. HFMCs consist of representatives from different boundary actors (VDC, schools, FCHV, health facility) in the VDC. They could contribute to building capacity to reach-up and draw-down resources to implement locally identified priorities. The Chairperson of the VDC leads the HFMC for executing the activities related to health services. Health issues are directly related to the drinking water, food security and education sectors. These sectors are also led by the VDC chairperson. The chairperson and deputy-chairperson of each VDC acts as a member of the District Council in which mayor, deputy mayor of municipality, members of DDC and members of House of Representatives are also involved. So, any health sector intervention at local level could be effective if the leading role was taken by the HFMC. The formation of HFMCs is guided by the Local Self Governance Act 2055 and as per the directive of the Ministry of Health and Population. The chairperson of the committee could advocate and coordinate at different levels for passing budgets for planning and programming, monitoring and evaluation of the program. Functional coordination between wider stakeholders/boundary actors in the VDCs and DDCs is essential to address the impacts of climatic hazards on human health. In every programme, participation of targeted vulnerable communities is to be ensured at every stage of the LAPA process (vulnerability assessment, planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation). Likewise, proper attention is needed for the service delivery mechanism. The capacity of HFMCs for responding to climate change effects, and building resilience capacity of vulnerable communities are to be emphasized. So, capacity building activities for service delivery outlets, such as SHP, HP, PHCC, agriculture service centre, veterinary centres, microfinance centre etc, have to be strengthened and made accessible to vulnerable people, so that the assets (natural, physical, financial, human and social) can be maximised for addressing climate change impacts on human health, such as cardio respiratory diseases, injuries, nutritional deficiencies, diarrhoeal diseases, vector borne disease and psychological stress.
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RECOMMENDATIONS
1. Health rights programming through a rights-based approach could be effective if designed with the involvement of boundary actors and community people in vulnerability assessments using different participatory tools and criteria defined by vulnerable people. 2. The HFMC is an effective entry point for addressing not only climate change vulnerability but also other development initiatives for adaptation plans of action. To do this, it needs capacity building initiatives and technical back-up from CSOs. 3. With regard to financial delivery, it would be best if funds were disbursed through GO or I/ NGOs. In the case of support to vulnerable households, it should be distributed directly to support household level adaptation activities through the facilitation of CSOs. 4. Role of monitoring and evaluation committee is to be enlarged, so that is involved in implementation and advocacy of public health issues at different levels. 5. Drought, landslides and floods are major climate change variables which act as predisposing factors for people most vulnerable to malnutrition, diarrhea, typhoid, jaundice, malaria, skin disease, tapeworm, and dengue, STD, HIV and AIDS in the selected LAPA catchments. So interventions should be designed and implemented with consideration of these facts. Climate change affects people differently depending on their social and economic status. Poor, marginalized and disadvantaged groups and women tend to suffer more from these effects. Participation of people most at risk of climate change effects needs to be recognized as critical elements of successful adaptation interventions. Health is both a means an end with regard to climate change. So the climate change adaptive planning should take this into account to get health results in people and vice versa, as health is an interdisciplinary concern.
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REFERENCES
CBS/NPC/HMG (2003): Nepal Living Standard Survey 2003/04, Vol. 2, And Kathmandu: Central Bureau of Statistics, National Planning Commission Secretariat, And His Majestys Government. CBS/NPC/HMG (2003): Population Monograph of Nepal, Vol. 2, Kathmandu: Central Bureau of Statistics, National Planning Commission Secretariat, His Majestys Government. Chhetri, R.B. (1990): Adaptation of Tibetan Refugees in Pokhara, Nepal: A Study on Persistence and Change. unpublished Ph. D. Dissertation, university of Hawaii Chhetri, R.B. (1987): Migration, Adaptation and Socio-cultural Change: The Case the Thakali in Pokhara, Occasional Paper in Sociology/Anthropology, Vol. 1: 43-68 Chhetri, R.B. and Pandey, T.R. (1992): user Group Forestry in the Far-western Region of Nepal: A Case Studies from Baitadi and Achham, Kathmandu: ICIMOD. Dahal N, Ojha H, Baral J, Branney P, Subedi R, 2009; Impact of Climate Change on Forest and Livelihoods: Issues and Options of Nepal, LFP Dahal, et. al., (1977): Land and Migration in Far western Nepal, Kathmandu: Institute of Nepal and Asian Studies. T.u. Dev, O.P. et. al.( 2003): Impacts of Community Forestry on Livelihoods in the Middle Hills of Nepal, Journal of Forest and Livelihood, Vol. 3 (1): 64-75. Graner, E. (1998): The Political Ecology of Community Forestry in Nepal: Saarbrucken, Germany: Verlag fur Entwicklungspolitik. MC Dougal, C., (1968): Village and household Economy in Far Western Nepal. Kathmandu: Tribhuvan university. Raithelhuber, M. (2003): The Significance of Towns for Rural Livelihoods in Nepal. In Manfred Domroes (eds.): Translating Development: The case of Nepal, pp.195-206, New Delhi: Social Science Press. Regmi B R, et al 2010: Participatory Tools and Techniques for Assessing Climate Change Impacts and Exploring Adaptation Options, LFP Regmi B R, Subedi R. 2010: Mainstreaming Climate Change Adaptation through Community Based Planning, LFP Schroll, M. (2001): Off-farm Employment and Temporary Migration in a Nepalese Village. In Susanne Von der heide and Thomas Hoffman (eds.) Aspcet of Migration and Mobility in Nepal, pp.129152. Kathmandu, Nepal Smith, J.B., R.J.T. Klein, and S. Huq, 2003: Climate Change, Adaptive Capacity and Development. Imperial College Press, London, uK, viii+347 pp. Swift, J. (1989): Why are Rural People Vulnerable to Famine, Institute of Development Studies (IDS), Vol. 20 (2): 8-15. Tiwari, BN. (2001): Food Security and Vulnerability Status in Nepal, The Economic Journal of Nepal, Vol. 24 (1): 64-85. WWF 2003. Buying Time: A users Manual for Building Resistance and Resilience to Climate Change in Natural Systems. L.J. Hansen, J.L. Biringer and J.R. Hoffman (eds). http://www.panda.org/ downloads/climate_change/buyingtime_unfe.pdf
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ANNEXES
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health There is increased incidence of fever of unknown origin. There are reported cases of malaria and typhoid Mosquito are appeared in recent years in the lower part of VDCs Diarrheal, tapeworm, dysentery, malnutrition, eye infection and uterus prolepses are the major health problems in the VDC The cases of STD, HIV and AIDS are increasing day by day There is increased incidence of fever of unknown origin. There are reported cases of malaria and typhoid and suspected causes of dengue. Difficulty to access maternal health services during flood time
Forestry and Biodiversity: Some plants to be used for medicine in recommendation of traditional healers have been disappearing Falcon bird has been disappeared in the jungle of Achham, it was available in the jungle of the VDC before 40/50 years ago Water Sources land Productive irrigated land and rain fed land at risk of land slide Productive capacity of land decreasing Productive land is decreasing by flooding Productive capacity of land decreasing Decreasing sources of water Destroyed water supply system (intake) due to landslide unmanaged water supply system in the VDC, taps without water Increasing size of streams and decreasing sources of water Some plants of economic importance ( Satisal, simal, Chanp, khayar, Daar, Sadhan etc) have been disappearing The HH of ethnic group Chadara , who were prehearing wooden vessels are A3 size special butterflies are disappeared
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High temperature
** * ** * ** * ** * ** * ** * * ** * ** * ** * *
* *** **
High cold
** * ** ***
**
Drought
** * ** *
** **
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cost
Economic cost
1.
Gabion wall
-Cement
-Sand, stone
-Skilled labour
(Tentative
Nrs. 15,00,000 -Moral and social -Delivery service will be available at local level in cheapest cost support of community -Responsive health facility at local level
2.
Construction of PHC/ORC
-Construction materials
-Skilled labour
SHP building
(Tentative Nrs. 2,00000) -Community contribution and support -Few bushes decrease -Domestic sanitation will be increased -Water born decreases will diseased -Prone to conflict for the placement of IWM -Few bushes decrease -Worked load of women will be reduced resulting good health of women -mobilization of men for the grain grinding work -Prone to conflict for the use of fund -In time care -Fund available at local -Social security will be increased Healthy family Improved family status -Healthy society -Improved environmental sanitation
3.
-Pipe
renovation/maintenance
-Cement
4.
Installation of Improved
-Pipe
-Cement
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-Fair of miss use
5.
-Fund
Establish emergency
-Processing cost
health fund -Air pollution -Quick response -Life saving -Distribution problem -Disposal problem -Health Facility service capacity will be increased -Quick response - Social security will be increased -Social security will be increase Carbon emission in micro amount Diclofenac may affect eagle disappearance
6.
Ambulance repairmen
-Material cost
7.
Stock of medicine
-Medicine
Handling
8. -Moral support of -Availability of safe water at health intuition of community -Healthy society -Communicable diseases will decreased -Vector born diseases will be decreased -CC awareness will be increased -Conflict between -Forest product -Income generation option will be increased will be used most vulnerable and other vulnerable -Child labour increase -Conflict between community and forest dependent people - Increase forest areas - Self help forum will be developed community -Community support
-Hardware cost
-Positive perception -Sanitation will be increased -Sanitation will be increased -CC friendly practice will be promotion
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-Skilled labour
9.
Awareness on sanitation,
-Cost
10.
-Fund
-Time
11
-Seeds
promotion activities
-Care taker-
A. total total B.c ratio Envt. cost 5 4 4 4 1 1 2 3 6 6 7 9 7 7 11 9.5 9.5 9.5/3.5 = 2.7 9.5/3.5 = 2.7 11/6 = 1.8 7/3.5 = 2 7/3 =2.3 6/3.5 = 1.7 6/2.5 = 2.4 7/6 = 1.1 9/6 = 1.5 3 15 15/6 = 2.5 18 18/8.5 = 2.1 5 2 1 1 4 Envt. cost .5 1 5 5 .1 .5 1 3 2 6 4 2 6 4 1 2.5 4 1 3.5 3 2 3 3 4 3.5 4 3 6 7 4 3.5 5 .5 3.5 5 .5 6 7 4 8.5 8 5 Economic cost Social cost Benefit ranking
Sn
cost
Economic cost
Social cost
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
.5
6.
.5
7.
.5
8.
1.5
9.
.5
10.
11
B. construction of phc/orc building and some room at Shp building 2.5 2.7 2 2.5 Water Mill (iWM) installation of improved
MuLTI CRITERIA ASSESSMENT MATRIx OF COST BENEFIT ANALySIS awareness on sanitation, climate change, promotion of preventive bed net 2.4 3 2.3 2 Stock of medicine livelihoods support for most vulnerable house hold 1.5 4
project
drinking water
supply renovation
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4 3 3.5 15.5 (2) 3.5 3 4 15.2 (3)
BC ratio
2.7
Directed to SE vulnerability
G & SI
CC Vulnerability
3.5
Total
15.2
(3)
Behavioural changes
individuals or
relationships, knowledge
to influence)
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VDC
increased effects of CC
Mothers Groups Mother organized in Interaction and observation Coordination a group and start saving and credit activities Aware on local health problems and diseases Their meeting minute Exist in the vulnerable wards Like to see the community: Active mothers to combat their babies from CC effects love to see the community: Representation and participation of vulnerable households in the groups Well participation of the groups in PHC/ORC and EPI clinics in the wards or nearby their households expect to see the community: Interested to be involved in LAPA process Participation on CC/LAPA orientation to HFMC like to see the community: Involvement in climate change vulnerable wards selection love to see the community: Eager to plan and allocate resources for addressing climate change induced disasters and health issues in the VDC Interaction and observation Coordination
adaptive capacity
CFuG
relevance of climate
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services.
Water users Groups (the Interested to be involved in LAPA process Changing their perception of the effects of CC they see around them (accepting it wont go back to normal) Looking at existing activities through CC lens and amending some practices/ activities Identifying the most poor and climate vulnerable like to see the community: Carrying out activities that increase adaptive capacity[Increasing livelihood options (vegetable, fish farming), Protecting water sources, Making recharge ponds, using alternative energy, using water carefully, Recycling waste water] Incorporating these activities into their action plans Letting the poor and vulnerable know they have rights to access funds/support from VDC Taking plans to VDC assembly
The pilot intends to see the expect to see the community: Interaction and observation Coordination
community)
relevance of climate
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services.
Using plans to access district level resources/services Creating an environment for the poor and vulnerable to express their needs and claim/receive support Registering their community water resources with the DDC love to see the community: Using their experience with CC and water/WASH in other aspects of their lives/ livelihoods expect to see the community: Interested to be involved in LAPA process Participation on CC/LAPA orientation to HFMC like to see the community: Involvement in climate change vulnerable wards selection love to see the community: Eager to plan and allocate resources for addressing climate change induced disasters and health issues in the VDC Interaction and observation Coordination
communities.
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S.n.
activity
objective
1.
of SHP
(Birthing centre)
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2067 Mangier HFMC BNMT Nrs. 1,00000 (LAPA) Other, VDC, CFuGs, Local communities
2.
Expansion of Delivery
Services
3.
institution
4.
5.
Awareness raising on
To safe minimize
environmental sanitation,
malaria
promotion of insecticide
treated bed net Fund will be increase by the regular coordination with different organization and individuals
6.
Establish CC emergency
Fund
of CC vulnerability
7. Fy 067/068 BNMT Nrs. 60,000 (LAPA) By the collaborating Other, VDC, District Soil Conservation Office, CFuGs, Red cross branch office Local Community 1 and 3 Risk Minimize Monitoring Team of Danabari 1 (By the coordination with HFMC and VDC level monitoring team) Fy 067/068 Ward Level Monitoring Team of Danabari 8 (By the coordination with HFMC and VDC level monitoring team) Fy 067/068 Ward Level Monitoring Team of Danabari 8 (By the coordination with HFMC and VDC level monitoring team) Fy O67/068 VDC and Ward level monitoring team by the coordination with CFuGs Fy 067/068 VDC and Ward level monitoring team by the coordination with Local Agriculture Sub Centre DADO, Agriculture Sub -Centre Farmers Groups VDC, CFuGs, District Forest, Ilaka Forest Office, Local Communities Activities will be finalize by the coordination with respective organization Activities will be finalize by the coordination with respective organization Nrs. 87,400 Tentative BNMT Nrs. 60,000 (LAPA) Drinking Water user Committee and Local communities By the coordination with Drinking Water user Committee of Danabari 8 Ongoing VDC, District Soil Conservation Office CFuGs, Red cross branch office, Local Community By the collaborating 15, 0000 Ward Level
Tentative Nrs.
Committee of Danabari
8.
Majhenitar
9.
Maintenance of Drinking
Danabari 8
10.
To minimize deforestation
promotion of forest
11.
To increase Agriculture
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minimize diseases of
promotion of Agriculture
Production
12. Fy 067/068 VDC and Ward level District Livestock Development Office Livestock Sub Centre Farmers Groups monitoring team by the coordination with Local Livestock Sub Centre
To increase livestock
Strengthening health Facility ManageMent coMMitteeS to Back Up eSSential health adaptation initiativeS oF cliMate change vUlneraBle coMMUnitieS
240
2067 Mangsir to Ward Level Monitoring Team continue BNMT Nrs. 84,000 2067 Mangsir/Paush Nepal Red cross Nrs. 140,000 branch office Danabari ICRC Nrs. 70,000 Other Nepal Red cross Branch, Office Danabari, VDC Danabari, DDC, BNMT
new Technology
minimize diseases of
13.
Income Generation
Activities
HH
vulnerable HH of Danabari
1 and 8
14.
Maintenance of
Ambulance
office Danabari
Sn
activity
objective
1.
controlling communicable
2.
ORC
3.
Mill (IWM)
community for water resource Fy 067/068 Tentative Nrs. 84000 HFMC HFMC, BNMT Coordinate with respective organization for the resources Fy 067/068 NRs. 100000 HFMC BNMT Nrs. 1,00000 (LAPA) Other, VDC, CFuGs, Local communities Fy 067/68 VDC, HFMC VDC,DDC, DADO and others Fund will be increase by the regular coordination with different organization and individuals
management
4.
change vulnerablehouseholds
vulnerable households
5.
Establishment of climate
6.
Construction of Irrigation
cannel and plastic pond Fy 067/068 Fy 067/068 VDC, HFMC and others Fy 067/068 FyO67/068 VDC, DDC, DAO VDC, HFMC VDC, HFMC
caused by drought VDC, DDC and other I/NGOs VDC, DDC and other I/NGOs
7.
Gabion wall
8.
Landslide control
and 54 households at
Strengthening health Facility ManageMent coMMitteeS to Back Up eSSential health adaptation initiativeS oF cliMate change vUlneraBle coMMUnitieS
241
Fy 067/068
Ghodasain-4, Lanchi VDC, DDC and other I/NGOs VDC, DDC and other I/NGOs
9.
Resettlement of community
10.
community to safe drinking VDC, CSOs VDC, DLDO, DADO and other I/NGOs Coordination with respective organization
water
11.
Animal husbandry
households
Strengthening health Facility ManageMent coMMitteeS to Back Up eSSential health adaptation initiativeS oF cliMate change vUlneraBle coMMUnitieS
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Developing Climate Change aDaptive CapaCity through WaSh initiativeS anD loCal planning proCeSSeS
Developing Climate Change adaptive Capacity through WaSh initiatives and local planning processes
Submitted to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
Submitted by Nepal Water for Health and Sanitation (NEWAH) February, 2011
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ExECUTIVE SUMMARy
The climate Adaptation Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) provided an opportunity to Nepal Water for Health (NEWAH) to contribute to the design of a local climate adaptation planning process through sharing learning from piloting climate change adaptive capacity development through Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) initiatives and process. The pilot took place during the period of September to December 2010 in Guranse village of Rauta Village Development Committee of Udayapur District in the Eastern Development Region of Nepal. This report is a product of the pilot process and hereby presents key findings, analysis and recommendations for the design and implementation of Local Adaptation Plans of Action (LAPAs). The pilot aimed to contribute to the CADP-N by exploring options for mainstreaming climate change and climate adaptation through community planning into VDC and district planning processes to increase the adaptive capacity of the poor and climate vulnerable. Learning outputs at community level included the use of tools and approaches for identifying households and communities that are vulnerable to climate change; identifying and prioritising climate response options; facilitating community planning processes and building local capacity to reach up and draw down resources. At VDC and district level the pilot team worked to raise awareness and strengthen capacity to respond to adaptation priorities from community level. NEWAH also draws on its experience of scaling-out and scaling-up in consideration of NGOs as longterm service providers for increasing adaptive capacity. In the pilot, climate awareness raising took place at every level, from NEWAH regional and field staff to district decision-makers, to VDC and community level as an essential first step. This was followed by participatory exercises to look at local climate trends and assess climate impacts. Communities identified physical and social vulnerability and assessed responses and response capacity. The detailed adaptation capacity development work was carried out in the Guranse village of 94 households who are all members of the NEWAH supported Water and Sanitation users committee. In addition it was important to involve local community based groups, VDC council members, political party representatives, government officials, NGOs, youth clubs and the media to increase awareness and consider adaptation measures that could be carried out locally or with outside support. Means to integrate community adaptation priorities into the local planning processes were explored. At the end of the process the communitys draft adaptation plans were presented by a group of 16 people to first VDC level and then district level decision-makers, with requests to support elements of the plan and incorporate them into the district planning process. Decision-makers appreciated hearing directly the voices of community delegates and pledged support. A range of participatory tools were found to be effective in the process of raising awareness, prioritising, planning, monitoring and building capacity. This pilot made effective use of vulnerability mapping, vulnerability assessment, timelines, seasonal calendars, cause and effect matrix, self-monitoring, gateway service analysis, cost effectiveness analysis and focus group discussions. Some tools were modified for climate change, others could be used directly in the local climate change context, and some were new. It was effective to use tools
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that participants were familiar with at community or VDC level and modify them to incorporate climate change and build adaptive capacity. The key point is whether the tools are used in a participatory way and whether ownership is with the participants. Tools need to empower communities, NGOs and local government to take on every step of developing resilient communities whilst building foremost the adaptive capacity of the most poor and vulnerable. From this pilot it is clear that communities are keen to understand climate change and ready to strengthen their responsive capacity towards addressing climate induced hazards and risks. They need continuous support in terms of access to relevant information, capacity to prepare and plan for immediate and longterm climate change effects, and capacity to effectively access services and resources. Establishing an effective coordination process at district, VDC and community level is essential for creating an enabling environment. Institutional mechanisms appropriate for implementing LAPAs vary at different scales. At the local scale LAPAs developed by communities are best implemented in partnership with community-based organizations and local NGOs with coordination by Village Development Committees. NGOs can play essential roles in awareness raising, capacity building, technical support and process facilitation at community level and VDC level during plan development and implementation. Local government is crucial in coordinating programmes that enhance adaptive capacity and overseeing the flow of funds from the public and private sectors to ensure they reach vulnerable communities. National government and donor roles include creating an enabling policy environment to mainstream the process. Appropriate financial mechanisms will vary with the socio-political situation of the country. Should the DDC and VDC have integrity and skilled human resources, funding is best channelled through local government. An alternative mechanism can be a coalition of agencies consisting of the DDC, VDC, NGOs and CBOs with clear roles. In line with the NAPA stipulation that 80% of funding goes to communities, an option for allocating the countrys total climate change adaptation fund to the local level is suggested as follows: The Government sector to manage 70% with 56% reaching the community (14% for management and overheads) and the NGO sector to manage 30% with 24% reaching community level. Cooperatives and other community owned enterprises should be supported to provide sustainable local financing. Particular provision needs to be made for the poor and most vulnerable. Consideration should be given to roles of both not-for-profit and for-profit private sector players. Public private partnerships should be considered in the absence of adaptation funding. Local governance is key for both institutional and financial delivery mechanisms for LAPA. The time is right to roll out LAPA because people are keen to understand how their experience of increasingly unpredictable local weather links to global climate change, and they are keen build resilience to immediate and long-term climate induced hazards. The decision-makers at VDC and District level are also keen to address climate change issues and support the building of adaptive capacity. There is a need for continuous effort to integrate community level adaptation plans into the development plans of VDC, DDC, Line Agencies and NGOs. The climate change related interventions can really serve the needs of the most poor and vulnerable when undertaken through coordinated planning with the collaboration of communities, local governmental and non-governmental organisations and with the support of a central government that encourages adaptive capacity development.
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NEWAH is ready to build on the pilot and take forward the work of building local adaptive capacity and mainstreaming climate change into local planning. At community level it would work towards the development of adaptation plans at the micro-catchment scale that includes every household. This would involve awareness raising, vulnerability mapping, adaptation monitoring, building capacity to reach up and draw down resources and access services and regularly revising plans in response to feedback and changing local conditions. It would work to strengthen the VDC and district structures that support bottomup adaptation planning. It would also play an advocacy role to mobilise the WASH sector to address climate change, and it would encourage policy and funding mechanisms that facilitate LAPA development.
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248
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
NEWAH is grateful to the CADP-N and the entire team of experts who have provided this opportunity for NEWAH to take part in the LAPA pilot process and contribute its experience and learning to the LAPA design. NEWAH would like to appreciate the guidance and support received from Dr. Deepak Rijal, Ms. Basna Sapkota, Mr. Bimal Regmi and Mr. Gyanendra Karki while designing and implementing this project, and all the support received in terms of communication and orientation to the NEWAH pilot team members. NEWAH is also grateful to Ms. Sibongile Pradhan for her kind professional support received during planning, design, orientation, VDC level workshop and community level orientation and capacity building processes. Her professional support to the NEWAH piloting team to develop this report has been commendable. Similarly, NEWAH is thankful to all the community members of Guranse Village, all the representatives of Rauta VDC decision-makers, political party representatives, VDC officials, LDO of Udayapur DDC, FEDWASUN, journalists, Local NGO partners and all the participants who have contributed to the process. The contribution of NEWAH Pilot team, Eastern regional office and field staff is greatly appreciated in the delivery of these outputs. -
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250
TABLE OF CONTENTS
executive Summary Acknowledgements table of contents 1. introduction 2. methodology 2.1 Geographic and socioeconomic overview of the pilot area 2.2 Approach and tools 2.2.1 Planning the pilot 2.2.2 Identifying boundary actors 2.2.3 Raising awareness 2.2.4 Assessing vulnerability 2.2.5 Facilitating the preparation of adaptation plans 2.2.6 Building capacity to access resources and support 3. outputs / Findings and Analysis 3.1 Outputs 3.2 Outcomes in terms of behavioural changes in boundary actors 3.3 Household vulnerability 3.4 Interventions that increase adaptive capacity 3.5 Community adaptation plans 3.6 The LAPA development process 3.7 Increasing awareness of climate change and adaptation 3.8 Including the priorities of the most vulnerable in planning adaptive capacity development 3.9 Assessing vulnerability 3.10 Prioritisation of options that increase peoples ability to survive, cope and adapt 3.11 Including climate foresight into local decision making processes 3.12 The use and modification of participatory tools 3.13 Service delivery mechanisms 3.14 Finance delivery mechanisms 3.15 Building capacity to reach up and draw down resources to implement locally identified priorities 3.16 Findings regarding the role of district level federations 3.17 Findings regarding the Water Use Master plan (WUMP) 3.18 Learning and recommendations regarding scaling-up community adaptation plans to the VDC level 3.19 Learning and recommendations regarding scaling up to district level and ensuring coordinated planning
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3.20 Monitoring and evaluating changes in adaptive capacity so as to ensure adaptation planning is reducing vulnerability to climate change 3.21 Ensuring M&E is integral to planning, with effective feed-back loops 3.22 Mainstreaming WASH into VDC and then DDC planning processes 3.23 Barriers and risks to developing and implementing LAPAs 3.24 Learning from NEWAHs experience of scaling-out and scaling-up NGOs as longterm service providers for increasing adaptive capacity (objective 3) 3.24.1 Lessons regarding geographic expansion 3.24.2 Lessons regarding programme expansion 3.24.3 Lessons on expansion with regard to increasing influence in the WASH sector. 3.24.4 Lessons regarding how government, other NGOs and the WASH sector have learnt from NEWAHs experience of scaling up/out 4. Conclusion: taking LAPA Forward 4.1 Proposed LAPA development for Rauta VDC and Udayapur district 4.2 National LAPA design based on experience of the WASH sector 4.2.1 LAPA Development Process 4.2.2 Planning and Capacity building process 5. Annexes Annex- I : Analysis of climate change hazard impact and adaptation strategies. Prepared visually with a force field analysis, Annex- II : descriptors of adaptive capacity identified in the field Annex III : Prioritisation of adaptation actions Annex IV : Verification of expected outputs Annex V : Outcomes in terms of behavioural changes of key boundary actors. Annex-VI : The climate change adaptation action plan presented at the VDC and DDC level sharing meetings Annex-VII : Assessment of programmes outcomes and whether they increase adaptive capacity Annex-VIII : Tools used and how they build adaptive capacity Annex-Ix : Modification of planning and monitoring tools
270 271 272 272 274 274 274 274 275 276 276 277 280 281
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INTRODUCTION
The purpose of this pilot was to contribute to the Climate Adaptation and Design Project Nepal led LAPA development by mainstreaming climate adaptation through community and Village Development Committee (VDC) planning processes through the Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) sector. Nepal is highly vulnerable to the uncertainties of climate change. Water supply and sanitation is an effective entry point for adaptation planning as it addresses the key element of adaptive capacity - health. That in turn has implications for other aspects such as food production, income generation, education and employment. People can immediately relate to the vulnerability of a drinking water supply system and the need to protect it from climate change effects and consider alternatives. Climate change as a threat to achieving development goals is highly visible in the WASH sector. Drinking water supply systems can be destroyed by floods and landslides or rendered useless by soil moisture depletion and drying springs. It is a clear entry point for communities understanding both the importance of climateproofing existing services and plans, and building resilience through participatory adaptation planning. Piloting ways to provide services to increase adaptive capacity and mainstream climate change through local planning processes is essential for Nepal to find a means of increasing the climate resilience of the most poor and vulnerable members of society. The pilot carried out by NEWAH was designed to find ways of doing this within the WASH sector. It was prepared with the following objectives: Mainstreaming climate change into VDC planning through WASH interventions and processes to increase the adaptive capacity of the poor and climate vulnerable, building on NEWAHs experience of mainstreaming gender and social inclusion both within the organization and WASH sector. Testing tools and techniques for identifying households and communities that are vulnerable to climate change. Learning from NEWAHs experience of scaling-out and scaling-up NGOs as long term service providers for increasing adaptive capacity.
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sectors to help deprived, poor and socially excluded communities secure basic services of water and sanitation, strengthening the capacity of these partners to undertake further development activities and to raise their voices to influence policy-makers, ensuring access of these services to all in the greatest need. Communities receive financial, technical and capacity-building support, and so far NEWAH has worked in 51 districts serving over one million people (estimated to be 4% of the national population), through 1,153 WASH projects working in partnership with 465 local partners. NEWAH is committed to improving the quality of life of Nepali people by contributing towards the provision of safe water, health and sanitation services to those in greatest need. Its goal is the improved living standards of Nepali people in greatest need through equitable and sustainable access to safe water, health and sanitation services. Its purpose is to ensure equitable and sustainable access of Nepali people in the greatest need to safe water, health and sanitation services, complemented with livelihood opportunities through effective empowering processes. NEWAHs objective is to bring substantial positive changes in the lives of Nepali people in the greatest need (poor, marginalised, remote, conflict affected or in crisis) by: Providing technical and financial support in water, health and sanitation activities/services directly or through other non profit making agencies (NGOs, CBOs, other development partners). Developing capacity of the individual and institutions in the sector to manage water, health and sanitation programmes. Engaging in research and studies to enhance sectoral knowledge base and involving in research based deliberations and advocacy for policy reforms. Collaborating with other agencies to leverage support for equitable and sustainable access to safe water, health and sanitation services. Supporting the states policies and other stakeholders programs to increase equitable and sustainable access to safe water, health and sanitation services.
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METHODOLOGy
Max.
Min.
Daily
Total
1:00
30.7
18.9
24.8
37.2/Jun
8.1/ Jan
1907
103
According to the NAPA document (2010 p.59) Udayapur district is ranked as one of the very high risk (0.787 - 1.000) districts from a landslide vulnerability perspective. According to the outcomes of the VDC level climate hazard and risk mapping exercise, Rauta VDC is climate vulnerable with a risk of water source depletion, floods, landslides and drought, as presented in the table below.
Hazard Water source depletion Flood Landslide Fire Drought Areas (ward no.) 1, 2 ,4 ,5 & 9 5&9 5&9 2,3,4,5,7 & 9 1&9
The socioeconomic condition of the VDC is poor. Most of the people living in this area are dependent on subsistence agriculture. The main crops are rice, maize, millet, wheat and barley. It is common for people to go outside their village to search for work. Some people go to the local market, Murkuchi Bazaar, for daily
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wages and some people go to the district headquarters, Gadhi, and a few people go abroad for employment. The local migration is seasonal and outside the country it is commonly for two or three years. This effects the vulnerability of households and communities to climate change effects in both positive and negative ways. Most of the residents of the Rauta area are Janajati, Chhetr and Dalit ethnic/social groups. Rauta VDC is a development deficit location with respect to access to basic services such as drinking water, sanitation and hygiene, health provision, agricultural support, road and transportation, secondary education, electricity, communication and mills. Regarding access to natural resources such as irrigation water and forests, people have some access but it is often not equitable or sufficient. The people may be members of irrigation user committees and community forest user groups which belong to different wards or VDCs. People in the pilot area generally were unaware of the basic services that could be provided by various line agencies or how to access them. NEWAH works in close coordination with the DDC and VDC. Rauta VDC was identified by the DDC as one of the VDCs least covered by government or NGO support, and for that reason was proposed by the DDC to NEWAH for WASH service development. NEWAH has been supporting the VDC for the last two years with implementation of drinking water supply, sanitation and hygiene programmes, through an approach of VDC-wide coverage. Project activities are carried out in line with the Water Use Master Plan (WUMP) prepared jointly by NEWAH and the VDC. Due to time constraints the pilot focused at community level on the village of Garanse (ward 9).
2.2.1 Planning the pilot Preparation of detailed action plans at NEWAH Regional Office, district level, VDC level and community level was accomplished with facilitation support from CADP-N. The necessary coordination and communication was maintained between NEWAH piloting team, NEWAH Eastern Regional Office and then the district and VDC level through the regional office, in order to engage the key boundary actors and develop a common understanding of objectives and create a sense of ownership of the process. 2.2.2 Identifying boundary actors Boundary actors (or stakeholders) were identified at three levels by the community (through a Venn diagram exercise) and by NEWAH field staff (based on their experience). At community level the boundary actors were members of the water and sanitation users committee (WSUC) and child club members (every household in the community was a member). They were involved in the process of climate sensitisation and awareness, vulnerability assessment, identification of poor and vulnerable households and water sources, visioning, determining indicators and preparing the climate adaptation plans. At VDC level the boundary actors were the political party representatives, VDC staff, teachers of the Higher Secondary School, Sub health-post in-charge, representatives of forestry user groups, representatives of local NGOs and ex-VDC representatives. They were involved during the awareness and sensitisation process, gateway services analysis, timelines and VDC level vulnerability mapping. The output of the community level adaptation plan was presented to them at a special VDC level meeting and their commitment was requested for inclusion of the climate adaptive action plan into the VDC level planning process.
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at District level the boundary actors were the DDC Local Development Officer, the district engineer of the energy and environment sector of the DDC, the district water supply officer, representatives of all political parties, user federations and other district level agencies such as the district forestry office, district irrigation office, district cooperative office, journalists and Constitutional Assembly members. They participated in the climate change sensitisation workshop held at the DDC in September 2010 and in the output presentation workshop in November 2010. The district Federation of Drinking Water and Sanitation Users Network Nepal (FEDWASUN) coordinated with the DDC and facilitated the DDC level meetings. This was an opportunity for them to engage with climate change issues and explore advocacy roles for integrating adaptation into WASH and other sectors. 2.2.3 Raising awareness Sensitisation to climate change issues took place through the organization of climate change awareness workshops for NEWAH regional level staff, district level boundary actors, VDC level boundary actors and the community of Garanse. Formal invitations were circulated at district level and VDC level through NEWAH regional office for the orientation and sensitisation process. Use was made of graphs, diagrams, photos, video, reflection exercises and discussion. At the workshops at VDC and community level participants were invited to reflect with a pictorial timeline on events that had occurred in their locality over the past thirty years, in relation to hazards and risks that affected the life and livelihoods of local elderly, adults, youth, men, women, poor, vulnerable, and disabled. A mapping exercise that included the identification of hazards and vulnerable areas, moved the discussion on to current and future vulnerability and the unpredictable nature of climate change effects. The discussion
that resulted from use of the participatory climate hazard trend analysis focussed on trends in water availability and effects on the poor, excluded and climate vulnerable. During the exercise the participants were divided into groups and at VDC level the following table was used.
year
At Community level, an analysis of climate change hazard impacts and adaptation strategies was carried out with newsprint paper and coloured marker pens. The paper was hung on the wall with the year, events, effects and responses drawn in pictorial form for clarity and inclusion. A force field diagram was prepared with them based on the information below. See annex 1 for details.
Hazard
impact
2.2.4 Assessing vulnerability An assessment of the vulnerability of the households of Guranse village was conducted by revisiting NEWAHs mechanism for identifying the poor and excluded (well-being ranking) and assessing how it applied to the poorest and most climate vulnerable. Since NEWAH had already been working in this area, a water and sanitation users committee (WSUC) exists in this village and wellbeing ranking had already taken place. While conducting the vulnerability assessment, the following process was adopted. A social map was prepared showing the water sources, streams, forest, cultivated lands, resident houses, water supply pipelines,
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reservoir tanks and tap stands. It also highlighted areas of physical vulnerability and households that had socioeconomic vulnerability. The names of each house cluster and water source were written on the map. At the same time the name of each household head was written on a small piece of paper. The participants categorised the vulnerability of each household into three groups - high, medium and low. In doing this process they defined their own criteria (which become indicators) for climate vulnerability, as in section 3.3 below. The gateway services analysis was a two part tool to both gather peoples perceptions of the importance of various services in increasing adaptive capacity and for them to think about which would be priorities to request or demand from local or district service providers. Participants identified on a Venn diagram services in their locality (both government, NGO and private sector) and recorded whether the service was in practice available to the most poor, medium poor and least poor. They also indicated how physical access impacted them. Cards were then made of all the services identified and participants were asked to place them in 4 areas joined by gateways on a large sheet of paper. They began with core services to meet fundamental needs, then identified which services were most important to take them up to each successive level of higher wellbeing. They then added new cards for services they did not currently have, but thought would
be useful. This tool was tested at VDC and community level. 2.2.5 Facilitating the preparation of adaptation plans The logical and moral development of the tools above was to turn focused discussion into action plans. Facilitation of the community / WSUC for climate proofing existing plans and preparing a climate adaptation community action plan focused on the 3 areas of: Vulnerability of existing water sources and supply Multiple-use of water and alternative sources/technology (for example rain water harvesting) Increasing livelihood options (linking with saving and credit, vegetable farming, fish farming etc.) In addition the community envisioned the qualities of a state of high adaptive capacity and these became both targets for planning and indicators of adaptive capacity. See annex2. This could form the basis for self monitoring and evaluation carried out by the community/WSUC. Based on the communitys new understanding of climate change and consideration of hazards and risks as above, existing water system plans were reviewed and adaptation actions prioritised using the following matrix. See annex3 for complete table. It was followed by a discussion of the multiple options for the use of available water sources.
Hazard
Adaptation action
effectiveness (1-3)
total score
Priority
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2.2.6 Building capacity to access resources and support The capacity of the community to reach up and draw down resources and to influence decision makers at VDC and District level was enhanced. This included information on funds/services and capacity to communicate with decision makers to integrate the community level climate adaptation plans into VDC and district plans. The capacity building process included the following steps: i) Men, women and members of child clubs were involved in the timeline, climate change trend analysis, seasonal calendar preparation, and in the process of social mapping, vulnerability assessment and identifying the vulnerable households, areas and water sources. ii) They participated in the process of climate-proofing the existing water supply systems, identifying further action in response to climate change effects, and prioritising activities. iii) They assessed which elements of the plans they could carry out themselves and which needed external support. They considered what support might be available from the VDC, DDC, line agencies and NGOs. They assessed their capacity to access this support. NEWAH staff facilitated links with the appropriate organisations.
iv) Members of the water supply and sanitation users committee were involved in the processes of field observation and verification. They guided the revision and clarification of the draft plan, and finalisation of the climate change adaptation plan took place in the presence of all women, men, poor, vulnerable and child club members. v) With an objective of sharing their climate change adaptation plan and appealing for inclusion in the VDC planning process, the WSUC Chairperson and local partner NGO representatives were facilitated to prepare and distribute an invitation letter to all VDC level decisionmakers, from political parties, schools, health post, VDC and other agencies. vi) A meeting took place at VDC level for the WSUC to present the community level adaptation plan. In attendance where representatives from the VDC, all political parties, the health post, higher secondary school and forest office. vii) A delegation of 16 people from Guranse went to the DDC and made a presentation to the district level politicians, LDO, district engineers and several district level agencies about the climate change adaptation plan that they had prepared for their community.
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This WASH sector pilot in Rauta VDC of Udayapur has produced outputs and learning to inform the national development of a LAPA process. The majority of this section describes findings related to objectives one and two; mainstreaming climate change into VDC planning through WASH interventions and processes to increase the adaptive capacity of the poor and climate vulnerable, and testing tools and techniques for identifying households and communities that are vulnerable to climate change. The final part of this section addresses the third objective of learning from NEWAHs experience of scaling-out and scaling-up NGOs as longterm service providers for increasing adaptive capacity.
3.1 Outputs
Outputs included the identification of climate vulnerable water resources, systems and households, and the identification of qualities of adaptive capacity, needs of poor and vulnerable households and key gateway services. They included increased awareness and understanding of climate change at community, VDC and district level and increased awareness of sanitation, latrine construction and hygiene in relation to climate change effects. They included amendment of community action plans in the light of climate change and steps towards the incorporation of elements of community action plans into VDC and district planning. Existing planning and monitoring tools were modified to include climate change and adaptation, and new tools were tested. The water users federation, FEDWASUN, identified a role with respect to climate change that included representing the voices of the climate vulnerable and helping mainstream climate change adaptation into district planning. The role of the Water Use Master Plan (WUMP) and VDC profiles in climate adaptation was explored. Recommendations of how to scale out adaptation and WASH interventions are made in the final section of this report. See Annex 4 for table of outputs.
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Outcomes: Behavioural changes (in terms of behaviour, relationships, knowledge base and access to info) found The community members have developed an understanding of the impacts of climate change on their lives and are using the information to prepare for possible future effects of climate change and make plans for increasing adaptive capacity, starting with the most poor and vulnerable. They have started to use the information to voice their concerns and demands at VDC and district level and are trying to draw down funds and services. Some of the PCV understand the implications and risks of climate change and are involved in planning and monitoring processes, to ensure their voices are heard and their adaptation needs identified and included in planning and budget allocation. The political leaders at VDC level have listened to and been influenced by the presentation of the community adaptation plan. They responded with a written commitment to support the plan using their new understanding of climate adaptation to work impartially and equitably towards increasing the adaptive capacity of inhabitants of the VDC, particularly the most poor and climate vulnerable, and represent their needs in district planning processes. The district level decision makers have enhanced understanding of climate change and the importance of climate adaptation to their work. Their verbal commitment has been received in the presence of Constitutional Assembly member Ms. Durga Pariyar to make planning and budget decisions that increase the adaptive capacity of people of Udayapur, particularly the most poor and climate vulnerable as per available resources and capacity. They are positive about working collaboratively to bring climate change awareness and the needs of the PCV into district planning processes.
VDC members
was a major hazard to the whole community, requiring protection of alternative water sources. There was a risk of flood damage to some households who had paddy land. Disease was seen as a hazard exacerbated by climate change effects and families with disabled members were seen as highly vulnerable. The community categorised all households into high, medium and low vulnerability. The criteria identified by the community whilst doing this became some of their indicators of adaptive capacity, and are listed in the box below.
High Vulnerability House is near the landslide area, Risk of flood in rainy season, House is alone and no easy access to trail, Poor economic status, low employment options, Members of family are disabled House is near jungle and may be at risk of fire.
medium Vulnerability No high risk of landslide and flood, Less risk of fire, Family member has job opportunity outside the country, Alternative options to move from the existing place, The household has land to shift the house if necessary.
Low Vulnerability Better economic status, including business and remittance from India and Arab countries, Have a house in the local market town, Their house and land are in a safe location, The community do not see any risk of land slide, flood or fire.
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Water source and pipeline protection Irrigation canal protection - pipe and plantation Alternative water source conservation - plantation and gabions Community forestry user group formation Emergency fund establishment Saving Credit fund establishment Awareness raising about drinking water purification Practice of using latrines and stop open defecation Household and environment cleanliness practice Hand washing with soap and water practice Multiple use of alternative water sources to increase income [Vegetable Production, Fish farming pond, Drip/micro irrigation, Water mill, Peltric set.] Suspension bridge construction Improved cooking stoves construction Water source registration
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or they lived too far away or did not hear about the workshop. Those who did the wellbeing/ vulnerability categorisation appeared to take into account the needs/situation of those absent, but a formal process is needed to ensure this consistently happens. Triangulation between mapping, clustering and informal discussion seemed to be consistent. Usually in NEWAH processes the technical and social staff visit every household to ensure inclusion. This level of input it unlikely to be feasible for LAPA at scale. It is useful to facilitate the community to set up guidelines that give opportunities for the most vulnerable people to express their concerns and receive support from the rest of the people to ensure social justice to the most poor and vulnerable. The adaptive capacity needs of the most poor and vulnerable must be prioritised and linked into planning using a multi-criteria ranking process which helps to rank the actions against vulnerability, gender and poverty indicators. There is a need both to mobilise the most poor and vulnerable people to have voice and demand support from political leaders, and at the same time to sensitise the leaders so that they listen to the poor and vulnerable and represent them. During the pilot it was easy to work with these groups and gain understanding of the priorities of the most vulnerable because NEWAH had gained their trust and respect. It would need more effort if working from scratch in a new area. It is important not to assume that the priorities of the poorest are generally the same as those of the people present in a workshop. They need to be deliberately sought, though it takes extra time and resources.
3.8 Including the priorities of the most vulnerable in planning adaptive capacity development
It is important to facilitate each community to identify the most vulnerable people and households through a vulnerability assessment process, and to ensure highly vulnerable people are present in the discussion. Some poor families and some very vulnerable were present during the pilot work. If they were not it was often because they were too busy labouring
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found to be useful: social mapping, hazard mapping, trend analysis, well-being ranking, vulnerability assessment, gateway services analysis and mapping adaptation support agencies. When existing well-being ranking has climate factors added, it can be used to verify the most vulnerable people. In this pilot it was found that most of poorest households were in a highly vulnerability situation. People really wanted to be engaged in the process when discussion was based around real vulnerabilities. Social mapping helped to locate the areas at risk (households, water source, water supply intake of pipeline or reservoir tank) from landslide or flood. The hazard mapping, analysis and ranking helped communities to emphasise their real situation, and the risk to their life or livelihoods, when preparing and seeking support for a response. Assessment of responses to hazards made or sought by the community was useful for the planning phase. The community-based adaptation planning process helps communities to focus on climate hazards and seek possible adaptation measures. While mapping potential support agencies, it was not so easy for communities to identify specific partners and they did not know how to get the required support effectively. WASH is an effective entry point when discussing vulnerability. People really focus because of their high vulnerability if a drinking water supply system is damaged, and they also consider wider implications such as those on health and livestock. This example also effectively highlights the vulnerability of a system that is dependent on one main source. The importance of protecting minor springs for times of emergency can be used for talking about the importance of diversifying options to increase adaptive capacity.
The community identified all the options that could increase their ability to survive, cope and adapt. They separated them according to the needs of different wealth or social status groups. They identified the options that they can carry out on their own locally and others that require additional external assistance. The community-based cost benefit analysis tool took a great deal of time. Since it is a qualitative process for ranking that takes time and skill to understand the concept, it is a bit difficult to involve all the women, poor and vulnerable in the calculation process. Thus, key informants should be carefully selected to represent all groups. The facilitator needs to be well prepared to use this tool with the local community. It is important that the outcome of complex processes are presented back to the whole community, taking care to ensure the most poor and vulnerable understand. At the end the community felt it was important to slightly amend the outcome.
3.10 Prioritisation of options that increase peoples ability to survive, cope and adapt
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the particular climate effects being felt in each district in order to pass on appropriate climate information. Using climate foresight is meaningful when clear foresight can be given when it is simply about expecting increased uncertainty, it is harder for people to tangibly respond. It was found to be easier for people to reflect on past disasters and current vulnerability than to think forwards and prepare.
vulnerability groups High, Medium, Low, as in the table below. The gateway service analysis initiated discussion about which services were actually accessible to which households in practice, and about which services were priorities for immediately increasing adaptive capacity. Having easily assessed access to and the value of the existing services, some participants found it hard to say what additional services they would need to increase adaptive capacity. They found it hard to think beyond everyday needs, so it would be effective to use this tool following exercises that envision a future with high adaptive capacity. Below is an example of gateway services identified and put into a hierarchy by a mixed group of community members. Square brackets indicate not available but seen as desirable. Because the value and prioritization of gateway services differed from those in the ISET model, it will be essential to use local priorities when deciding which gateway services to be first developed for VDC/district delivery, and to bias decisions towards the needs of the most vulnerable. The analysis of gateway services was useful for community understanding of the bigger picture, relationships, and identification of what services they need and how to access them. The analysis also highlighted to facilitators how the community was not very aware of what services exist to increase resilience and which may be most helpful in times of disaster. Gateway analysis may be more useful at district level for developing strategies for the sequence of providing services, but the tool was not tested at that level. It can be useful during consultation by district decision makers to ask different communities and interest groups to put the
LA 10 LS 17 LC 12 L = 39 A = 40 (most poor) B = 35 C = 17 T = 92
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Gateway services Core Level 1 Access to land, water, forest, a safe house. Safe drinking water, toilet, medicinal herbs, health post, medicine shop, primary education, secondary education, Higher education, temple/monestry, [technical support on crops and livestock], [suspension bridge], [irrigation], local labour employment. WFP (goats, seeds) Roads, transport, mill, post office, telephone. Radio/TV (news) [electricity] [Markets, credit/loans, training and support for establishing micro-enterprises, emergency fund]
water services (fish farming and vegetable farming), Water conservation (rainwater harvesting), Capacitating communities for operation, management and conservation of water sources and systems. Mechanisms for the climate vulnerable to reach up and draw down resources and access services were found to be different at different levels: Community: They valued three factors that enabled them to reach up and draw down: Information around climate change, adaptation and where to access support. Facilitation support from the NGO in drawing up plans so as to have something concrete to take to the VDC and DDC. Enabling support in terms of accompanying them to District fora where they could meet decisionmakers face to face and present their case. VDC level: Climate change awareness was a crucial step in creating the environment for the community representatives to come and make their requests. A strong planning process and governance structure would help the VDC be an effective channel of funds and support. District level boundary actors: The district level politicians and officials appreciated the real voices of the community representatives and committed to address some of the action points given resource availability. During the September workshop, their contribution was collected through group work and presentation on four key strategic questions. These contributions were relevant for climate proofing existing WASH systems and useful hints about the process of VDC level plan inclusion into DDC plan. The politicians and a Constitutional Assembly member were invited during the sharing workshop at district level and gave suggestions, feedback and verbal commitment to address the community adaptation needs within their capacity and resource availability.
Level 2
Level 3 Level 4
services in their preferred hierarchy (level) groups. It would be very useful for them to see how the ranking differed with wealth, access to resources and vulnerability.
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or able to access financial and technical resources. It was found that when they put actions into plans that involve going to the district for help, the community needed capacity building support in order to be able to approach line agencies and other officials. The pilot team accompanied the delegation of 16 members of Guranse village to a VDC level meeting and then district headquarters to introduce them to key decision makers.) There are roles for key players at every level. Government roles would be in the areas of: Policy and guideline development. Climate change information system development for key actors and dissemination of general information for the public. Building capacity of government officials, political representatives, including VDC secretary, school teachers and NGOs/CBOs regarding the adaptation needs of the most vulnerable. Coordination of the distribution of resources and the planning, implementation and monitoring of initiatives that increase adaptive capacity. Timely budget disbursement as required to support adaptive capacity development. NGO roles would be in the areas of: Awareness raising of rights and service provision at community and VDC level. Capacity building at community and VDC level to reach up and draw down funds and support. Technical support for implementation of community level activities. Supporting monitoring and evaluation of resources accessed and being accountable. Facilitation of resource distribution process at VDC and community levels, and encouraging transparency and fairness of service providers.
3.15 Building capacity to reach up and draw down resources to implement locally identified priorities
Capacity needs to be built; it cannot be assumed that communities are aware of
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CBO roles would be in the areas of: Mobilisation of people in accessing and accountably using resources in the implementation of climate adaptation priority actions. Maintaining links with VDC and other support agencies at VDC and district level for smooth flow of information and resources. Mobilisation of locally available financial and social capital in response to climate change hazards, such as establishing an emergency fund, to match with funding from VDC or District.
Following the VDC and district level meetings the pilot team and key members of FEDWASUN met in Udayapur to discuss FEDWASUNs involvement in the district level process. As a result, FEDWASUN submitted a brief concept note and is ready to play a key role.
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communities (and they tend to fund cheaper projects first). In theory all projects should go through the DDC council. In practice if a communitys project has not come up as a priority, and political pressure has not worked, they can approach offices and line agencies individually to ask for support.
cons they say yes but take little action, but also they do not block activities being carried out. Plans need to be backed by good technical support from projects, NGOs and other line agencies.
3.18 Learning and recommendations regarding scaling-up community adaptation plans to the VDC level
It is best that VDC level sensitisation takes place prior to working with communities. It should include representatives from all wards and local decision makers (including political party representatives). Action points in the community adaptation plans that require support from VDC and higher levels should be presented in priority order according to the result of cost benefit analysis and multi-criteria ranking. Often support is required to develop the capacity of the community to present their action plan or an application, and influence the decision to include their activities in the planning process. The establishment of links with VDC level decision makers is crucial. Mainstreaming can also happen through NEWAH plans as they have credibility at VDC (and DDC) level because the DDC allocated NEWAH VDCs to work in. This would also apply to other NGOs officially working in the district. Political party representatives expect to be invited to all important meetings,and nothing goes ahead without their support. It is an important opportunity to raise their awareness about climate change as they may be more long term than government officers. It was found that where the VDC secretary is passive there are pros and
3.19 Learning and recommendations regarding scaling up to district level and ensuring coordinated planning
Community plans need to come up through VDC council, and Ilaka offices (where they function) in order to effectively get incorporated into plans and result in action. However the official planning process rarely works in practice. It is essential for climate change awareness to be in every sector, agency, NGO and political party for adequate responses to bottom-up needs and plans. District level climate change sensitisation workshops should happen first, engaging DDC, DWSDO, DIO, DFO and politicians. It is useful to collect baseline information about what climate change related activities have already been undertaken. Rather than talk generally of LAPA it may be more useful to have nested CAPA, VAPA and DAPA (Community, VDC and District level adaptation plans). NEWAH, amongst others, can lobby for the development of climate change adaptation planning guidelines. Central level policy and guidelines with strong recommendations are needed to enable DDC and VDC actors to consider climate change on the development agenda and incorporate in into the annual planning process. The DDC should ensure climate change is overarching and have the mandate to ask every sector and line agency to
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climate-proof their plans and include climate change adaptation measures in their development activities. If NEWAH were to work in a new district without existing working relationships to encourage coordinated planning, the following process would be helpful. Identify existing agencies or networks that are working on water, sanitation or climate change issues in the district. Visit the DDC and explore opportunities in relation to what has already been done in the district and what gaps exist. Explain the background and purpose of the process clearly and ask district level key actors (LDO, Engineer and Planning officers, politicians) what would be the best steps to proceed in the district. Organize district level awareness building and consensus receiving workshop. Identify the most climate vulnerable VDCs or Ilaka with the help of participants and request they are prioritised. Select VDCs in which to begin work from the priority list and get approval to organise VDC level workshops, discussions, surveys and facilitate an adaptation planning process with communities. Show district decision makers the provisional plans of action developed at community and VDC level, and invite district level decision-makers to provide their suggestion on the process and framework. Encourage them to clearly state their commitment to supporting or implementing elements of the plans.
the communities, its uptake and its impact on their life in terms of increased adaptive capacity. The improved understanding of people can be verified by listening to their views and use of terminology after having awareness raised, and their commitment towards participating in training, meetings, action plan preparation and implementation. Something is seen as effective by a household or community if they maintain it, continue doing it or develop it. Effectiveness needs to be defined by the people an intervention or process is intended to benefit. It can be measured and evaluated by them and other boundary actors. Simple community-based monitoring charts can be prepared with action points and what action was undertaken and when. The community completes them themselves, thus keeping accountability in the community. Bringing together VDC level and district level professionals, politicians, VDC Secretary, health post in-charge and journalists seemed to add value to and validate the effectiveness of efforts. It is too early to give strong a recommendation for the evaluation process. However, for monitoring the adaptive capacity of households, including the vulnerable, the following process would be useful.
Community level
Once communities have defined what they mean by increased adaptive capacity or reduced vulnerability they can prepare a monitoring chart of planned climate change adaptation activities and carry out self monitoring. A self monitoring tool should be simple and visual so that community members can easily understand and update it. It can monitor qualitative and quantitative changes. It can measure one-off events and changes in capacity over time. Adaptation activity indicators should be developed together by/with the community. An example for this level of monitoring is below:
3.20 Monitoring and evaluating changes in adaptive capacity so as to ensure adaptation planning is reducing vulnerability to climate change
The effectiveness of an intervention can be measured in terms of understanding among
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Achievement/indicators Three gabion boxes have been installed above the intake structure to divert the flood during the monsoon season. 50 trees planted above intake. On a capacity scale of one to ten we began at 2 and now feel we are at 6.
outcome in terms of reduced vulnerability So far they have not been breeched and the intake is safe. unknown We went to the DSCO and got seedlings and wire to do the above.
VDC level
At VDC level the monitoring should also be based on the criteria of the most climate vulnerable for increasing their adaptive capacity. The monitoring process can be based on how many climate hazard events (landslide, flood, fire, drought) have been reported over recent years from the different wards of the VDC, and types of climate change adaptation actions undertaken. The response of the communities and VDC, should the climate change related hazards takes place, would indicate changes in adaptive capacity of people. This is difficult to measure if the event does not take place or if adaptation measures are not reported.
also be monitored. Key district officers and political party representatives should be invited to visit and observe the adaptation actions, talk with communities and assess the effectiveness, and hear their views regarding district policy decisions.
District level
The district disaster relief committee can provide information regarding effective capacity to deal with disasters. Slow onset effects of climate change such as reduced soil moisture leading to drought should
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Findings form the foundation for the next round of planning. Evaluation feeds into the next project cycle. It is important to ensure a sense of ownership of the monitoring by key players in the mainstreaming process such as VDC secretary and LDO. Public sharing of periodic evaluation should be encouraged.
3.22 Mainstreaming WASH into VDC and then DDC planning processes
The pilot found the VDC and DDC level actors were very receptive to community level adaptation plans. They pledged financial and other support. The community was very encouraged by this response and felt they now had capacity to go again alone and ask for services and support. This was a new experience for the NEWAH team to focus on integrating community plans into the local government planning processes. It was clear how this leads to adaptation mainstreaming. FEDWASUN was confident that once they incorporate climate change into their plans, they can facilitate its mainstreaming into VDC plans, and can update plans and processes to ensure access to the most vulnerable. Mainstreaming depends very much on local relations. In Udayapur district NEWAH has good relations with key decision makers at both Rauta VDC level and district level (including through FEDWASUN) so WASH activities are incorporated into local planning/reporting and mainstreaming climate change seems to be straightforward. Mainstreaming WASH can be an entry point to supporting sustainable livelihood development. In theory mainstreaming can happen through the WUMP; in practice WUMP is an inventory, a very useful resource for planning, rather than a plan itself. Mainstreaming can happen when WUMP is incorporated into VDC profiles. The timing
for this is favourable as in Udhaypur district MOLD VDC profiles are being prepared now. This can result in communities getting government funding for implementation of activities beyond WASH (and WASH too if they choose to when NEWAH withdraws.) There are inconsistencies still to be ironed out in the VDC profile guidelines water and sanitation are included in planning, however at DDC level only water supply is included, but sanitation is not - WUMP can meet this gap (Water Aid is encouraging this).
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In some communities their interests are well represented, but it can not be guaranteed. At the national scale of developing LAPA interest groups may speak up for them, but may not be able to represent the specificity of their context. It may be best to work though existing groups that support the development of the most poor and excluded, such as womens groups, water user groups or forest user groups, but these are only effective if they genuinely focus on them. Provision of guidelines, tools and trained social mobilisers can not guarantee, but can increase the chances of their inclusion. Participants may be disillusioned with the adaptation planning process if the finance situation has not been transparent and expectations have been raised where they are not deliverable.
can be an unwillingness to change plans which have already been approved and formalised, and they would rather do it in the next cycle.
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District level authorities may not be in a position to provide the proper instruction to VDCs for incorporation and implementation of climate adaptation plans due to lack of directives from above or limited financial resources. Untimely disbursement of funds through government institutions may delay the process of building adaptive capacity at community level, and lead to frustration or increase the vulnerability of the most vulnerable. Donor policies and requirements may be hard for local level agencies to meet.
Try to influence new donors to come to work in the most vulnerable places. Decentralise. Rather than cover whole country thinly, better to focus on working well and having wide coverage in a region.
3.24 Learning from NEWAHs experience of scaling-out and scaling-up NGOs as long term service providers for increasing adaptive capacity (objective 3)
3.24.1 Lessons regarding geographic expansion Expand gradually (region-district-VDC). Expand systematically, according to need on the ground. Focus on areas of real need, even if they are most difficult. Spend time researching which are the places of real need, and the communities and individuals that most need to be included. However, to first establish a presence, it helps to work in more easy areas first. Respond to demand, but be aware that in some places it might be necessary to create demand through awareness raising. Be ready also to go where government or donors have priority to focus. Note that government policy and donor interest need to be complimentary in order for NGOs to expand and implement effectively. Harmonise with donor interest in a focus area.
3.24.2 Lessons regarding programme expansion Main focus should be consistent over time and place, with new components added according to demand, donors or latest trends. Gender and social inclusion should be there from the outset and in all components. Important to always meet basic needs and keep programmes practical, in line with technical knowledge and potential. Livelihoods element can be included later, but need to think of multiple water use from the outset with communities. Work closely with whole community from the start, and let them inform programme expansion. Bring examples from other areas, facilitate participant exposure to options and participation in the design stage. Costs can increase with increased inclusion (e.g. if working with more remote and scattered communities). In very remote areas it is very expensive to implement programmes and interventions. 3.24.3 Lessons on expansion with regard to increasing influence in the WASH sector Credibility (as manifest as increased voice in advising policy, increased effectiveness of advocacy) comes through working on the ground, providing practical support. Credibility with communities comes with service delivery and a rounded WASH approach. A disadvantage of having credibility in the WASH sector is being left with
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difficult implementation, or all the implementation (if line agencies no longer bother). Important to have local government respect. Important to lobby with political party representatives. Credibility increased through being truly transparent and participatory, working through local NGOs/CBOs, having a long term reputation, meeting basic needs, giving no cause to make people upset or block the work. Need to have the following qualities flexibility (e.g. to work though conflict, switching to work more through CBOs when NGOs cannot work), respond to change or new focuses (e.g. add GAP or CC focus) or
changing donors, ability to see clearly the way forward into new areas/themes. 3.24.4 Lessons regarding how government, other NGOs and the WASH sector have learnt from NEWAHs experience of scaling up/out Acknowledgement of achievements. NEWAH asked to share findings during policy development e.g. to input into 2004 policy. NEWAH a member of the government sector stakeholder group (MPPW), involved as member in joint sector review initiated by Sector Efficiency Improvement Unit (SEIU). NEWAH part of key task forces e.g. Steering Committee for National Sanitation Action. NEWAH approached by donors, strengths recognized.
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4.1 Proposed LAPA development for Rauta VDC and Udayapur district
Based on the foundations laid during the pilot phase NEWAH would continue the LAPA development work as follows. At community level it would work towards the development of adaptation plans at the micro-catchment scale that includes every household. This would involve awareness raising, vulnerability mapping, adaptation planning, building capacity to reach up and draw down resources and access services, monitoring and plan revision. This would be based on the recommendations of the existing Water Users Master Plan. At the level of Rauta VDC it would 1. Further increase awareness of key actors of climate change and the importance of including it in planning. 2. Increase the capacity of VDC members from every ward to explain about climate change and take action to increase local resilience. 3. Encourage VDC decision-makers to support and respond to community level adaptation planning and generally strengthen the local planning process. 4. Build a team to facilitate adaptation planning at community level (perhaps through VWASHCC) that includes all actors/sectors. 5. Facilitate the development of a VDC level mechanism for equitably allocating funding for adaptation activities. 6. Develop a role for schools/students with teachers that have shown interest. 7. Follow up existing plans and monitor progress. At district level it would 1. Continue to encourage CA members, DDC (or the current elected body) members, government officials and political party representatives to prioritise climate change in development planning (through awareness, vulnerability mapping, adaptation planning, equitable finance distribution). 2. Facilitate the development of coordination mechanisms between district level agencies and down through VDC to community level (as best as possible given governance constraints. 3. Encourage DDC to allocate budget for adaptation planning. 4. Facilitate the development of funding mechanisms, that include prioritisation of the most vulnerable. 5. Develop the capacity of FEDWASUN to advocate for climate change inclusion in water use and management.
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NEWAH would then make a request to the DDC to facilitate the development of adaptation planning with communities throughout the district and roll out the programme to every VDC in Udhaypur.
uncertainties of climate change and potential adaptation measures that could be made either locally or with outside support where required. Explore and develop opportunities to integrate the climate change adaptation priorities into the existing development planning processes as below.
Tools The following tools would be used: Climate vulnerability assessment Social Mapping Hazard mapping, analysis and ranking Vulnerability and well-being ranking Gateway services analysis Community based adaptation planning Mapping adaptation partnership (support agencies) Community based monitoring and evaluation. Coordination/synergy Coordination is essential as climate change impacts all sectors at each scale. Synergistic working needs to be modeled from central level, and coordination across watersheds encouraged. The elected district body (currently the DDC) should oversee coordination amongst line agencies and other district actors, rather than a separate climate committee.
incorporate community plan into VdC level planning and allocate VdC budget ensure VdC plans are climate proof Forward to plans to ilaka level
Ward level
n n n
VdC level
identity climatic hazards Assess the risk of them actually happening identify most vulnerable households and communities and their socio-economical status make community level plans to cope with, prepare for and adapt to hazards Climate proof existing plans
ilaka level
n
incorporate plans into district plans and allocate budget (prioritise adaptive capacity of most vulnerable) Provide technical support for planning, design and implementation ensure district plans use climate foresight and are climate proof
Accept ward level and VdC level adaptation planning and forward to ddC
district level
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The VDC should ensure synergy amongst government and nongovernment agencies and political parties working locally. At micro-catchment level community organizations such as water user committees, forest users groups, irrigation user committees, and saving and credit cooperatives can coordinate local effort and work for synergy and optimum use of resources.
Institutional Mechanisms Institutional mechanisms appropriate for supporting LAPA development and implementation vary at different scales: There need to be teams of local facilitators working with communities to develop LAPA or to climate proof existing community planning mechanisms. They need skills in awareness raising, participatory planning and social mobilization (to reach up draw down). Small-scale local service delivery would be in partnership with community based organizations, local NGOs closely coordinated by VDC council and processes. They should all have clear roles. Use should be made of existing strong community organizations and the capacity of others built. District wide NGOs are crucial for awareness raising, capacity building, technical support and process facilitation at community level and VDC level during plan development and implementation. A strong sense of ownership at every level is essential for effective mainstreaming. Strengthen DDC capacity to act according to the local governance act, to have the authority to ensure all planning and budgeting is climate proof and insist on a coordinated
approach. It is important to use the existing local government planning structure, even though is does not function freely and fairly, rather than bring in something new. Central and regional government and donor roles would be essential in coordinating, monitoring and creating an enabling policy environment for the process. Key players at district level need directives and guidelines from above to effectively ensure climate mainstreaming.
Financial Mechanisms Considering the present socio-political situation of the country, it would worth preparing more than one financing strategy: Should the DDC and VDC have integrity with a good working environment with skilled human resources, funding is best channelled through local government. An alternative mechanism can be a coalition of agencies consisting the DDC, VDC, NGOs and CBOs with clear roles. In line with the NAPA stipulation that 80% of funding goes to communities an option for directing the countrys total climate change adaptation fund flow to local level is suggested as follows: The government sector to manage 70% with 56% reaching the community (14% for management and overheads) and the NGO sector to manage 30% with 24% reaching community level. Cooperatives and other community owned enterprises should be encouraged for sustainable local financing. Provision needs to be made for the poor and most vulnerable. Consideration should be given to roles of both not-for-profit and for-profit private sector players. Public private partnerships should be considered in the absence of adaptation funding.
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Technology/practices Practices that increase adaptive capacity specific to the WASH sector include: Climate proof permanent water sources and drinking water supply systems. Identify alternative water sources and develop conservation and protection plans. Provide support for rainwater collection at household and community level to recharge the ground water and meet community demand for household use, livestock and micro irrigation. Promote multiple use water systems according to community needs and context, including income generating activities. Facilitate Open Defecation Free Community/VDC as well as Clean and Healthy community/VDC. Facilitate sustained improved hygiene and sanitation behaviour and practices regarding hand washing, management of human excreta, water hygiene and food hygiene. Promote improved cooking stoves. Plan for and provide emergency support. Provide training and capacity building support. This is a time of great opportunity to mainstream climate change through developing local adaptation planning
processes. Local people are keen to understand how their experience of increasingly unpredictable local weather links to global climate change, and they are keen to build resilience to immediate and long-term climate induced hazards. The decision-makers at VDC and district level are also keen to address climate change issues and support the building of adaptive capacity. A supportive policy environment is coming into place to enable key decisionmakers that are keen to address climate adaptation to facilitate the development and implementation of LAPAs. NEWAH is in a strong position to continue the work begun during the pilot design phase. It is keen to embrace climate change and address the adaptation needs of rural communities. It sees the way forward for NGOs with a district presence as starting at community level to identify vulnerabilities, capacities and priorities, and build the capacity of communities to prepare adaptation plans and lobby for them to be integrated into the district planning process. It will work at every level within the district to strengthen institutional and funding mechanisms to meet the adaptive capacity development needs of poor and vulnerable communities. NEWAH will also take the WASH sector forward nationally to embed climate change understanding in all programmes and advocacy work.
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Action
n n
n n
n n
n n
n n
Presentations Group work time Line Seasonal calendar Well being ranking
n n n
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Participatory community meeting, climate rish analysis Cause and effect matrix
n n n
n n n
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ANNExES
ANNEx-1 Analysis of climate change hazard impact and adaptation strategies. Prepared visually with a force field analysis,
Hazard impact (1 (low impact) to 5 (high impact)) Scale of impact or risk of impact 5 Response(1- less effort; to 5 -prompt and effective response) Scale of response
Land slide occurred around water source Landslide on Pipeline Water source drying up Use of unsafe water for drinking
Pipe damaged, tank broken down, water supply discontinued for one week, it took three hours to collect water for trip, people become sick. Pipe damaged and water supply discontinued Difficult to water cattle, reduced irrigation opportunity, A number of water borne diseases occurred, people became sick, difficult to go to health post for treatment, mental and economic loss for treatment
40 meter pipe brought from VDC, all users contributed to collect stone and construct stable foundation, people went to alternative source to fetch water, people had to take medicine to control fever, local effort like use of bamboo to provide temporary solution of water supply. Pipeline clearance, skill masons support to repair damaged pipeline and continue the water supply. The response process was slow and not satisfactory. People did not take any action to protect the water source instead, they took the cattle to alternative sources. Search and use of traditional healers, use of herbs and medicine, boiled water given to patient and started to construct toilets.
2.5
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descriptors/indicator areas identified by Community: From household vulnerability clustering Safe from landslides Safe from fire Economic capacity Presence of and support for disability River control Good health Income Strong/safe house Literacy Employment stability Options and alternatives Relatives working outside Income generating activities (eg fish or vegetable farming) Health post manned and near by Vehicle road Awareness and information on a range of things Electricity for mill and light Forest thick and green NTFP in forest empty spaces Education of children to SLC Education of adults (functional literacy) Crop diversification Cheap loans from own group Suspension bridge for access during monsoon floods
From Visioning -
Nb different tools yield differing sets of descriptors (a study on this would be interesting)
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Landslide at or around water source Stream water used for drink Water source depletion Diseases/ epidemic
a) Gabion box b) Tree plantation c) Alternative source protection a) Boiling b) Use of local firewood c) Emergency fund for treatment a) Plantation b) Rain water harvesting c) Reservoir Tank a) use boiled water b) toilet use c) hand washing with soap d) keep environment clean
a further discussion took place asking them about options for use of available water sources. responses covered irrigation to paddy and wheat fields, fish farming, vegetable farming and water mill construction and micro hydro plant construction as alternative options.
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Identification of climate vulnerable water resources and systems Identification of climate vulnerable households Identification of qualities of adaptive capacity and needs of PCV to increase adaptive capacity
Number of water sources and water supply systems were identified with vulnerability status. Households were identified as having High, medium and low vulnerability. Identification of qualities/indicators of adaptive capacity of community members Inventory of risks identified by communities. The key risk are: Landslide and flood. List of desired institutions and services are received from communities Participants list, Inventory of climate change related elements, events and use of CC related terminology by the people after awareness raising.
Social mapping
Identification of gateway services Increased awareness and understanding of CC at community, VDC and district level
Focus group discussion using venn diagrams and gateways diagram Timeline, Seasonal calendar Video Powerpoint presentation
Increased awareness of sanitation, latrine construction, safe use and hygiene in relation to climate change effects Amendment of community action plans in the light of CC (in effect an element of an adaptation plan) Elements of community action plans are incorporated into VDC planning Elements of community action plans are incorporated into DDC planning and Line Agency plans Climate change is incorporated into NEWAH WASH activities
Participants list, inventory of types of diseases, climate hazards and adaptation measures with monitoring indicators developed, Climate adaptive plan is prepared for existing water supply system and new components like farming pond, improved cooking stove have also been included as priority actions. Delegation of representative meets the VDC Secretary and political party before or during VDC council meeting.
Delegation of representative met the DDC and political party before or during DDC council.
Submission of application with CC adaptation community action plan/VDC recommendation. Planning meeting
Existing planning and monitoring tools are modified to include CC Local media coverage of CCA
Modification is documented and reported to Senior Management Team at NEWAH HQ Copies of news/clips about CC events are received
Discussion, review and pre-testing in the field. formal informal linkages and coordination with local media.
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FEDWASUN identifies a role with respect to CC that includes bringing voices of the climate vulnerable and helping mainstream climate change adaptation into district planning. The role of Water Use Master Plan WUMP and VDC profiles in CCA is enhanced Recommendations of how to scale out adaptation and WASH interventions Learning report
Discussions with district representative of FEDWASUN on their potential roles at VDC and district level.
FEDWASUN is willing to be engaged in the process for strengthening of its VDC level network of WSUCs, awareness on CC, disseminate information, play monitoring role and influence cc focus at district level. Reported in section 3.12 (Role explored, not enhanced) See section 3.13
Discussion
Recommendations, learning and cautions are reported Compilation of real learning, constraints and recommendations from the field. Steps for increasing adaptive capacity (LAPA process) with facilitation tips and what to watch out for.
Discussion
Monthly reports
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overall adaptive outcome expected (pilot purpose): note: ranking (0= not yet started, 1= start ........ and 4 complete) Status evidence of change (moV) Role of project in influencing change. other factors that influenced change. NEWAH
behavioural changes (in terms of behaviour, relationships, knowledge base and access to info) these are outcomes. 4 4 4 Trend of rainfall pattern, Estimation of crop yields of past few years. Number of water sources identified. Number of climate vulnerable people and HHs. Inventory of options identified by communities. 2 Community action plan.
Change statement: The pilot intends to see the community understanding the relevance of climate change to their lives and using the information to prepare for increased effects of CC and make plans for increasing adaptive capacity, starting with the most poor and vulnerable. They will use the information to voice their concerns and demands at VDC and district level, and draw down funds and services.
Progress markers (incremental indicators of change in behaviour of boundary actors in terms of expect to see (2-3), Like to see (5-7), Love to see (2-3) expect to see the community: Changing their perception of the effects of CC they see around them (accepting it wont go back to normal) Looking at existing activities through CC lens and CC proofing practices/activities Identifying the most poor and climate vulnerable
4 2
List of local agencies identified. Reports on VDC response. CAP. 4 1 1 4 1 Voices of PEV are recorded. Registration certificate NA
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like to see the community: Carrying out activities that increase adaptive capacity [Increasing livelihood options (veg farming), Protecting water sources, Making recharge ponds, Using water carefully, Using alternative energy,] Incorporating these activities into their action plans Letting the poor and vulnerable know they have rights to access funds/support from VDC Taking plan to VDC members Taking plans to VDC assembly Using plans to access district level resources/services Creating an environment for the poor and vulnerable to express their needs and claim/receive support Registering their community water resources with the DDC love to see the community: Using their experience with CC and water/WASH in other aspects of their lives/livelihoods 0
The most poor and climate vulnerable people (PCV) 2 1 Inventory of past incidents. Priority CC risks identified by PCV. CC adaptation plan. Different crops identified. Inventory of type of CC hazards. Interaction with political parties Putting CC agenda in VDC council. Local examples.
Change statement: The pilot intends to see the PCV understanding the implications and risks of CC and being involved in planning and monitoring processes, to ensure their voices are heard and their adaptation needs identified and included in planning and budget allocation. This will result in activities and processes that increase their adaptive capacity as a priority. like to see the pCv: Being better prepared for climate effects Having more livelihood options Having the confidence to cope with climate effects 1 1 1 love to see the pCv: Lobbying politicians Demanding respectful responses Feeling that they have more control of how they respond to and adapt to climate effects (not all in the hands of the distant government or the gods) 2 0 1 expect to see vDC members: Understanding CC and its local relevance Sharing their understanding of CC and CCA at ward/community level 4 1 2 2
as well as the points above The pilot expects to see the PCV: Being aware of climate change Accessing support from VDC, DDC, NGOs and line agencies
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0 1 like to see vDC members: Considering CCA in allocation of VDC budget and basket funds Listening and responding to the requests for support from the PCV (create an environment that they can come forward with their needs and claim support) Increasing the adaptive capacity of the PCV through VDC planning activities and budget allocation. Who are WSUC members and political party reps raising their voice to ask for funds and activities to increase adaptive capacity. Attend the VDC level interaction on CC. Express their views and ideas during VDC level interaction. Propose CC as an agenda in VDC level meeting. The PCV people are allowed to meet and discuss with the VDC members. VDC organizes discussions/ orientation about CC. Submission of requests to VDC.
VDC members
Change statement: The pilot intends to see the VDC using their understanding of CCA to work impartially and equitably towards increasing the adaptive capacity of inhabitants of the VDC, particularly the most poor and climate vulnerable, and represent their needs in district planning processes.
1 1 1 0 VDC council meeting decision. DDMs attend the CCA related interaction. Consensus NA
love to see vDC members: Providing the support the PCV require to feel empowered to claim their rights in times of need. Incorporating CCA activities into VDC panning and taking them up to DDC planning. Showing accountability to community level groups. Allocating some budget specifically for the PCV Such decision made at Rauta VDC level after October 2010 onwards. VDC council meeting decision. 1 1 expect to see district decision makers: Understanding and internalising CC and CCA Talking amongst each other about CC related issues and making links between their observations and CC. 0 1 0
Change statement: The pilot intends to see DDMs understanding CC and the importance of CCA to their work. They commit to making planning and budget decisions that increase the adaptive capacity of people of Udhaypur, particularly the most poor and climate vulnerable. They work collaboratively to bring CC awareness and the needs of the PCV into district planning processes.
like to see district decision makers: Revising their plans in the light of CC Committing to integrate CCA needs identified at community level into district plans (DDC or line agencies) Committing to consciously include CC in the next planning cycle (activities and budgets that increase CCA) 1 1 love to see district decision makers: Taking forward WASH plans and supporting the sector Learning from the WASH pilot experience of incorporating CCA into plans and activities, and applying it to other sectors.
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Providing forum to share the outputs for VDC and community level CCA process in the DDC council. DDC council acknowledge the issue and makes certain decision.
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ANNEx-6 the climate change adaptation action plan presented at the VdC and ddC level sharing meetings
SN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Adaptation Action Water source and pipeline protection Irrigation canal protection - pipe and plantation Alternative water source conservation - plantation and gabion Community forestry user group formation Emergency fund & Saving Credit fund establishment Awareness about drinking water purification Practice of using latrine and stop OD Household and environment clean practice Hand Washing with soap and water practice Improve adaptive capacity of vulnerable households Promote multiple use of alternative water sources to increase income Vegetable Production Fish farming pond Drip/micro irrigation Water Mill Peltric set 12 13 14 Suspension bridge construction Improved cooking stoves WSUC registration VDC, DDC Alternative Energy NEWAH/ DDC Location Guranse Guranse Who Community Community Community Community Community Community Community Community Community Household When Support NEWAH VDC, Irrigation office and DDC VDC, DWSSDO Forestry office Cooperative NEWAH NEWAH NEWAH NEWAH VDC, DDC and other support agencies. District Agriculture Office, Alternative Energy and DDC
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ANNEx-7 Assessment of programmes outcomes and whether they increase adaptive capacity
major programs and approaches WaSh Facilities Gravity Flow system Spring Protection Tubewell Hand Dug well Rain Water Harvesting Fog Water Water Connection Community Hygiene promotion and sanitation School hygiene and sanitation Training and capacity building at community level 51 districts empowerment and capacity enhanced Sustainability multiple uses of Water Service/ Domestic Drinking Water Micro hydro/Peltric set Water Mill Fish pond Sprinklers Recharge pond Cattle pond Irrigation pond Water Use Master Plan/VDC profile Capacity Building of NGO and CBO Advocacy and influencing National and local level Working VDCs Local level Consolidated VDC water use plan capacity enhanced institutional development contribute to and influence policy formation sharing and reflection good practices Emergency Support responding to outbreaks of diarrhea Anywhere access to safe water, promoting hygienic and sanitary practices Mainstreamed in all areas and programmes equitable access to all drinking water pro-poor focus grants and prioritised support Build up and ownership Geographic and client focus 51 districts (Technologies in water includes gravity flow system in the hills, ground water in Tarai, rain water in the hills and fog water in the Eastern hills) remote area, poor and socially excluded community groups Key outcomes access to water and sanitation facilities health improvement improvement of hygiene and sanitation practices and behaviour livelihood improvement increase enrolment in school increase adaptive capacity yes ALL
Increased paid job opportunities WASH program communities increased livelihood opportunity improved health
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It triggers the people involved in the process to set suitable (i.e. high, medium, low vulnerable) norms/ values for social justice to poor and vulnerable on the basis of local practices.
Allowing people to discuss and decide: what can be done individually, what can be done jointly by communities locally and what should be proposed to supporting agencies (VDC, DDCs, NGOs, Donors).
Focus group discussion using Venn diagrams and gateways diagram Timeline and Seasonal calendar
The people become comfortable expressing their views when they feel listened to and respected. They can then have confidence to raise their voice in other venues. Through engagement in the process people develop confidence. Their experiences are validated and linked with wider trends, so then they feel they can ask for support.
By engaging in the process of discussion, planning, and action implementation. Individual experiences are set in a wider context, part of a trend that can be analysed and logical changes made.
They are clear about what has been achieved/ provided and what has not. They can then ask for it.
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Well being ranking Obj: To find out the households vulnerable to climate hazards; to develop indicators of climate induced vulnerability; to have a baseline to compare against. Social mapping Obj: to have a baseline to compare with in the future. Community Self Monitoring Matrix Obj: to monitor progress in implementing activities in community plan and changes in sanitation behaviour.
Categories remained three, but instead of being around poverty they were around vulnerability (high, medium, low)
Add vulnerability to the map both physical and social, both geographical areas and households Climate adaptation components included in the existing CME tool
Through adding questions about vulnerability while the community prepared the map. In consultation with field based staff and community new heading were added to the matrix.
Increases awareness by being incorporated. Capacity to self monitor enhanced through doing.
Community output monitoring Obj: to monitor completion of cc adaptation activities conducted in the community; to compare activities planned against those achieved.
Existing monitoring template used for cc adaptation activities related to WASH in community plan.
Monthly reminder of the importance of adaptation activities. Enhances capacity of community to monitor and reflect on progress this will inform their planning for next year.
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submittEd to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
prEparEd by Local Initiative for Biodiversity Research and Development Gairapatan, Pokhara, Kaski January, 2011
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Local Initiatives for Biodiversity, Research and Development (LI-BIRD) P.O. Box 324, Gairapatan, Pokhara, Kaski, Nepal Tel: +977-61-535357 Email: info@libird.org
Citation:
Thapa K., G.B. Sharma, R.B. Rana, K. Lamsal, and S. Subedi. 2011. Exploring climate adaptation mechanisms for watershed management. Local Initiatives for Biodiversity, Research and Development (LI-BIRD), Pokhara, Kaski, Nepal.
Acknowledgements
We are thankful to all LI-BIRD staff for their contribution to this pilot and the report preparation. We appreciate Dr. Shreeram Prasad Neopane, Executive Director, LI-BIRD and Mr. Abishkar Subedi, Programme Director, LI-BIRD for their constructive input to refine the pilot and report. Our sincere gratitude goes to Dr. Deepak Rijal, Climate Adaptation Design and Piloting Nepal for his regular backstopping, and Ms. Sibongile Pradhan, Climate Adaptation Design and Piloting Nepal for her technical input during design and editing of this report. UK Department for International Development is acknowledged for the financial support for this piloting. Last but not least, we are thankful to the local community of the Rupa watershed for their local effort to successfully complete this pilot and achieve the results.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Table of Contents Executive Summary 1. Introduction 1.1 General Context 1.2 Project Context 1.3 Institutional Context 2. Methodology 2.1 Pilot Area Geographic And Socioeconomic Overview 2.2 Approach And Tools 3. Outputs / Findings 3.1 Institutional Mechanisms 3.2 Climate Change Adaptation Measures In The Watershed 3.2.1 Measures For Adaptation In Natural Resources 3.2.2 Measures For Adaptation In Agriculture 3.3 Mechanism Of Service Delivery In The Watershed 4. Analysis: Towards Developing And Implementing A Lapa 4.1 Including Climate Foresight Into Local Decision Making Process 4.2 Assessing Vulnerability 4.3 Prioritising Options 4.4 Service And Finance Delivery Mechanisms 4.5 Monitoring And Evaluation Framework 4.6 Watershed Or Subwatershed As A Unit Of Lapa 4.7 Constraints to Developing and Delivering LAPAs 5. Conclusion 5.1 Approach 5.2 Tools 5.3 Technology And Practices 5.4 Synergy 5.5 Institutional Mechanisms 5.6 Financial Mechanisms References Annex 1 Annex 2 297 299 301 301 301 302 303 303 304 306 306 309 309 310 312 313 313 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 319 319 320 320 320 321 322 323 325
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ExECUTIVE SUMMARy
Exploring Climate Adaptation Mechanisms for on Watershed Management was a pilot project, implemented by Local Initiatives for Biodiversity, Research, and Development (LI-BIRD), under the Climate Adaptation Design and Piloting Nepal (CADP-N) project mechanism supported by the UK Department for International Development (DFID) and the Ministry of Environment (MOE), Government of Nepal. The main objective was to explore mechanisms for the management a lake watershed through mainstreaming and mobilizing local institutions in the Rupa Lake Watershed in Kaski district of Nepal. The pilot followed participatory approaches and tools for community consultation, orientation, community awareness, and scoping climate change and management issues at the watershed scale. The key indicators of climate change as perceived by local community are increased sedimentation, decreased agricultural performance and decreased agriculture workforce, due to intermittent rainfall increased and dry spells. Farmers have observed a shift, in rainfall period from June-August to July-September. Incidences of crop pests have increased with increased foggy weather and frequency of dry spell. The pilot found that the communities have adopted several adaptation strategies and measures in response to climate change impacts. Reforestation of degraded and eroded land with fodder trees and forages, construction of gabions and loose stone check dams or split bamboo barriers, and bioengineering are some of the effective measures used for gulley control, and reducing soil erosion and sedimentation downstream. Strengthening market links is vital for community adaptation to the stresses posed by climate change. Assigning clear roles for different local institutions in managing ecosystem resources could be a milestone for developing community ownership. Broadening livelihood options through promoting income generating activities and improved market access for value-added products, promoting eco-tourism, and increasing access to information enhances adaptive capacity. Strategies that diversify livelihoods, provide options to the community, add value to their products, and link their products with the market have increased adaptive capacity, thereby making community more resilient to the climate change impacts. Promotion and adoption of organic farming, agroforestry systems, integration of legumes in the farming system (especially in rain-fed or upland farming systems), and promotion of crop varieties developed through decentralized breeding are all key agriculture initiatives to address drought and flood. Cultivation of non timber forest products and strengthening networks for their market is another strategy to diversify livelihoods. Increased utilization and conservation of crop varieties through seed banks and field gene banks, identification and promotion of climate stress tolerant (particularly to drought, flood, and pest) underutilized crops in the farming system, integration of fruit in the farming system, and the integration of small farm animal species of local origin are adaptive strategies.
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A reciprocal benefit - sharing mechanism between upstream and downstream communities was found effective in sustaining the sustain management of ecosystem services against climate change impacts. It has increased access of poor and marginalized communities to local institutions, markets and has brought about a remarkable social change. The mechanism of LAPA development and delivery should engage all local stakeholders and it must include the district and village level governmental agencies, community based organizations, private sector and civil society organizations towards building a public private partnership as a service delivery mechanism. The mechanism should assign defined roles for individual partners, the service providers. There should be a two way delivery mechanism of services in order to really enhance the adaptive capacity of the poor and climate vulnerable communities and ecosystems. A bottom - up as well as top - down monitoring and evaluation mechanism should be in place and should be implemented as a balance that ensures the effective and efficient implementation of adaptation interventions in Nepal. A two-way mechanism of monitoring and evaluating the LAPAs should be in place, in the scale of a watershed or sub-watershed as the recommended unit of LAPA. In order to design and implement the LAPA, a thorough review of existing national policy and plans needs to be carried outs to build climate foresights. Adaptation planning should be fully participatory. Political leaders, constitution assembly members and policy makers need to be regularly updated with climate knowledge along with the need of LAPAs and NAPA. Capacity building of stakeholders (local to regional and national level) on climate change issues is important to effectively and efficiently make LAPAs and implement them. The learning and experience generated from LAPA pilots provides important feedback to the local and national development plans, programmes and policies. Involvement of the private sector, nongovernmental organizations and certainly the government institutions (development and academic institutions) is essential in order to successfully demonstrate public private partnerships to address climate change and develop adaptive capacity. Along with the local bodies, the local institutions including cooperatives and natural resource groups are potential entry points for designing and implementing LAPA.
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INTRODUCTION
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livelihood security (Regmi et al, 2009; Pradhan et al, 2010). Exploring climate adaptation mechanisms in Rupa Lake watershed of Kaski district can provide insight for a model of community based adaptation alongside watershed management. It will ensure longer term ecosystem services (water regulation, food, fibre, fish stocks, crop landraces, erosion control, local employment opportunities, etc) of the fresh water resources, including habitats of aquatic flora and fauna, forests, Non-Timber Forest Products (NTFP), birds, and wildlife through climate adaptation interventions. This pilot project aimed to develop a participatory mechanism to manage a lake watershed through strengthened community initiatives for climate change adaptation to benefit the most poor and climate vulnerable, with the following purpose and objectives:
measures (technologies and practices both local as well as intervened) in Rupa Lake Watershed. 2. To identify and pilot watershed level mechanisms (coordination, benefit sharing, and joint planning) to facilitate the adaptation initiatives.
Purpose:
Explore mechanisms for lake watershed management in order to facilitate climate change adaptation practices and strengthen management of the lake watershed through the involvement of local government and community based institutions.
Objectives:
1. To assess the effectiveness of the existing and potential climate change adaptation
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METhODOLOGy
Watershed Degradation
Biophysical Environment
Drought and Seasonal flood Pest outbreak in crops Drying of water sources Landslides and soil erosion Increased rate of siltation
Socio-economic environment-impact
The area is accessible to markets through a motor-able gravel road. The major market centres are Gagangauda, Shishuwa, Begnas Lake, and Pokhara. There are a range of local institutions operating in the watershed including academic and community based institutions. There are 4 secondary level governmental schools, 15 primary schools, 17 community forest user groups, 12 youth clubs, 5 farmers groups, 18 womens groups, 6 cooperatives, and 2 community based organizations (one focusing on farm production and the other for biodiversity conservation). Impacts of climate change in the watershed are clearly observed in the lake ecosystem and the livelihoods of nearby communities (figure 1). A major indicator of
Decreased crop production More families in debt Increased youth migration Increased drudgery to women Influx of un-sustainable technologies
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climate change in the lake is increased siltation, whereas an indicator for livelihoods is the decreased agriculture workforce and declined productivity due to prolonged drought and erratic rainfall. Weather pattern changes include erratic rainfall of high intensity and short duration, less cold days (shortened winter), increased foggy days and a lack of rain for the rest of the year. The major climatic hazards in the area are heavy precipitation, increased temperatures and prolonged dry spells.
coincided with agriculture practices that increased accumulation of soil and sand in the lake. During such flooding the extent of dying fish in the lake increases.
The pilot used participatory approaches and tools for community consultations, orientation and capacity building during field piloting. Initially, the project identified During community consultations both its boundary actors (Table 1) which included downstream and upstream, farmers shared individual farmers, their institutions, and local their experiences of current patterns of climate bodies (village development committees change of the area. They have experienced and the municipality). These boundary actors a shift in timing of monsoon rain (delayed were the people and organizations with onset) from June-August to July-September. whom the project worked and expected to Increased incidences of crop pests due to be able to influence behavioural changes increased foggy days and prolonged dry that would result in increased adaptive spells have reduced agriculture performance. capacity of households and ecosystems. Fog during winter had an impact on the During the piloting several community level rice harvesting, threshing and drying. In the workshops and meetings were organized to summer, higher temperatures have even identify community perceptions on climate resulted in the dying of fish. Intense and erratic change and local response measures. One rainfall, that resulted flash floods in natural broad consultative workshop was organized springs including feeder streams of Rupa Lake, at watershed level. During this workshop,
Table 1 Boundary actors of the pilot and their desired behavioural change.
s.n. boundary actors behavioural Change (behaviour, relationships, actions, information) Farmers/community members practice watershed management actions to respond to the impacts of climate change Adopt climate change adaptation measures in agriculture and other natural resources to secure their livelihood
Community institutions (Cooperatives, farmers groups, mother groups, community forest user groups and youth clubs) Local government institutions: -Village Development Committees (Rupakot, hansapur, Majhthana) -LekhNath Municipality
Community institutions organized to deal with climate variability by inclusively practicing adaptation options and mechanisms Climate change adaptation mainstreamed in VDC planning Climate change adaptation mainstreamed in municipal planning
LI-BIRD had organized a climate integration workshop on June 20-15 in Begnas. During that workshop, participants were oriented on those tools to carry out climate risk assessments in the watershed by dividing them in 4 groups. During this pilot, information generated was used to identify the climate and livelihood contexts as well as vulnerability.
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all institutions active in the watershed were made aware of the issues and mechanisms of climate change, and current climate change adaptation practices in the watershed and practices that might help them respond to climate change. In addition, meetings and workshops were organized separately with upstream and downstream communities and local institutions. There were also focus group discussions and key informant interviews along with transect walks to identify existing and potential adaptation measures, and mechanisms for implementing adaptation plans through improved finance delivery mechanisms. In addition, the climate and livelihood contexts of the watershed were assessed using CRiSTAL (community risk screening tool-adaptation and livelihoods). Tools such as the historical time line, hazard mapping, seasonal calendar, participatory transect walk, and vulnerability and adaptation matrix were used to assess vulnerability1. Community responses were assessed to understand the ways community respond to climate hazards. During focus group discussions, a cost benefit analysis was done,
along with multiple criteria and gender sensitivity analysis to identify and prioritise the most immediate and urgent needs of the communities. This process began with participatory discussion of existing and potential climate change adaptation options with the community. Then the economic, social, and environmental costs and benefits of the adaptation options were scored by communities from zero to five (0 being no cost or no benefit, 1-2: low cost or low benefit, 3: medium cost or medium benefit, 4-5: high cost or high benefit (See Table 2). The prioritised adaptation options were then supported for piloting through local community institutions. During the community consultations, institutional mechanisms were identified to facilitate adaptation in the watershed. Some options that ensure active participation of vulnerable communities were then piloted in collaboration with the Rupa Lake Rehabilitation and Fishery Cooperative. Additionally, dialogues were initiated with the municipality, key community members and VDC secretaries to integrate local adaptation responses through the joint planning process.
Table 2 Cost benefit analysis of the community prioritized adaptation options for watershed management.
Cost benetit activities Promotion of minimum tillage operation Plantation in the degraded and eroded land Construction of check-dams Protection of water sources Environmental Cost (0-5) Economic social benefit (0-5) Environmental Economic social
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OUTPUTS / FINDINGS
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Municipality-10. The project also supported them by paying for the share (each share costs NRs 500) so that they become the member of the Pratigya Cooperative. The individual members started rearing goats and poultry from money the project provided (NRs 1000 for each household) and the money borrowed from the Cooperative. At present, they have earned money from goat farming, bonus from the cooperative and they have paid the loan back to the cooperative. Mr. Bhim Bahadur Pariyar aged 65, who was involved in this scheme, changed his livelihoods totally from a plough man to goat farming. Now he has 7 goats and has already sold 6 male goats. Nowadays, his livelihood is sustained by the income from goat rearing. i. A synergistic association of community organizations and the development of social cohesion is important for LAPA. A number of community based and community led institutions are operating in the watershed. These include community forest user groups (CFUGs), cooperatives (with low share and high share values), mother groups, women groups, farmer groups, and youth clubs. The CFUGs are working actively to manage forests while Cooperatives are managing micro-finance for improved utilization, product development and marketing of natural resource based products. Several youth clubs are active in managing the watershed to ensure continuity of ecosystem services. Awareness activities by the youth clubs have decreased the threat to biodiversity (particularly for birds) from the children. Mother groups and women groups are responsible for maintaining sanitation in the community as well as conservation of specific local crop species. They are also involved in the management of biodiversity by conserving special
conservation blocks. Such institutional mechanisms at the local level have increased social cohesion in the community, thereby enhancing social assets to deal with climate change. ii. Mobilizing community through group funds helps strengthen ownership. The Batabaran Sanrakshyan ra Samudaye Bikas Samiti (Environment Conservation and Community Development Committee) is a committee based in Lekhnath Municipality 11, Sundaridada (upstream). It was formed in 2007 to initiate conservation of biodiversity as well as support community development through income generating activities. In order to initiate conservation activities, LIBIRD established a group fund of NRs.30,000 to mobilize the community for biodiversity conservation and support local initiatives that strengthen livelihoods. The committee has been loaning this money to the group members (up to NRs. 2000) with 12% interest rate. While providing loans they have a clause that the member taking the loan must pay half of the principal (to provide loans to other members also) with interest within sixth months and the remaining half by the end of the year. The members of this committee use this loan money for bee keeping (by 20 households) and local goat (Khari breed) by 8 households. Initially, they had planned to invest the loan for commercial vegetable production but were unable due to lack of irrigation and problems with monkeys. The committee has been contributing to conservation of orchids of the area in a conservation nursery where they have conserved 33 varieties of orchid. In addition, it has increased awareness in the community for biodiversity conservation.
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iii. Establishing market links for community to be managed by mother groups, products through value addition, tourism and cooperatives, and women groups. In the access to information. different conservation blocks, they have Some climate resilient development conserved wild rice, local fish, wetland interventions are initiated by the based flora (such as white lotus and kade downstream communities to promote simal), and birds. For example Jamunkuna ecotourism. They have constructed a Mother Group is responsible for conserving green road with green plantation at wild rice. Similarly, bird conservation is the edges such as broom grass, narkat assigned to another mother group. and bottlebrush. The green plantation at the edges is to reduce erosion of soil v. Cooperatives play a key role in making during erratic rainfall. Construction of the financial provisions inclusive to benefit poor and green road has enhanced access of the marginalized community members. watershed community to the market and The current mechanisms operating in information. In addition, it has encouraged Pratigya Cooperative , upstream, is also a tourism in the area. climate adaptive institutional mechanism. The cooperative has included the dalit and iv. Assigning separate roles to separate groups for poor communities in their shareholding management of ecosystem resources effectively which has a low share value (NRs 500/-). develops ownership and coordination of efforts In addition, they have supported these at the local level. communities for goat farming and have In order to manage the lake resources, also involved them in marketing other commercial fish farming is practiced local products prepared from Aanadi rice, by downstream communities. They taro, and medicinal and aromatic plants. also manage the lake biodiversity by Local groups and microcredit schemes establishing and maintaining different of various mother groups, farmer groups, conservation blocks, which are assigned CFUGs and youth clubs are important
Case Study
Pratigya Cooperative in the Rupa Lake Watershed was established in 1997 with 43 share members. Conservation of threatened species, value addition of local crops and marketing them for their sustainable management is the priority of the cooperative. The major climate change impacts in the community are decreased agricultural production due to frequent and prolonged drought as well as erratic rainfall. In this context, conserving local drought tolerant underutilized crops, maintaining a diversity of crops in their field, and supporting the poor and marginal farmers to sustain their livelihoods are the key strategies that have enhanced members capacity to deal with drought and heavy precipitation. Value addition of local crops has enhanced their access to markets and information. The cooperative members have promoted marketing of anadi a local landrace of sticky rice, after the members realized the market potential for its medicinal, cultural, and traditional value; and marketing of taro products through value addition. Initially (in 1999), they hardly collected around 0.15 quintal of anadi rice but this reached 200 quintal in 2009/10. Similarly, they sold taro products of NRs. 15000 in 1999, whereas they earned NRs 35000 by selling the products in 2009/10. In addition, the members of the cooperative are maintaining field gene banks of different taro species and conserving medicinal and aromatic plants. The cooperative has in total 78 members; among them 38 are female, 6 are from a local food wholesaler (Shital Agro-products), and 15 are dalit community. Poor and marginalized community members also have membership and have been selling their rice and taro products through it. Every month, on 19th, each member of the cooperative contributes Rs. 50 to their revolving fund. Now days, goats are an important source of income to these households apart from taro and anadi. With the increased income, they are able to send their children to the school and are happily celebrating the festivals.
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for increasing adaptive capacity. These groups must effectively participate both in planning and implementation of the LAPA. The downstream cooperative has also strategically supported poor and marginalized community members by offering employment. This Cooperative has also provided shares to poor and marginalized community members by deducting from their salaries. vi. Provision of group shares is effective for including poor and marginalized community members in the cooperatives scheme. Because of the large value of the share (NRs. 15000/-), poor and marginalized community members are excluded simply because they are too poor to buy high value share. In this pilot a mechanism was introduced whereby group share was made available to include poor and marginal household members. It was endorsed through a series of meetings with cooperative members in the Rupa Lake Rehabilitation and Fishery Cooperative. Through the meetings, cooperative members agreed to amend the cooperative bylaws so that a group share can be sold. This pilot supported to the purchase of shares for two groups (one with 15 members and other with 25 members). Similar practice can be expanded through cooperatives that gradually include the marginal and fisher men dependent on traditional fishing.
change. In addition, there are institutional mechanisms and structures operating in the watershed that increase the adaptive capacity of communities to deal with climate change and the associated climate hazards. Communities that live in similar landscapes or a watershed have many things in common, both in terms of experiences of climate change and responses. Based upon the pilot assessments and observations of several practices, we recommend the following interventions to be integrated while preparing local adaptation plans of action.
3.2.1 Measures for natural resources adaptation to erratic rainfall and dry spells
i. Reforestation of degraded and eroded land and plantation of fodder trees and forages on public and eroded land (for long term investment). Construction of gabions and loose stone check dams or split bamboo barriers (for short term investment). Bioengineering for gulley control and control of soil erosion. Promotion of minimum tillage. Protection of water sources.
ii.
iii. iv. v.
The major climate risk to natural resources, as portrayed by the local community, is the erosion of soil and its deposition in the lake. The rate of siltation in the lake is expected to be further increased due to heavy and erratic precipitation/rainfall as a result of climate change. Watershed communities have experienced high erosion of soil in the degraded forest and pasturelands. In order to reduce the loss of soil and the resultant siltation in the lake, communities upstream are adopting reforestation in the degraded forest areas and eroded lands and are actively managing the forests by forming community forest user groups. People have started planting fodder and forrage such as napier, rai khanyu, amriso, narkat, badahar in the public and eroded areas. They have also initiated protection of water sources by planting and
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conserving the sources. Along with the plantation, they have constructed gabions, loose stone check dams, and split bamboo barriers to reduce stream bank cutting and check erosion by controlling run off. In the gullies and eroded areas, they have initiated bioengineering practices to control soil erosion. One of the main species to minimize loss due to flash floods is bamboo plantation along the bank of streams.
ii. Agroforestry farming system Integration of fodder trees such as rai khanyu, badahar, amriso, pakhuri, kauro, kutmiro, phaledo, narkat and napier in the farming system has advance organic farming by supporting livestock rearing. In addition, this system has adapted well to the drought experienced by farmers. iii. Legumes in the upland farming system Farmers have found legumes such as cow pea, pigeon pea, rice bean, horse gram, black gram and soybeans to be drought-resistant and that their integration contributes to maintaining the yield from the production system. Farmers have experienced these crops to be most useful in the rain-fed farming system. iv. Crops developed by participatory plant breeding and participatory variety selection Farmers are cultivating rice varieties such as Mansara 4 and Biramphul to adapt to drought, floods, and lodging in some parts of the watershed. In addition they are getting 20-30% more yield than from the local landraces of these varieties even in the context of climatic variability. v. Cultivation and marketing of non timber forest products to diversity livelihoods and utilize marginal land Cultivation of non timber forest products, including medicinal and aromatic plants, has been initiated by a few members of the watershed community. The practice of cultivating medicinal plants has better utilized marginal farm land as well as linked local products to the nearby markets thereby diversifying sources of income. In the pilot area, a local healer, Mr. Jaya Bahadur Thapa2, has been linking those medicinal products with the market in Pokhara by making different treatment combinations for different diseases such fever, common cold, jaundice and gastric complaints.
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vi. Conservation of local crop varieties through seed banks and field gene banks Maintenance of local crop landraces is important to develop crops that perform well in a changed climatic context. Conservation of local landraces through seed banks and field gene banks was found in the pilot area. It was seen by households as a means of being prepared for and adapting to droughts, floods, and attacks of crop pests. vii. Identification and promotion of climate stress tolerant underutilized crops in the farming system Farmers were found to have options of crops that are tolerant to climate stress such as drought, floods and pests. They have maintained cultivation of some drought tolerant neglected and underutilized crops in their home gardens. These crops and their species contribute to sustaining their livelihood in times of stress due to climate variability. In the pilot site, crops such as taro, yam, brinjal, local tomato, and legumes were found. viii. Integration of fruit in the farming system Farmers have integrated fruit like banana, litchi, jackfruit, pineapple, citrus, guava, pear, peach, and plum into their farming systems, especially in the home gardens. Integration of coffee has contributed to providing additional income, reducing soil erosion, and utilizing the farmland efficiently. The fruit trees are mostly perennial and resist drought and help stabilize the soil. In addition, they are a source of family nutrition and income to the farmers. ix. Integration of small farm animals and their local breeds in farming systems Livestock is an integral component of farming systems in the watershed. The rearing of small farm animals such as chickens, ducks and goats supports the livelihoods of poor and marginalized households. It has supported
farmers by promoting organic farming as they were using goat manure in their farms, promoting agroforestry to supply forage and fodder to the goats, and by diversifying income sources within agriculture (goat keeping along with vegetable farming and rice farming in small plots). Compared to the large farm animals such as cows and buffalo, integrating small stock such as local chickens, ducks and goats, the farming system has a reduced risk from climate hazards (Neopane et al, 2010). x. Identifying and promoting income generating activities that are climate proof As a means of generating income, farmers are doing bee keeping and mushroom cultivation in the watershed. Though these businesses are climate sensitive, bee keeping and mushroom farming are an important source of income for the farmers. In some areas, farmers have started bee keeping on a commercial scale which has contributed to promoting organic farming in the area. In addition, such farming practices have enhanced social cohesion thereby increasing integrity in the management of watershed services. Among those above mentioned interventions for agriculture and natural resources, the following interventions were found to be effective, through cost benefit and multicriteria assessment in minimising the impacts of climate change in the watershed. i. ii. iii. iv. Promotion of minimum tillage operation Plantation on degraded and eroded land Construction of check-dams Protection of water sources
With this analysis, the pilot supported 8 community institutions in the watershed to initiate construction of check-dams, protection of water sources, and plantation of degraded and eroded areas.
During transect walk and field interactions, we had an interaction with him and observed his medicinal and aromatic plant farms and their products.
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need to be involved in both planning and implementation. (Table 3). During the discussion, community members defined different roles for different stakeholders including district line agencies, NGOs and private sector. however, they represented themselves as the primary implementer of adaptation options, whereas the role of other partners were identified for joint planning, technical support and making market links. During the discussion, poor and marginalized community members asked for direct services of adaptation interventions to support their livelihoods, with minimal delay in the channelling of funds.
Table 3 A mechanism of service delivery of the adaptation options in the watershed through a public private partnership (PPP).
Institutions Activities Promotion of minimum tillage operation Plantation in the degraded and eroded land Construction of check-dams Protection of water sources Community and their institutions Implementing VDC/ Municipality Planning DDC/line agencies Technical support (DADO, DSCO, DFO) DFO and DSCO (provide seedlings and awareness raising) Financial and technical support Technical and financial support NGOs Private Sector Marketing the products
Technical support
Implementing
NGOs provide seedlings Financial and technical support Technical and financial support
Implementing
Implementing
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This tool was found effective from two perspectives. First, it saves time and money to prioritize adaptation options in a participatory discussion with community members, where community member can identify potential partners to support those activities that have a high cost. In addition it is useful for them to prioritize other developmental activities with some rational basis. Second, it also provides a quick analysis of how the community prioritises services provided by outsider organizations such as NGOs, the private sector and line agencies. however, it needs enhanced capacity for communities to estimate costs and benefits over longer periods.
Table 4 Cost benefit analysis of the prioritized adaptation options for watershed management in the pilot in 2010
Cost Benefit Activities Promotion of minimum tillage operation Plantation in the degraded and eroded land Construction of check-dams Protection of water sources Cost (0-5) Environ Economic Social Total Benefit (0-5) Environ Economic Social Total B/C
=3
=13
4.33
=4
=15
3.75
1 0
5 4
3 3
=8 =7
5 5
4 5
4 5
=13 =15
1.62 2.14
Table 5 Prioritization of adaptation options for watershed management by using multiple criteria along with cost benefit analysis in the pilot in 2010
Criteria Activities Promotion of minimum tillage operation Plantation in the degraded and eroded land Construction of check-dams Protection of water sources B/C 4.33 3.75 1.62 2.14 Gender sensitivity 4 (saves time and reduce drudgery) 4 (saves time and reduce drudgery) 1 3 (saves time and reduce drudgery) Reaching poor and vulnerable 4 (technologies can directly reach) 2 1 3 (ensure water availability) Total =12.33 =9.75 =3.62 =8.14
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establishing market links and increasing the access of vulnerable people to the basic services and service providing institutions. On the one hand, service providers must directly work with the community and their organizations to carry out or implement the specific adaptation actions, and on the other, they must be involved in building the capacity of community institutions which can become the entry point and who are the primary implementers of the adaptation actions. In the given watershed, LAPA can be implemented through two types of community institutions. One way of delivering services is through the cooperative model and the other way is through natural resource groups. Cooperatives have established a unique mechanism to include poor, disadvantaged and vulnerable members in their marketing schemes. So, this pathway could provide an access to the poor and marginalized member of the community.
Figure 2 The proposed mechanism of service delivery for the local adaptation plan of action.
A. Cooperatives: - Low share value (payable) Pro-poor responsive - High share value Group share and local employment
Direct Implementation
B. Natural Resource Groups: CFUGs, Farmer group, CBOs - Group fund establishment (saving/credit) - Fund mobilization for the watershed management
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Furthermore, this model plays vital a role linking outcomes with the market, since income generation by selling local produce enhances the adaptive capacity of poor and climate vulnerable communities. In the later model, the adaptation actions that are associated with resource management (natural resources and agriculture) should be implemented through resource management groups such as community forest user groups, farmers groups, womens groups, mixed groups, and youth clubs. This model also provides opportunities to reach the resource poor community members to include them in adaptation mechanisms. These two modalities of LAPA implementation can cover all existing institutions working in the given unit of implementation and helps bring a synergistic association among them. It helps to enhance the access of poor and marginal people to the market, information, institution, technology and resources to adapt to climate change.
Figure 3 The proposed monitoring and evaluation framework of the local adaptation plan of action (Modified from monitoring and evaluation mechanism of LI-BIRD)
level as well as coordinate LAPA preparation and implementation, a national level steering committee is needed to mainstream local experiences and learning on adaptation into national plans, policies, and programmes. The district level adaptation steering committee must be at district level to coordinate with both central government and local stakeholders. This is vital for monitoring and evaluation of the adaptation programmes in the district (the same applies to municipal level). Based on the experiences and learning at the local level, it can influence district line agencies and non-governmental organizations to integrate the climate adaptation responses into their plans and programmes. The local level committees, whether at the VDC or watershed level, are recommended for implementation of the LAPAs locally. They are responsible for mainstreaming adaptation responses in the VDC periodic plans as well as that of community institutions. In a nutshell, these committees are responsible for creating an enabling environment from national to local level for effective and efficient implementation of LAPAs. Under these national to local level committees, a monitoring and evaluating team would need to be formed, or the existing group is given this assignment, to ensure LAPA are effectively planned and implemented. They must be able to provide technical and managerial input to the LAPA development process and those Who facilitate implementation. It must also ensure information from monitoring and evaluation feeds back into planning cycles. The team should engage expertise in various themes such as from technical and managerial expertise. For example, the team may comprise one community member, VDC secretariat, Planning Officer from District Development Committee, Municipality, experts from district agriculture, forestry,
soil conservation, health, and irrigation offices (including district level committee), and member from the national steering committee. During this process, if the team becomes too large, then the members can be involved alternately. The team can use the logical framework analysis of the LAPAs and service providers as a monitoring and evaluation mechanism. Based upon the logical framework of LAPAs and that of service provider, the monitoring can be done at activity, process and output level, whereas evaluation can be done at outcome level to measure the changes made in enhancing the adaptive capacity of the vulnerable communities.
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of key stakeholders. Through this local From the perspective of watershed ownership can be ensured. management in response to the impacts of climate change, ecosystem based iii. Given, the political context of the adaptation and the integrated management country is in transition and there is of agriculture, water, forest and biodiversity a rapidly changing government and sectors through community based adaptation, its related professionals, formulation and sustainable management of water and implementation of LAPAs will be resources are the urgent and immediate difficult if an understanding of climate adaptation options as identified by Nepals change, NAPA, and LAPA is not clear NAPA. Working at watershed level addresses at the national level. In order to avoid vulnerability contexts that are similar, such constraints, the political leaders, thereby generating wider impacts on the constitution assembly members and livelihood of vulnerable communities cost policy makers need to be regularly effectively. In this context, based on the pilot updated on climate change progresses, and LI-BIRDs experiences, the unit of LAPA the needs of LAPAs and NAPA should be watershed or sub-watershed to implementation. optimize efficiency, generate wider impacts, and enhance the adaptive capacity of the iv. In the context of non-functioning ecosystem and communities. VDC structures, the service delivery mechanisms and monitoring and evaluation mechanisms could be used 4.7 GAPS TO DEVELOPING AND effectively to operationalize the LAPA DELIVERING LAPAs and implement NAPA in partnership with private sector organizations. i. A thorough review of existing national policy and plans need to be carried out v. Capacity building of stakeholders (local and updated on the basis of climate to regional and national level) on climate foresight. This will also facilitate integrating change issues is very important to climate change responses in to the district effectively and efficiently prepare LAPAs and local planning process. and implement them. The framework and the delivery mechanisms along with ii. A top-down and bottom- up planning trained human resources need to be process needs to be made while prepared to translate policies into action. designing LAPA, rather than only topThis needs to be taken into consideration down or only bottom-up. It should start while designing and implementing LAPA with community adaptation needs, and in the watershed context. identification of their roles and the roles
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CONCLUSION
Based on the outputs and analysis of this pilot, the following approaches, tools, practices, coordination mechanism, institutional mechanisms and financial mechanisms are recommended for designing LAPA for a watershed or a sub-watershed (Figure 4).
5.1 APPROACH
The overall development of LAPA should follow a participatory and multi-partnership approach. It must ensure the participation of local communities and their institutions at every step of planning and implementation. The vulnerable communities identified during climate risk assessment must be central during planning and implementation of LAPA. In addition, the planning and implementation of LAPA needs to be based on livelihood assets (natural, physical, social, financial and human assets) and it must include options and mechanisms that diversify the use of these resources and increase the access of vulnerable communities.
5.2 TOOLS
i. Different participatory tools and techniques can be used to identify the current and future climate hazards, their risks and impacts, and current and potential adaptation options. These include historical time lines, hazard mapping and prioritization, seasonal calendars, cropping calendars, vulnerability matrix, and impact and an adaptation option analysis framework. The climate and livelihood context of the area can be assessed by using CRiSTAL. ii. In order to assess the access of communities to livelihood assets and basic services, the gateway system concept is useful. Gateway system analysis, if done with active participation of local decision makers, can be used to inform adaptation planning and increase the inclusion of marginalized people in planning and implementation of activities that increase local resilience to climate effects. iii. Cost benefit analysis along with multiple criteria ranking is also a useful tool to prioritise implementation of identified adaptation options and develop synergy among the stakeholders. Based on this analysis, communities and local planners can distribute the roles and services to each stakeholder including communities. For example, they can take assistance from outsiders (NGO, government line agencies, etc) to those interventions that bear high cost and high benefit, which they cannot afford. For interventions with less cost and high benefits, local communities can initiated them and also can match activities introduced by outside organisations.
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support. At national level there should be a national steering committee. A coordination committee at district or watershed and at VDC level should be in place to monitor and evaluate the outputs and outcomes of LAPA. A public private partnership should be demonstrated during LAPA development and implementation that can develop synergy among the stakeholders in the given watershed and link its services and products to the market or outsiders. While designing and implementing LAPAs, it is very important to define whether the local unit is at VDC, district, watershed or sub-watershed level. LIBIRD recommends, from pilot and wider experience, a watershed or sub-watershed as the main unit of LAPA. This is recommended as appropriate for cost effective planning and implementation of the adaptation strategies, for good representation of the strategies that address vulnerability, and for integrated management of watershed services and natural resources. This will enhance the collaboration among the local institutions (government, community based and nongovernmental) operating in the watershed, by developing synergistic associations to respond to the impacts of climate change. It will also ensure wide ownership of the plan and its smooth implementation.
ii.
iii. iv. v.
5.4 SYNERGY
Every actor including each household of the watershed should be engaged in design and implementation of LAPA. It also requires national guidance and
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be brought about by defining clear roles and responsibilities. Assigning separate roles to separate groups for management of ecosystem resources is fruitful and effective to develop ownership. iii. Institutions can support adaptive capacity through promoting group funds (micro-credit) to mobilize communities around climate adaptation and develop ownership of the interventions implemented. iv. Institutions should promote private sector involvement to establish market opportunities for the products from the community as this is crucial to adapt to the impacts of climate change through value addition, tourism, and information access.
Figure 4 A prototype of LAPA at watershed level demonstrating tools, approaches, and service delivery mechanism.
LAPA
LAPA Service Providers: Districtline agencies, DDC, municipality, VDCs, NGOs, and Private sector
Natural Resource Management Groups (CFUGs, farmers groups, youth clubs, women groups) Watershed or Sub-watershed Partcipatory and partnership approach Join planning and implementation Diversifying livelihood options (natural, physical, financial, social, and human capital)
Partcipatory tools Time line Mapping Ranking Vulnerability matrix Gateway system...
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REFERENCES
FAO. 2010. The hague conference on agriculture, food security and climate change Climate Smart Agriculture: Policies, Practices and Financing for food security, adaptation and mitigation IPCC.2007. Climate change 2007: Synthesis report. An assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IUCN, IISD, SEI, Interco-operation. 2007. CRiSTAL :Community-based Risk Screening Adaptation and Livelihoods. Users manual. A decision support tool for assessing and enhancing project impacts on local adaptive capacity to climate variability and climate change. Version 3. November 2007 Kafle G., M. Cotton, J. R. Chaudhary, h. Pariyar, h. Adhikari, S. B. Bohora, U. Chaudhary, A. Ram and B. Regmi. 2008. Status of and Threats to Waterbirds of Rupa Lake, Pokhara, Nepal. Journal of Wetlands Ecology. 1(1/2):9-12. MOE. 2010. National adaptation programme of action (NAPA) to climate change. Ministry of Environment, Government of Nepal, Kathmandu, Nepal Pradhan, N., I. Providoli, B. Regmi and G. Kafle. 2010. Valuing water and its ecological services in rural landscapes: A case study from Nepal. Mountain Forum Bulleting Page 27-29. Downloaded from http://www.mtnforum.org/rs/bulletins/counter_bul.cfm?bID=31 [retrieved on 24 Jan 2011] Regmi, B.R., G. Kafle, A. Adhikari, A. Subedi, R. Suwal, and I. Poudel. 2009. Towards an innovative approach to integrated wetland management in Rupa Lake Area of Nepal. Journal of Geography and Regional Planning Vol. 2(4), pp. 080-085, April, 2009. Downloaded from http://www.academicjournals.org/jgrp/PDF/PDF%202009/Apr/Regmi%20et%20al.pdf [retrieved on 24 Jan 2011] Neopane, S.P., K. Thapa, R. Pudasaini, and B. Bhandari. 2010. Livestock: an asset for enhancing adaptive capacity of climate vulnerable communities of Nepal. Paper presented in the Consultative Technical Workshop on Climate Change: Livestock Sector Vulnerability and Adaptation in Nepal organized jointly by Nepal Agricultural Research Council (NARC), International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), heifer International (hI) Nepal, Local Initiatives for Biodiversity, Research and Development (LI-BIRD), and Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives (MoAC), Government of Nepal. Kathmandu, Nepal. (In Press)
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ANNEx 1
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Other activities
Implement programs that increase awareness of conservation and encroachment Educate school children on lake management and conservation Develop a management strategy to implementing activities through committee formulation with involvement of various local institutions Develop a network of Government and non-government organizations
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ANNEx 2
Activities that LIBIRD would carry out to build on the work of the pilot.
S.N. 1 2 3 Further LAPA Development Activities Bioengineering for gulley control and control of soil erosion Promotion of minimum tillage operation Protection of water sources Construction of gabions and loose stone check dams or split bamboo barrier (for short term investment). Plantation in the degraded lands Organic farming Legume integration and promotion Promotion of stress tolerant species Running a CADSchool Group share and group fund to poor and marginalized community members Cultivation of NTFPs in marginal lands Theme (Watershed/ Agriculture) Watershed Watershed Watershed
Watershed
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Watershed Agriculture Agriculture Agriculture For capacity building For capacity building and mobilization Watershed/Agriculture
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IdentIfyIng the Role of local fInancIal InstItutIons In fInance delIveRy, goveRnance and PlannIng In develoPIng the caPacIty of communItIes to adaPt to clImate change
Identifying the Role of local financial Institutions in finance delivery, governance and Planning in developing the capacity of communities to adapt to climate change
submItted to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Sanepa, Lalitpur, Nepal
February, 2011
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ExEcutivE Summary
the link between poverty and environmental degradation is direct, and the poor are often the most vulnerable to climate change. Nepals daunting development challenge is to ameliorate the socio-economic and climate plight of the poorest and most marginalized people. Without addressing the needs of vulnerable communities directly in local level planning, national climate adaptation policies and programmes are likely to be ineffective. rSDc has been working in poverty alleviation over the last two and a half decades through the philosophy of self reliance, and implementing Self-reliant Poverty alleviation (SPa) and Self-reliant Development of the Poor by the Poor (SDPP), through social mobilization and grass roots self-help institution building. in this context, rSDc has been involved in piloting Local adaptation Plans of action (LaPa) development in Kapilbastu and Kalikot districts to see climate adaptation through the poverty lens, and poverty through the climate adaptation lens with regard to finance delivery mechanisms and local level planning. the overall objective of the pilot was to identify the role of Local Financial institutions, particularly cooperatives, as mechanisms for finance delivery to increase the adaptive capacity of poor and climate vulnerable communities. Kapilbastu and Kalikot had been identified as vulnerable districts in the NaPa document. Both districts have massive poverty, inequality and an agrarian economy which is vulnerable to climate change hazards. the pilot activities took place through two local self-reliance cooperatives. the following activities took place during the pilot implementation process: mapping of service and finance delivery institutions, assessment of governance and participation of vulnerable communities, climate awareness raising, review of existing planning processes, and development of adaptation plans for mainstreaming into local level planning. village Development committee (vDc) level gateway systems information was also collected and analyzed by an expert team. this was followed by a series of consultation workshops which verified the gateway systems through shared learning dialogues and also identified local level planning issues and responsibilities. tools were used to effectively identify vulnerable communities, assess their needs and deliver resources and services to them. rSDc also identified good practices for reaching vulnerable communities outside its working areas, and constructed two micro-structures to demonstration local climate adaptation infrastructure. the cooperatives involved in the pilot developed new climate adaptation policies and programmes, such as a community insurance/compensation mechanism and an investment policy to enhance community adaptive capacity to cope with the impacts of climate change. the pilot concludes that in the case of Nepal, poverty alleviation programmes and activities are the only way to address the climatic hazards and risks faced by rural communities. the self-reliance working modality that identifies the most poor and vulnerable communities and forms hamlet or interest group based organizations, and vDc level cooperatives could be key entry points for local climate adaptation. Self-reliance cooperatives have the capacity
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and expertise to: improve governance, demonstrate transparent and accountable policies and decision-making processes, mainstream issues of the poor into programmes and policy, involve communities in local level planning, empower communities, share information, and build community trust and involvement. the cooperatives provide a wide range of financial and other community development services that are focused on the poorest households. Self-reliance cooperatives were found to be practicing different methods of property evaluation for loan approval so that the poorest community members could borrow without collateral. they have established a risk fund for emergencies caused by climate and other uncertainties. micro-insurance has also been identified as an important component of future action for climate adaptation. innovative risk sharing mechanisms are needed to respond to the new challenges, including increasing frequency of extreme events, land degradation and loss of biodiversity. Selfreliant cooperatives are an established mechanism for finance delivery and it is therefore proposed that they are an effective institution for LaPa implementation. Wider programmes of the cooperatives cover health and hygiene, income generation, drinking water and irrigation, improved agriculture and livestock, education, enterprise development, job-orientated skill development and building micro-infrastructure. Selfreliant cooperatives are recognized as a cost effective local institution for implementing any community development activities. they were found to be the bank of the poor and vulnerable, capacity building partners, market promoters, governance teachers and planning advisors. they were found to be a reliable mechanism for planning and implementing any community level activities. their role has been significant over recent years, particularly in the absence of the peoples representatives at vDc level. Likewise, they access and channel the resources of district level agencies such as the District agriculture Office, District Livestock Office, and District Health Office to the poor at village level. the report concludes with a prototype LaPa development and implementation design for the micro-finance sector through Local Finance institutions and details how rSDc will take forward and scale out the LaPa pilot work into other areas.
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taBLE OF cONtENtS
Executive Summary Table of Contents Introduction 1.1 Pilot objectives Methodology 2.1 Background of the Kapilbastu pilot area 2.2 Background of the Kalikot pilot area 2.3 approach and tools 2.4 methods 2.5 tools 2.6 Boundary actors Outputs / Findings 3.1 Swabalamban and climate adaptation 3.2 reaching the poorest and most vulnerable communities 3.3 vulnerability assessments 3.4 Finance delivery mechanism of Self reliance cooperatives 3.5 Finance delivery status of Kapilbastu 3.6 Fund mobilization at Jankalyan cooperatives Kalikot 3.7 Self-reliance cooperative loans and adaptive capacity 3.8 capacity building for livelihood diversification 3.9 assessment of service delivery mechanisms of self reliance cooperatives 3.10. raising awareness of climate change and adaptation 3.11. Promotion of pro-poor governance, transparency and cost effectiveness 3.12. Sustainability and democratization processes 3.13. involvement in local level planning 3.14. Scaling up the rSDc experience in rimS and iSEt pilot areas Analysis 4.1 using climate foresight in local decision-making and planning processes 4.2 including the priorities of the most vulnerable in planning adaptation responses 4.3 assessing vulnerability 4.4 Prioritizing options to increase adaptive capacity and turning them into plans 4.5 mainstreaming vDc adaptation plans into district development plans 4.6 Building capacity of communities to reach up and draw down resources
329 331 333 334 335 335 336 336 336 337 337 338 338 340 341 341 342 343 343 343 344 344 345 345 346 346 347 347 347 348 348 348 349
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4.7 monitoring and evaluating changes in adaptive capacity 4.8 institutional mechanisms 4.9. Downward accountability 4.10 Sr cooperatives as a mechanism for LaPa finance delivery 4.11 Scaling-out and scaling-up to other institutions 4.12 measuring effectiveness, monitoring and evaluation tools and indicators 4.13 Barriers and gaps to developing and delivering LaPa 5. Conclusion: Proposed LAPA design for the micro-finance sector through LFIs 5.1. Proposed structure and methodology for LaPa development and implementation. References
349 349 350 350 351 351 352 353 353 355
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Nepal is very much in the grip of poverty, which is evident by almost half the population living below the absolute poverty level. the toll of such poverty is heaviest on vulnerable communities, in particular those who are also vulnerable to climatic hazards. Nepals daunting development challenge is to ameliorate the socio-economic and climatic plight of these poor people. Nepal is highly at risk from the detrimental impacts of climate change. this is largely due to its fragile mountain ecosystems, low socio-economic status and heavy reliance on rain-fed agricultural production. With poverty being both a condition as well as a determinant of vulnerability, alleviation is imperative in resilience building activities. a starting point for such an exercise is to understand the assets and capabilities of the poor. as defined by the intergovernmental Panel on climate change, adaptation means adjustment in natural or human systems in response to actual or expected climatic stimuli or their effects, which moderates harm or exploits beneficial opportunities (iPcc, 2001). Nepal has developed a National adaptation Plan of action (NaPa) which includes a priority list of adaptations, identification of key adaptation needs and a list of top priority adaptation response measures. to address these, local level adaptation plans, programmes and activities need to take place. the climate adaptation Design and Piloting Nepal (caDP-N) team initiated the localization of the NaPa through a Local adaptation Plan of action (LaPa) design and piloting process. the rural Self-reliance Development centre (rSDc) works to alleviate poverty and reduce vulnerability, and supports the ultra-poor in stepping out of poverty by themselves. it is pioneering the development and implementation of self-reliant poverty alleviation (SPa) and self-reliant development of the poor by the poor (SDPP), through social mobilization and grass roots self-help institution building. it has two and half decades of experience as well as proven organizational efficiency in the arena of self-reliant poverty alleviation and self-reliant development (See annex 1 institutional assessment of rSDc for details.) rSDc piloted local climate adaptation initiatives and mainstreaming mechanisms from September to December 2010 in Kapilbastu and Kalikot districts. the output of the pilot is recommendations for the national design of Local adaptation Plans of action (LaPa). it was decided at the LaPa design inception workshop (18-23 august, 2010) that intervention areas by rSDc for climate adaptation piloting should focus on mechanisms of finance and service delivery to poor and vulnerable communities and their integration into local level planning. the following activities took place during the pilot implementation process: mapping of service and finance delivery institutions; assessment of governance and participation of vulnerable communities; review of existing planning processes; and development of adaptation plans for
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mainstreaming into local level planning. this involved a two stage process. First, village Development committee (vDc) level gateway systems information was collected and analyzed by an expert team. Second, rSDc identified good practices of reaching vulnerable communities outside its working areas, and built two local micro-infrastructures which were designed to demonstrate climate adaptation infrastructures to local communities. additionally, the cooperatives involved in the pilot have developed new climate adaptation policies and programmes, such as a community insurance/compensation mechanism and an investment policy to enhance community adaptive capacity to cope with the impacts of climate change. During this process, a series of consultation workshops were organized to verifying the gateway systems through Shared Learning Dialogues (SLD) and to identify local level planning issues and responsibilities. at the end of the pilot, mechanisms were identified that effectively recognize vulnerable communities, assess their needs and deliver resources and services to those vulnerable communities.
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the LaPa pilot was carried out with the manakaman Self-reliance cooperative of Shivagadi vDc, Kapilbastu and the Jankalyan Bahudeshiya cooperative of Kumalgaun in Kalikot. these areas are highlighted on the maps below. Both districts have high levels of poverty and inequality, combined with an agrarian economy, which makes them more vulnerable to the effects of climate change.
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the pilot was conducted in Shivagadi vDc, one of the most conflict and flood affected vDcs in the district. it lies between two rivers, the Surahi Khola and chirahi Khola. the population is around 5000, most of whom have migrated from the hills and other parts of the terai looking for agricultural land and forest resources for their cattle.
Despite the difficulties, there is high scope for off-season vegetable production for both local and outside markets. green vegetables are currently imported from Nepalgunj by tractor and farmers with easy access to the district headquarters have already started vegetable farming. two banks operate in the district, but generally external support, including government services, is insufficient.
2.4 Methods
First Stage: an orientation workshop was organized for the local self-reliance cooperative board, other networks and organizations, like FEcOFuN and irrigation
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committees, and for the field support staff involved in collecting gateway system information. these trained local staff went to each ward, which is defined as a community in this pilot, to collect gateway information through interaction with local communities. gateway system field data was tabulated, and analyzed and ranked at the iSEt office in Kathmandu. Second Stage: a series of meetings was organized among stakeholders, particularly cooperative leaders, political party representatives, vDc representatives, local government officials, other community level institutions and organizations such as FEcOFuN and Womens groups. information gathered from the gateway system analysis was confirmed by community members using SLD. at the end of the community level workshop, potential climate adaptation activities were listed for adaptation planning along with identification of the responsible institutions. Third Stage: climate change workshops with communities lead to the identification of demonstration plots for climate adaptation in their respective communities. at end of the process, a draft adaptation plan document, mentioning roles and responsibilities, was shared with vDc representatives and DDc representatives.
representatives and reporters of various district offices. another objective of this joint workshop was to raise awareness of climate change and its effects. this linked local experiences with global trends and aimed to encourage consideration of climate change by communities and decision-makers alike. community level interviews were used to collect information from the selected communities with the help of a structured questionnaire. the questionnaire and checklists were designed in line with the study objectives to capture both the process of project operation as well as the performance/ impact of the overall programme. Poorer households were targeted and information was collected from action research staff and other project actors. interviews with nonbeneficiaries were important not only as a comparison in terms of socio-economic status, but also to solicit outside opinion about the programme. cooperatives that have been working a long time in the pilot areas were directly involved in the process. in practice, these cooperatives are umbrella organizations of income generation groups of deprived households. they work very closely with other organizations such as local NgOs, cBOs, schools, clubs, and local government, so they were all also represented in the process and benefited from finding out about adaptation options.
2.5 Tools
the overarching tool used was the gateway system analysis. a questionnaire jointly developed by iSEt Nepal and rSDc was used to gather the gateway system information (annex 2). to test the outcomes and analysis of the gateway system, the shared learning dialogue process was used. this involved various tools such as semistructured interviews, group discussions and direct observation to collect information. Shared learning dialogues took place at district level, attended by the head or the
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OutPutS / FiNDiNgS
Proposed outputs Outcome 1.0 Facilitating diversification of livelihoods, services and financial delivery mechanism Output 1.1 vulnerability assessment and identification adaptation needs identified Activities 1.1 at least one workshop will be organized to identify the local hazard assessment through participatory method Activities 1.2 at least two workshops will be organized to identify the potential livelihoods options in local level
Outcomes 1.1 in places, Kalikot and Kapilbastu, local level vulnerability assessment and need identified through the group consultation. Activities 1.1 in both place, two workshops were organized. Before the consultation workshop, gateway system information collected and verified the workshop as well. Activities 1.2 in both places, two consultation workshops were organized inviting local stakeholders like government agencies, vDcs, local political leaders, cooperatives and other social organization representation. in both cooperatives leaders identified the positional livelihood options to increase the adaptation capacity on the basis of local need. they also revised their policies accordingly for coming days. manakaman of Kapilbastu has already adopted these changes through the generally assembly of the cooperatives and Kalikot cooperative is preparing to submit in upcoming general assembly. Activities 1.3 at the end of the process a vaPa was produced. they not only identified the need, but also prepared the priority list with responsible organization. Activities 1.4 Both of the cooperatives are agreed to establish a climate related information centre in the office from 2011 if the fund manageable.
Activities 1.3 a revised activities document (lets say vaPa) will be produced through the cooperatives consultation Activities 1.4 a small resource centre will be established in each cooperation on hazard information, and market information
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Activities 1.5 rSDcs working modality, policy and programme will be reviewed
Activities 1.5 a two days workshop of rSDc staffs and board was organized in December 28 and 29, 20101, to discuss the potentially to incorporate the climate adaptation activities in rSDc ongoing activities and other projects . Activities 1.6 two demonstration plot (local level infrastructure) are developed in both cooperatives working vares through the consultation of board. in Kapilabastu, cooperatives has build a returning wall in a small cannel side to protect the community vegetable collection center which protects the collection center from flood and make easy and regular connection with village and market. Similarly, this wall supports the small bridge connection of two villages with local market and services center. Similarly, in Kalikot, the cooperative has built a returning wall in the connection road between village and market which is badly damaged by landslides and flood. Activities 1.7 Both cooperatives have agreed to incorporate the climate risk fund in their policy. manakamna has already got approval from general assembly and Kalikot is planning to propose in upcoming assembly.
Activities 1.6 at least a local infrastructure will be developed through each cooperatives and all the process will be documented and assess to identify how this process can help in LaPa process
Activities 1.7 analyses of community risk fund (compensation mechanism) for agriculture, livestocks, and other assets against flood and drought designed and developed Output 1.2 Livelihood diversification options identified Output 1.3 an case study report will be produced of cooperative how self-reliance cooperatives finance and service delivery mechanism can be useful in climate adaptation as well, to reach in deprive and poor communities and communities. Outcome 2.0 climate adaptation plans mainstreamed into local institution, cooperative, community, and local body Output 2.1 climate adaption plans mainstreamed in vDc level plan Activities 2.1 at least one workshop in each site will be organized to build create awareness on climate adaptation in local level planning
Outcome 1.3 a report was prepared in both cooperatives. annex 4,5 and 6 annex 4, 5 and 6
annex 5, 6 and 7
Activities 2.1 an awareness workshop was organized in both places in the initial stage of the piloting inviting local social leaders and stakeholders including cooperatives leaders and field mobilizes for gate ways stem collection. in the workshop, existing vDc plan was revised and prepared the list of potential activities. Activities 2.2 an awareness workshop was organized in both places in the initial stage of the piloting inviting local social leaders and stakeholders including cooperatives leaders and field mobilizes for gate ways stem collection. in the workshop, existing vDc plan was revised and prepared the list of potential activities. Activities 2.3 a workshop was organized in district headquarter of Kapilbastu inviting all related agencies of government and local agencies (cooperatives, FEcOFuN,vDc etc) to discuss the outcomes of gateway system , method and proposed activities in vDc level
Activities 2.3 a consultation workshop will be organized in vDc level to incorporate the climate adaption in vDc plan Output 2.2 vDc level plan intergraded into district level planning process Outcome 3.0 rSDc financing and governance mechanism up-scaled in rimS and rSDc working areas Output 3.1 the model reaching to deprive and vulnerable community of rSDc will be used in rimS working areas Activities 3.1 a consultation workshop will be organized to share the rSDc experiences on cooperatives and poor annex 7 annex 13
Activities 3.1 rSDc worked jointly with iSEt Nepal in Kapilabastu in gateway system collection particularly identification of poor and vulnerable communities in three vDcs Similarly, in Dhading, rSDc worked with rimS Nepal in comparative study of community forest group and cooperative to implement the idea of community risk fund Output 3.2 the model reaching to deprive and vulnerable community of rSDc was tested in rSDc working areas
Output. 3.2 the model reaching to deprive and vulnerable community of rSDc will be used in rSDc working areas
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2.
3.
4.
5.
selected without exploring alternatives. there was no benchmark data collection. in the selected site, rSDc motivators organized an initial meeting to explain the objectives of the programme, the procedure for organizing a group and the benefits of joining. two important elements of group functioning, namely first, the possibility of transaction cost saving in a group and second, the need for the group to be collectively self-reliant and individually independent, seemed to have been ignored. People who were interested in joining the programme formed iggs. Homogeneity and size were found to not have been considered. targeting, which should have entered into the programme at this phase, was defied by open entry to all. generally, it is the motivator who encourages, guides and assists the rural people in organizing themselves into groups. in some cases, people had formed iggs on their own initiation. it was found that training on group functioning and dynamics was quite inadequate. after a group is formed, the executive committee is selected, comprising 5 - 11 persons. these are generally literate (to keep records and accounts) and leaders of the community, but where members were incapable of maintaining records and accounts, motivators had assisted them and built capacity. Some important instruments of selfreliance are savings collection and mobilization, which takes place first. motivators later provide revolving credit to igg members to carry out income generating activities on the recommendation of the executive committee. most of the groups developed their own rules and regulations for mobilizing savings funds in areas such as investment, repayment schedule, interest rates and book keeping. those groups which were weak in formulating rules and regulations received assistance from motivators.
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6. Besides this, motivators mobilized igg members to perform various community activities such as construction of pit latrines, maintenance and repair of trails, construction of water tanks and cleaning surrounding areas. 7. identification of vulnerable households to become members of the group takes place through targeting during the formation process. First, it involves working with the vDc to identify and select wards which are economically, socially and educationally deprived, and with very few opportunities to get support and resources. Second, identification and selection of targeted hamlets and households within the targeted ward based on a number of socio-economic factors (see box 3.1 below). in forming these groups, deprived or excluded people (Dalit, Janajati and women) are given preference. a key indicator of vulnerability is food sufficiency. member households are categorized into 5 groups all can receive benefits, but the poorest group has priority access to loans. targeting can be done in two ways, namely through the above community process or through the gateways system information. in either case, it is imperative to ascertain the level and magnitude of the poverty and vulnerability in an area or household through baseline information collection and vulnerability analysis.
experts and communities focused on climate change and the identification and ranking of the most vulnerable wards/communities. SLD was used to see if there is common understanding among them, for example on the indicators of vulnerability. it was also useful for building trust and rapport between science and society, implementing agencies and beneficiaries.
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after group formation, each member makes a monthly contribution of an amount agreed by the group (ranging from 5 - 300rs) to the group saving fund known as the Self reliance Fund. a fee of 5% was found to be payable if payment was not made. credit obtained from the rcF is generally utilized for income generation activities such as livestock rearing and agriculture production. the livestock sector, which receives top priority in the investment portfolio, was found to be very risky due to a lack of reliable veterinary services, improved breeds and fodder supply. in the field it was observed that irrespective of such risks, rural women still prefer livestock
loans as it meets their priority needs. credit was generally found to be utilized to meet needs for education, food purchase, medical treatment and other social needs.
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average loan size of rs. 241 per member. the survey showed that nearly 40 percent of the sampled members had received a loan from rcF and 50 percent of the members from SrF. this has substantially reduced the borrowing requirement from neighbours and money-lenders at a high interest rate, which illustrates an increase in adaptive capacity. almost two-thirds of the rcF recipients were found to have received the loan only once, but there were households who had received it as many as four times. So there is some equity issues involved in rcF lending. SrF lending is not directed towards productive lending. this means that the income from the programme intervention is minimal, but this allows more poor members to benefit from the fund. the use of loans from both funds was found to have reached Nrs 2.2 million last fiscal year. these were used for livestock (19%), crops (23%), trade/business (7%), cottage industries (6%), foreign employment (15%), household consumption (7%), medical treatment (10%) and other unidentified activities (13%).
families to be better prepared for, cope with or bounce back from climate effects and natural disasters. most of the loans have strict requirements about collateral and repayment. a key element to the self-reliance ethos is the provision of loans for the most poor, where effectively the group provides the assurance of repayment. the cooperatives have special provisions for emergency loans which are available for any kind of disaster. Emergency loans can also be given to members without collateral, based on membership duration and deposited amount. it has a relatively lower interest rate than other loans. Provision of an emergency fund was seen as very important by individuals when discussing climate change impacts. Both cooperatives were found to have included a risk Fund into their policy. During the pilot, discussions took place with the groups about including climate/weather induced disasters in the list of eligible categories. they decided to incorporate this and included items such as the drying of rice nursery beds, and frost damage to vegetable crops. the fund is internal and comes from two percent of the total loan interest paid by members.
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generation activities, yet the traditional activities with new techniques and inputs seem to provide better food security for households, if not contributing to higher cash income directly. rSDc provides different types of skill training to cooperative members, such as vegetable production, veterinary care, accounting, bee-keeping, and literacy. in addition, members have received the opportunity to go on observation tours and these have been highly appreciated. Skill training and loans have enabled members to raise their income through on-farm and off-farm selfemployment activities. members valued the opportunity to earn income at home rather than needing to migrate for long periods. this made the household units more stable and resilient to climate change.
the pilot found that the provision of these services has assisted the beneficiaries in reducing their plight, although the adequacy and effectiveness of the services varied across iggs and vDcs. Services were valued for increasing communities wellbeing where government line-agencies and other institutions were absent. For example, drinking water facilities have enhanced the quality of life of poor households as well as reduced the workload of women. cooperative members showed a keen interest in and support for the service delivery mechanisms of cooperatives, which is basically a product of their own involvement.
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that implementing activities through the cooperative was much more cost effective in comparison with external implementation, i.e. it bypassed the common misuse of resources. given the inclusive nature of the rSDc approach to group formation, the iggs also include some local elite and people who are less vulnerable. Decision-making in the iggs is mostly done through consensus, where all members, rich and poor, men and women, fully participate to protect their stake in the fund and the group. the result is that people in positions of power are also part of transparent decision-making and behave accountably with the rest of the members.
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this mutual way of working facilitates the integration of effective initiatives into the formal planning processes. in both piloting areas, cooperatives have discussed and identified the required climate adaptation activities at the local level with shared responsibilities among cooperatives, vDc, DDc and government. See annex 4 for manakamana , Shivagadi, Kapilbastu and annex 5 and 6 for Jankalyan, Kumalgau, Kalikot. these form the content of the vDc climate adaptation plan.
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aNaLySiS
Local cooperatives have helped rural residents respond to local social, economic and environmental challenges in the past, and they are a mechanism to facilitate rural communities in their current need to find ways to adapt to climate change. Because adaptation to climate change varies with every locality, it is critically important to understand the role local institutions can play in shaping adaptation and improving capacities of the most vulnerable social groups (agrawal et. 2008). to secure win-win outcomes in the face of existing and future climate challenges there is a huge need for investment in marginal communities in order to build people-centred resilience, which increases adaptive capacity at the local level (OxFam, 2006). in order to address the adaptation priorities identified at community/vDc and district level, rSDc has found the most suitable unit for LaPa operation to be the vDc. rSDc offers insight and makes recommendations for the design of a successful LaPa under a number of themes below.
4.2 Including the priorities of the most vulnerable in planning adaptation responses
in planning responses to locally identified hazards, vulnerable people know their local priorities, but they do not always attend meetings. Where local decision-makers are elected (eg cooperative chair or vDc chair) they must represent the poorest and most vulnerable community members while making plans. although the local government system is not working democratically, local organizations, such as Sr cooperatives, do represent their members and speak up for their rights.
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4.4 Prioritizing options to increase adaptive capacity and turning them into plans
the gateway system analysis was also used for prioritizing response options to climate effects. it is recommended that consultation and discussion takes place at vDc level with key actors - cooperative leaders, political party representatives, vDc secretary and technical assistant, government officials such as persons in charge of health posts, the agriculture service centre, civil society groups such as federations, users groups, mothers groups and youth clubs. they prioritize the options based on the criteria identified by gateway systems and the local people present. rSDc recommends forming a draft (unauthorized) LaPa at vDc level and incorporating activities from them into vDc development planning. in the pilot, the top 5 activities on the list for responding to climate change were entered into this plan, but it can be any number relative to the available budget. For clarity these plans should be called vDc adaptation Plans.
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has been significant in recent times, particularly in the absence of the peoples representatives at the vDc level. During the piloting period, it was found that Srcs are invited to all steps of the vDc planning process due to their effectiveness and reputation in the community. in addition, the chair of a cooperative is often someone who used to have a position on the vDc. this kind of synergy facilitates the mainstreaming of adaptation plans, and in the absence of the formal system is often essential.
sure the plans are doing this. the mechanism used by rSDc is recommended for assessing change over time. the household survey is used at the beginning of an initiative and after a few years. it records details of households that are in fact related to adaptive capacity such as food sufficiency, savings and access to loans, agricultural assets, other assets (eg house construction), income sources and skills. these are indicators for poverty alleviation, but are easily modified for climate change by adding aspects such as availability of water, energy source, access to health services, climate hazards, access to savings, marketable goods and access to markets, road connectivity, transport, and means of communication, particularly by mobile phone.
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clear mechanisms for enforcing rules, accountability); characteristics of the context of institutions (dissemination of new technologies, local government support, provide necessary support in terms of information, finances, and skill development); characteristics of groups served by the institutions (clearly defined boundaries of the group, history of successful shared experiences, existence of social capital, appropriate leadership that changes periodically); characteristics of the ecological context (match between the demands on the ecological system and its output, information availability about the ecological system, possibility of storing benefits from the system). Srcs exhibit many of these characteristics. Srcs are a cost effective way of reaching vulnerable communities and supporting them to develop their own organizations. rSDcs working modality is a process of relevance in LaPa development and implementation processes (See details in Annex 8, Annex 11 and Annex 12)
accountable leaders and transparent mechanisms. they are practicing democratic and inclusive mechanisms in their organizational life, which in turn makes them respected local institutions. it was shown that rSDcs working modality has been successful even during the conflict period of the county. Hence, vDcs and other government institutions are making Srcs major partners for spending resources and planning at the community level.
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and livestock insurance programmes implemented through cooperatives and mFis. there is a lack of clarity over the legal status of the guarantee protection cum insurance products. Likewise, the limited range of crop and livestock insurance products, lack of data and information, lack of capacity of private sector insurance companies and their branch network, and hard administrative costs for operation, mean that this is not possible to implement immediately in the country. therefore, SLcs, which are Local Financial institutions with some capacity and experience, may adopt and accept the climate and weather related risks into their risk fund policy. Other external agencies like government or donors, who are interested in supporting micro-insurers and public private partnership schemes, can contribute to the fund to strengthen LaPa delivery. (See uNFccc 2009.)
that other institutions can also use the model for reaching poor and vulnerable communities within their own structures. it simply needs political will to prioritise climate adaptation and allocate resources.
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cONcLuSiON PrOPOSED LaPa DESigN FOr tHE micrO-FiNaNcE SEctOr tHrOugH LFiS
in the case of Nepal, poverty alleviation programmes and activities are the only way to address the climatic hazards and risks faced by rural communities. therefore, the self-reliance working modality, used to identify the most poor and vulnerable communities, and form hamlet or interest based organizations and vDc level cooperatives, could be a key entry point for local climate adaptation. they have capacity and expertise in improved governance (including transparent, and accountable policy and decision making processes), mainstreaming poor issues into programmes and policy, involvement in local level planning, empowerment of communities, information sharing, and building community trust and involvement. micro-insurance has been identified as an important component of future action for climate adaptation. innovative risk sharing mechanisms are needed to respond to the new challenges, including increasingly frequent extreme events, land degradation and loss of biodiversity. Srcs are an established mechanism of financial delivery, with self monitoring mechanisms that include risk fund management and evaluation of collateral. therefore, it is proposed that Srcs are an effective institution for LaPa implementation. Following the pilots in Kalikot and Kapilbastu districts, rSDc is keen to implement this approach in a further four districts: two from the hills area and two from the terai plains, considering new areas (such as Nawalparasi/Dang and Syangja) and existing working areas (such as Kapilbastu and Kalikot). in Kapilbastu and Kalikot, rSDcs working modality and the socio-economic and climate adaptation needs of deprived communities would be the entry point. in the two new areas community vulnerability, based on gateway systems analysis and vulnerability assessment, would be the entry point.
5.1 RSDC proposes the following structure and methodology for LAPA development and implementation
Approaches
Reaching the most vulnerable and deprived communities, as RSDC has been doing for a long period Increasing climate adaptation through a poverty alleviation lens, as is already being implemented
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Share the outcomes with and raising the awareness of the local stakeholders at vdc level Identification of local hazards and appropriate responses Prioritise adaptation activities and identify support institutions Share at district level to ensure a response from government line agencies
Large projects by DDC Capacity building and livelihood diversification by cooperatives Monitoring by government mechanism, cooperatives and the community
Financial mechanism
Proving finance through cooperatives and iggs to the poor and vulnerable for capacity building and livelihood diversification Micro insurance as protection against the uncertainties of weather and climate
Coordination system
Self reliance cooperative plays the coordination role as it is the umbrella organization of local level IGGs, represents deprived communities, and is an elected body in the absence of elected government and it works in the whole VDC with a good reputation.
Information/ technology
Establish climate information centres at local level Cooperatives collect local data and share with NAST and disseminate the information received from nast NAST provides climatic information regularly
Institutional mechanism
VAPA planning by cooperative Micro level infrastructure by cooperative and vdc
Process
vulnerability assessment of each ward (community) in the vDc Share vulnerability assessment outcomes with all stakeholders at vDc level Workshop: vDc, FEcOFuN, NgOs, cBOs, cooperatives, all stakeholders on increasing climate change and adaptation awareness and hazards issues in whole vDc Prepare complete vulnerability list, analyses and priority list Prioritization of issues and discussion related to gWS map and climate change issues / hazards in whole vDc vDc adaptation action plan for whole vDc Response activities 1. 2. 3. .etc Institution cooperatives/ Local NgOs vDc DDc
Tools
Questionnaire/gateway system Discussion tools
group work and discussion tools group work and discussion tools
District level workshop to share vPa, inviting DDc, government line agencies, civil society, political leaders, cooperative leaders Objective: to seek a district level response (commitment or clarity) to vDc adaptation top priority list.
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rEFErENcES
agrawal a. , catherine mcSweeney and Nicolas Perrin 2008, tHE SOciaL DimENSiONS OF cLimatE cHaNgE, No. 113 , Social Development Notes : community Driven Development, July 2008, World Bank OxFam 2009, People-centred resilience Working with vulnerable farmers towards climate change adaptation and food security Oxfam Briefing Paper 16 November 2009 World Bank 2009. Finance and Private Sector Development unit, South asia region global Facility for Disaster reduction and recovery: Feasibility Study for agricultural insurance in Nepal report No. 46521-NP World Bank and iSDr July 2009 united Nations Framework convention on climate change (uNFccc 2009), climate change: impacts, vulnerabilities and adaptation in Developing countries. uNFccc Shrestha BK 2006, Self-reliant Development of the Poor By the Poor (Sdpp) Project, Progress monitoring and review report, rSDc
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Gateway systems analysis for assessinG vulnerability and buildinG local adaptive capacity to climate chanGe impacts
Gateway systems analysis for assessing vulnerability and building local adaptive capacity to climate change impacts
submitted to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
submitted by Ajaya Dixit, Kamal Thapa and Madhav Devkota Institute for Social and Environmental Transitional-Nepal
March, 2011
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TAble of ConTenTS
Table of Contents Introduction Vulnerability to climate change Adaptive strategies Objectives Examining gateway systems and assessing vulnerability Biophysical and socioeconomic context of Kapilbastu: Pilot study district Climate and natural resources Demography Agriculture Infrastructure Identification of VDCs Climate-induced hazards Status of gateway systems and services Core systems Secondary systems Tertiary systems Vulnerability ranking The marginalised Local climate change scenario Developing development scenarios Planning process Summary A comment on decentralisation in Nepal Last words End notes References
359 361 364 366 368 370 373 373 374 374 374 376 379 381 381 383 384 386 389 392 395 399 401 405 407 408 409
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InTroDuCTIon
In 2007 the fourth Assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) declared that, by 2100, global temperatures are likely to increase by 1.8-4C, and recognised the potential impacts of such an increase on temperature extremes, precipitation levels, tropical storms and sea levels. even minor changes in temperatures can have major impacts on the natural environment, including changing species ranges, increasing extinctions and exacerbating the risk of wildfire. Increased temperature will likely affect the human environment, too, changing water availability, altering crop productivity and reducing coastal land due to sea-level rises. Increased spells of hot weather and greater incidences of vectorborne diseases will threaten human health. The global community has attempted to respond to these challenges by holding Conference of the Parties (CoP) meetings in an attempt to negotiate targets for reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, the primary cause of global climate change. recent CoP meetings, however, have tended to downplay the seriousness of the problem: the 2009 Copenhagen CoP, for example, acknowledged that global temperatures may rise 2C, but failed to contemplate the possible 4C suggested in the IPCCs 2007 report. The 4C and beyond conference held at oxford in 2009, in contrast, presented compelling evidence that given the current trends in green house gas emissions, a future with an average global temperature 4C higher than it is now is a distinct possibility. because a substantial increase in warming may occur much sooner than anticipated, the world is likely to face severe climate changes and much uncertainty in the near future. With regard to climate change, however, not all elements of the future are uncertain. According to Smith, et al. (2011) several aspects of climate change are straightforwardly monotonic; as a result, for many types of decisions, levels of uncertainty are modest. The rise in average global temperatures predicted by general circulation models (GCMs) is an example of a monotonic change. other examples are sea-level rises (and the resultant inundation of coasts) and increasing seawater acidity, the magnitudes of which is reasonably certain for at least the next few decades and even longer (Smith et al., 2011). The increase in average global temperatures, regardless of its degree, will no doubt exacerbate extreme climatic hazards. As a result, climate disasters are likely to acquire greater ferocity across the world and result in destruction of properties, lives and livelihoods. natural systems, local and communities, institutional structures and social relationships will be affected by increased climate variability and resultant disasters. Clearly adaptive strategies are needed to effectively respond to these emerging stresses.
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In formulating a strategy for adapting to the impacts of climate change in nepal, the following factors add to the complexity and challenges: Due to the poorly understood relation between the South Asian monsoon and the Himalaya system, and the inherent limitations of climate science and modelling, uncertainty about the future is inescapable. Models simply cannot generate a precise vision of what the future holds for the country. Climate change impacts are occurring simultaneously with development. In many areas people do not have access to basic services such as drinking water, energy and education. Climate change impacts add new stresses and from these perspectives development and adaptation emerge as two ends of a continuum, and it will be difficult to disentangle the two. As adaptation is a process and not an end in itself, responses need to be iterative and based on learning shared between experts and those who are driven to adapt. People are different: they perceive risks differently, respond to pressure differently and strategise differently. Such differences must be acknowledged in the design of adaptive strategies. Since it is often the hierarchically organised government, whether at the local or national level, which devises responses for adapting to climate change, it is important to consider how to reconcile its rigid organisational structure with the flexibility adaptation requires. Societies also face other drivers of change including climate change stress. As the six points above indicate, the drivers of change are multiple and the context is dynamic. As conditions change, new constraints and new opportunities will emerge and the definition of the problem
itself will change too. Whenever the nature of the problem changes, new solutions need to be sought. Conventional methods will be of little or no use in a future in which the problem itself, and, as a result, its solutions, are changing. Thus, an effective adaptive strategy to deal with climate change must have the capacity to identify emerging constraints and to devise new solutions. broadly, the strategy must devise approaches that will perform at the intersection of development and adaptation, accommodate multiple drivers including climate change, and have the ultimate aim of achieving individual, household and societal well being. In many ways, notions of adaptation as achieving well being, derive from the work on ecosystems and subsequent analysis by leading thinkers such as C.S. Holling and lance Gunderson that draw parallels within interlinked socio-ecological systems (Gunderson and Holling, 2002). ISeT (2008) uses this conceptual foundation as a starting point for understanding how human systems may adapt to stresses spawned by climate change. This interrelationship in achieving wellbeing, the aim of any state with respect to its people, is illustrated in figure 1. The above conceptual grounding leads to the idea of a gateway system as the means for assessing vulnerability and adapting to climate change. At its core, gateway systems is based on the notion that the social and economic systems within which individuals, households and organisations function, present these social actors with certain constraints and opportunities to which they respond as they seek to maintain or improve their well-being. The idea of the gateway system will be discussed in detail in the subsequent sections while analyzing vulnerability to climate change and adaptation. Clearly adaptation and development are not separate though each has different
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Gateway systems Government bodies national level district level village level
plural solutions
multiple institutions
development of capacity to respond as and when constraints emerge through local-level planning
private actors, both national and local achievement of well being in ordinary circumstances and adaptation to stresses, including those imposed by climate change.
donors
elements that need teasing out. This process of exploring inter-linkages between the two, leads to seeking methods that will support broader development objectives while adaptation strategies are pursued. Given the inherent uncertainties in climate science and the multiple needs of societies, methods that help prioritise options identified for adaptation will be necessary. Prioritising options is a key responsibility of effective governance. The logic is relevant when one recognises that climate change adaptation is an additional burden for developing countries that have fallen behind in helping citizens achieve well being. This line of enquiry about the links between adaptation
and development, raises more questions than it provides answers. Some of the questions are: How can financing for adaptation be distinguished from general development financing? How can such additional financing be integrated into normal budgetary processes of the government? How are maximum accountability and transparency ensured in the way adaptation financing is delivered, allocated and governed? Climate change in that sense is a lens that will help reassess the prevailing practices, because the above questions are frequently asked, in the context of the effectiveness of foreign aid and development, of many developing countries including nepal.
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The conception of vulnerability is at the heart of our aim to understand how the impacts of global climate change translate to local scales and how we take action to reduce vulnerability. IPCC defines vulnerability as the degree to which systems are susceptible to and unable to cope with the adverse impacts of climate change: Vulnerability is a function of the character, magnitude, and rate of climate change and the variation to which a system is exposed, its sensitivity, and its adaptive capacity (IPCC, 2007, emphasis added). The Hyogo framework 2005-2015, adopted by the united nations at the World Conference on Disasters in 2005 includes a broader definition of vulnerability: A set of conditions determined by physical, social, economic and environmental factors or processes which increase the susceptibility of a community to the impact of hazards. both documents indicate that susceptibility and sensitivity to exposure and the capacity to shift strategies in ways that reduce such susceptibility and sensitivity are central to understanding vulnerability and adaptation to climate change. In short, human vulnerability to climate change is a function of susceptibility to exposure (lives, livelihoods, relationships and assets that are either directly or indirectly likely to experience major impacts from climate change) and the capacity to shift strategies in ways that reduce such susceptibility (ISeT, 2008). The discussion above raises several important questions: What will be the scale of climate change impacts? How does one assess those impacts? Where will they occur? Who will be most affected by them? Clearly, answers to the where and who are crucial, as the vulnerability of a particular place and the people in that place to impacts of climate change matters. Climate change is a global phenomenon but the impacts are local and must be dealt with at that level. Therefore what is needed is a better grasp of the complexity of, and changes in, climatic systems and how they will affect both nature and society, and the systems which they are based on and derive from both. our focus on these local issues is rooted in our understanding of the larger dynamics of global climate patterns and their implications for regional and local climates. This understanding is based on the scientific perspective, that is, physical scientists tend to espouse a natural hazards-based school of thought, a positivist approach to development rooted in the technological management of risk. They consider risk reduction to be a physical function and equate vulnerability with physical exposure to extreme events and adverse outcomes, the characteristics of the biophysical environment and natural resource distribution.
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This approach to conceiving vulnerability is insufficient because it does not consider the question of who is affected. It is in identifying the people affected, that the social approach to vulnerability assessment is useful and, in fact, required. The social approach starts by assessing vulnerabilities already embedded in a given social context: the characteristics of a person or group and their situation that influence their capacity to anticipate, cope with, resist and recover from the impact of natural hazards. In this perspective, vulnerability is both dynamic and contested. It is also differential, depending as it does on the scale and functional unit of analysis, whether it is the individual, household, community, regional or system level. According to Adger (2006), vulnerability stems from the failure of certain people to secure their entitlement to resources as well as structural factors that leave them differentially disadvantaged in the face of disasters. Some analysts have attempted to bridge the gap between the physical and social perspectives on vulnerability by proposing the concept of a vulnerability of place, in which biophysical exposure intersects with political, economic and social factors to generate specific configurations of vulnerability (Cutter, 1996; Cutter et al., 2000). In appreciating that vulnerability to climate change is differential, it is important to recognise both the scientific and the social perspectives: a persons exposure to hazards matters and so does their state of survival. In addition, any approach to assessing vulnerability must capture both an understanding of the local context and an appreciation of global dynamics. Applying a number of analytical tools, including a consideration of exposure, sensitivity, the ability of a system to adapt and the state
of disadvantage can be useful in helping people respond to the potential impacts of climate change. However, the challenge is much deeper than just coming up with an approach. Climate change is a global phenomenon with local impacts on real people and it is those people who matter. rising temperatures affect local livelihoods, social systems and economic enterprises and pose health risks. Impacts such as severe weather, dry spells and floods are likely to increase food shortages, the incidence of vector-borne diseases, infrastructure damage and the degradation of natural resources. In this web of impacts, how does one identify who will be at the greatest disadvantage? unless we can identify who the vulnerable are, we can hardly take proactive measures to build adaptive capacity. The localised impacts of the global phenomenon of climate change depend upon the geographical, environmental, economic and socio-political contexts of particular places. because the idiosyncrasies of each of these varied contexts are intertwined with both monotonic changes and large uncertainties, identifying an overarching strategy for adapting to climate change is an impossible task and identifying a strategy for a particular context, a daunting one. As all adaptive strategies are influenced by local systems, each must suit the actual or anticipated experiences of climate change impacts on people and systems in a specific area. These systems include water, energy, land, food, education, transportation, communications and finance systems as well as ecosystems. effective adaptive strategies will require responses at all scales of governance, from local to regional to national.
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ADAPTIVe STrATeGIeS
The above discussion brings to fore a question: what is adaptation or an adaptive strategy? The united nations framework Convention on Climate Change (unfCCC) first defined adaptation as the extent to which societies could tolerate changes in climate. In its efforts to link such a concept with practical necessities for on-the-ground action, ISeT (2008) makes a distinction between adaptation and coping. It argues that adaptation is much more than coping and suggests that, in well-adapted systems, people do well despite changes in conditions which introduce new stresses, including those attributable to climate change. The reason they do well is either that they shift strategies for earning a living or that the underlying systems on which their livelihoods are based are sufficiently resilient and flexible to absorb the impact of change. Adaptation, therefore, encompasses both the ability to adopt alternative livelihoods as well as the ability to develop resilient and flexible systems. The capacity to shift strategies is a function of three key variables: (1) access to underlying infrastructure, knowledge, communication, economic and other systems; (2) relationships among those systems; and (3) assets, particularly convertible assets (ISeT, 2008). Shifts in strategies can be accomplished by both planned and autonomous actions. Planned actions include those steps by a government or a donor agency to shape its policies, programmes and projects in response to climate change impacts. Dixit (2010) suggests that planned adaptation can be further classified as attributed and indirect. Attributed planned adaptation is the result of public policy decisions made by government or public sector agencies with respect to climate change. Such decisions are explicitly designed to respond to the predicted impacts of climate change on ecological, hydrological and human systems. They include programmes that governments, non-governmental organisations (nGos) and international donor agencies implement with the deliberate goal of responding to specific impacts of climate change identified after assessing climate change vulnerabilities. When the uncertainty inherent in climate science and projection renders the adoption of measures which, by design, tackle specific impactsattributionimpossible, indirect planned adaptive measures can be adopted. This approach establishes systemic mechanisms that enable people to switch strategies autonomously and as a result, to do well. Indirect planned adaptive measures may facilitate a shift to more adaptive strategies but their use is not directly attributed to the desire to address climate change. This approach works independently of climate change but, serendipitously, enables strategy switches and autonomous adaptation. In contrast with planned adaptation, autonomous adaptation includes actions that individuals, communities, businesses and other organisations undertake on their own in response to the opportunities and constraints they face as the climate changes. These actions may involve changing practice or technology, diversifying livelihood systems, increasing access to financial resources such as micro-insurance and micro-credit, migrating,
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looks bleak, farming households move onto non-agricultural activities, investing heavily in migration or educating children. As new constraints and opportunities emerge, people respond to them, actively and creatively, taking advantage of the gateway systemsenergy, water, land use, mobility and finance systems as well as ecosystemsavailable to them. In countries such as nepal, since much autonomous adaptation occurs in the informal The difference between the two types of sector, it tends to be visible at the household adaptation can be conceptualised by using the analogy of an iceberg: the submerged, invisible level but invisible at the national level. part, which represents autonomous adaptation, Global planning, too, pays scant attention to is much larger than the visible tip above the autonomous adaptation. understanding the role that the informal sector and autonomous water level, which is akin to planned adaptation (nCVST, 2009). behavior play in adapting to climate change, is central to developing effective policies While society tends to seek and latch onto a and strategies. for example, across the single, catch-all solution, when faced with an burgeoning cities of South Asia, where ever-evolving problem, the only appropriate municipal governments are notoriously strategy is to embrace plural approaches, that unable to meet the demand for drinking allows adequate space for a wide variety of water, local and migrant populations adapt by purchasing water through informal tanker stakeholdersthe government, the private sector and civic groupsto be involved and markets. These markets are a key behavioral contribute what they can. There is a need for and institutional mechanism that responds creative engagement, for thinking outside to the needs of large populations and adds the box. only a nimble approach will allow flexibility to the much more rigidly fixed and space for the flexible and iterative processes poorly managed municipal water supply systems. However, the adaptive systems have that adaptation to climate change requires. When mainstreaming the adaptation process their problems, too: suppliers provide poorinto development planning, it is crucial that quality water and charge exorbitant prices. Another example of autonomous adaptation the notions of both flexibility and iteration be balanced with the need for structure at all levels to rising temperatures is the installation of of governancelocal, regional and national. air-conditioning. This, too, is an option only open to the affluent and to large commercial entities and manufacturing enterprises. In figure 2: both cases, the truly vulnerable, those who are Adaptation iceberg most susceptible to exposure and the least capable of shifting strategies to reduce that susceptibility, are unable to adapt. Instead, they cope, foregoing personal hygiene and sweltering in misery. Therefore, it is this group which is most affected and this group that governments need to identify and support. reconfiguring labour allocation or resource rights and engaging in collective action to access services, resources or markets. Social capital and access to skills and knowledge are particularly important in enabling autonomous adaptive behaviour. on a more fundamental level, in order to enjoy a cool home or workplace, individuals and households (and possibly communities as well) often devise strategies for responding to constraints. When the future of farming
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obJeCTIVeS
To further the aim of facilitating adaptation, an approach that brings together the global dynamics with the local will be needed. While efforts can be and should be made at the national level, efforts that focus at the local level are needed. To that end, a process for devising local adaptation plans for action (lAPAs) as a means of mainstreaming climate change adaptation into development planning was piloted in nepal. Such an approach needs to bring together bottom-up and top-down approaches. In conceptualisation, the approach should enable a local-level governance unit to prepare a local-level development scenario using localised climate change foresight, and to formulate plural responses in order to establish climate-resilient gateway systems that help build the resilience of the vulnerable population. This conceptualisation of an lAPA leaves many questions unanswered. How does one: decide that one area affected by climate change is more vulnerable than another; identify which gateway systems in that area are most vulnerable; determine who is likely to be most seriously affected; decide who will be involved in deploying adaptation measures? To seek the answers, we piloted the design of lAPA in Kapilbastu, a Tarai district in nepals western development region from August 2, 2010 to January 30, 2011, applying the framework of gateway systems to the village development committee (VDC) level of governance. This framework used a natural hazard perspective to assess the vulnerability of a VDC to climate change and then used a socio-political perspective to identify individual and households within the VDC who are likely to be most vulnerable to climate change impacts. It thus brought both the natural science and social perspectives together. Thus the process adopted a systematic approach to using gateway systems as the lens to assess ward-level vulnerability and to preparing a strategy to respond to climate change impacts. Its objectives were as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Identify the gateway system services in selected VDC. Assess the impacts of climate change within the specific boundary at the VDC level. Identify communities rendered vulnerable by climate change, as well as those which are more resilient. Arrive at a preliminary assessment of how gateway system services build or constrain adaptation. Identify a range of adaptive options. Devise a method for mainstreaming the learning of the pilot process into VDC and district development committee (DDC) procedures.
In this process, shared learning dialogue (SlD) served as an overarching framework that guided the selection of appropriate methods and tools. SlD is a concept based on the learning frameworks proposed by lewin (1946) and is similar to participatory research
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methods (Chambers 1994). The process contrasts with more conventional development and research methods, such as Participatory rural Appraisal (PrA), in which external facilitators base their plans or recommendations on information extracted from local partners or in which external facilitators seek to catalyse action for the existing priorities that local partners suggest. Conventional methods, unlike SlD, do not always present new information and knowledge to local stakeholders. Instead of either capturing or catalysing local priorities, as is done by the conventional approaches, SlD emphasises synthesising the knowledge of both local people and external actors. It blends the experiential and the scientific, the local and the global.
In this approach, both external analysts and local actors, including local communities, sector specialists, governmental actors and non-government organisations, share their insights in order to come to a common understanding of the issue. The SlD method (ISeT/ISeT-n, 2009) is valuable in that it fosters an understanding of vulnerability at the local level but is, at the same time, informed by the global, scientific perspective. As its perspective is both broad and focused, the synthesised knowledge generated by SlD is crucial for local-level planning for climate adaptation. It is precisely because climate change is a global phenomenon with local consequences that the knowledge generated at the global, technical level needs to be used in combination with local, experiential knowledge.
Draw lessons from implementation revise plan and implement Learning Collect local experience and scientific evidence
Aci
Aci
Aci
TIME
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As discussed above, the entry point for preparing an lAPA was through assessing the presence and use of gateway systems in each ward of the VDCs selected for piloting. Gateway systems were defined as systems of energy, water, land use, mobility and finance systems as well as ecosystems. The term gateway systems is not intended to draw attention to the differential access implicit in the nature of systems, but emerges from the understanding that adaptation is the ability to switch strategies in face of constraints, including those due to climate change. Indeed, to do well, people switch strategies. Whether or not they can do so depends, in large measure, on their ability to access services from energy, water, land use, mobility and finance systems as well as ecosystems. Thus, these systems serve as a gateway toward greater resilience to the impact of climate change. As mentioned above, gateway systems bring together social and economic systems within which individuals, households and organisations function and respond, as they seek to maintain or improve their livelihood status together. The array of choices that social actors can make depends upon the availability of energy, water and other resources, as well as on the nature of the social and physical infrastructure they have access to. Social systems (i.e. institutions, languages, social networks, health, sanitation, finance, education, communications and knowledge systems) determine the opportunities and constraints that social actors perceive and are able to respond to. At the same time, the decision-making space available to these actors is a function of physical systems: the physical infrastructure supporting or constraining mobility (transportation), communications, access to natural resources and exposure to hazards, all shape both the reality and the perception of opportunities and constraints. The combined physical and social infrastructures which exist in any given context, along with basic availability of resources, create a limited space within which decisions regarding shifting strategies can be made.iii Drinking water, energy and food systems, as well as forest and other ecosystems are fundamental to survival. They constitute the core systems on which local livelihoods depend. All are likely to be directly affected by climate change. Secondary systems, if they are robust, enable people to access various opportunities to overcome the constraints that they face. The greater the impact of climate change on these systems, the more vulnerable people will be and the less able to adapt. Tertiary-level systems include finance, health and education. If the quality of service provision is good and the systems strong, people will have access to the money, medical treatment, knowledge and skills, political voice and other tertiary services that they need to shift strategies. regardless of the level, it is the robustness and quality of the systems that contribute to the ability of local populations to adapt to climate and other changes, and their dysfunction and ineffectiveness that detract from it.
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Governance
by analysing the services provided by gateway systems at the local level, the socioeconomic and biophysical context within which they are embedded, and identifying individuals and households without access to them, we had a practical tool by which we were able to assess vulnerability to climate change. The majority of the population depend on agriculture, and for them, climate-related hazards such as floods, droughts and winter fog pose a serious threat. During the process of creating the lAPA for the four selected VDCs of Kapilbastu, five SlDs were held with locals both at the district and VDC levels. These were held in order to share with them insights of global climate science and to identify their experiences of the nature of localised climate change impacts and their ideas about options for switching strategies. These discussions increased local ownership of the lAPA and also helped validate local conditions. In order to minimise the risks posed by climate change at specific locations, planners need to know two key pieces of
information: who is most vulnerable and how gateway systems in that location will be impacted. external analysts have the capacity, methods and tools to assess changes in climate, but their ability to know local vulnerabilities is limited. Thus, ensuring the participation of local stakeholders in identifying key priorities and entry points for assessing vulnerabilities is crucial. At the same time, the ability of local actors to assess climate vulnerabilities at their locality is limited as they lack a technical understanding of global and regional climate change impacts. SlDs are instrumental in capitalising on the insights of both groups, and thereby producing a synergistic effect. The step after assessing the status of the gateway systems in the VDC (or, indeed, in any specific locality), was to develop an understanding of the vulnerabilities of each systemwhere they are fragile, poor quality, inaccessible or potentially subject to disruption by climate changeand to make those points more resilient. This step also enables stakeholdersboth external
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analysts and localsto identify who would be most harmed by climate change and, by improving gateway systems, most able to build their adaptive capacity. Gateway systems are classified as core, secondary and tertiary types (see Table 1). Therefore, an assessment of gateway systems can reveal the nature of the services they provide and how accessible they are, particularly to marginalised groups, as well as the degree to which they are likely to be disrupted by the direct impacts of climate change. If they are assessed at the VDC level, the relative vulnerability of each ward in that VDC becomes evident. To reiterate, the two main epistemological approaches to assessing vulnerability are the natural hazard research-based and
the social vulnerability approaches. The social vulnerability approach begins by assessing vulnerabilities already embedded in a given social context; it considers those characteristics of people or groups and their situation which influence their capacity to anticipate, cope with, resist and recover from the impact of a natural hazard. The natural hazards school of thought, in contrast, takes a positivist approach to development; its focus is on the technological management of risk and sees risk reduction as a physical task. To assess the relative vulnerability of each ward, the natural hazard approach was applied and then a variety of qualitative and quantitative methods were used to capture a sense of the embedded social vulnerability. The results of both approaches were used to develop a lAPA.
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Kapilbastu District is the westernmost section of the contiguous region of the northern IndoGangetic Plain. Along with Palpa, rupandehi and the Tarai section of nawalparasi districts, it lies within the rTb basin, named after the rohini, Tinau, and banganga rivers which drain it. Kapilbastu stretches between 8241e and 84 14e longitude and 2725n and 2749n latitude and its area of 1,738 km2 encompasses three distinct geographical zones: the lower Chure and the bhabar, the middle Tarai and the lower Tarai.
Khoti River Bagmati River Kapilbastu Tinau River Watershed boundary Rohini Khola Palpa Rupandehi
Mahu River Marai River
Kapilbastu District was purposively chosen for piloting for four reasons: ISET-N has access to local groups through local partners The lead researcher has worked in the district on food system vulnerability ISET-N is involved in food system research in the rTb basin, and With an HDI of 0.437 and a per capita income of uS$206 (nepal District Profile, 2006), Kapilbastu is the poorest district in the Tarai. In the following section the macro context of Kapilbastu is presented.
Internation al Boundary
INDIA
CHINA
Pokhara Kathmand
High himalayan region High hill region Middle hill and Mahabharat Chure Bhawar Tarai
0 125 250 km
INDIA
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247,875 287,093
234,101 294,937
Source: District and VDC profile of Nepal-2010 and District profile of Kapilbastu-2005
Demography
In 2001, Kapilbastu had a total population of 481,976 distributed across 77 VDCs and one municipality. The population was increasing at 2.6% annually and there were slightly more men than women: 105.88 to 100. The Central bureau of Statistics (CbS) reported in 2004 that the average household size was increasing and cited a figure of 6.6 persons per household, which is significantly higher than the national average of 5.4. The population density in Kapilbastu, 277 people per square kilometre, was also higher than the national average of 157. only 35.8% are literate (compared to a national average of 53.74%) and the per capita income in Kapilbastu District is uS$206, uS$240 less than the national average (nepal District Profile, 2006). Indeed, the district is one of the least economically developed of all the Tarai districts. The population in the northern zone is more heterogeneous than in the southern and central regions, where the Madhesis, or people of Tarai origin, dominate.
Agriculture
The soil, climate and rainfall pattern of Kapilbastu district make it very suitable for agriculture, and, indeed, 93,855 hectares of land is arable, which constitutes 93.5 % of the total area. Slightly over 37% is irrigated, generally by groundwater. The remaining 62.7 % of non-irrigated land is totally dependent on rainfall; since rainfall is erratic, both agricultural production and productivity suffer. There are reports that the groundwater level has been depleted, but these are anecdotal. not all areas of the district have access to underlying aquifers. (See figure 6.)
Infrastructure
Drinking water: As is the case in the rest of the Tarai, the primary source of drinking water in Kapilbastu is groundwater. Most of the aquifers underlying it are shallow and are accessed using tube wells. In the northern zone in the Chure foothills, in contrast, surface sources are both available and exploited. In the mid-1990s, the government of finland provided technical assistance to nepal to improve the drinking water and sanitation services in the lumbini Zone. Kapilbastu was one of the six districts which received technical and financial support to that end. Altogether, 100,000 people were benefited by 108 schemes, all of which met national standards (Sharma, 2001).iv As a result of this project, the district is well covered by drinking water supply
6.50%
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systems: officially, 83% of households are served by taps and piped water systems or tube wells. The rest rely on a variety of sources, including traditional wells. Some wells, however, have been contaminated by naturally-occurring arsenic. Roads: According to Moench and Dixit (2004), the ability to move to access jobs and Table 4 Road length in kilometres and their types
Road type black-topped Gravel fair-weather Length (km) 150.27 402.19 777.2 Road density (distance/sq.km) 0.086 0.231 0.447
sources of livelihood, enables individuals to adapt to stress induced by climate variability and climate change. A robust road infrastructure serves as the backbone of such mobility and the overall socioeconomic development that supports livelihood diversification, better health services, and, through distribution, food security. road coverage, by both allweather and seasonal roads, is fairly good in Kapilbastu (see Table 4). Communications: Public access to information and means of communication is always important for accessing goods and services, but such access is crucial during times of disaster. There are not enough telephone services in Kapilbastu district and most are concentrated in the districts one municipality and its large towns. Since only 5.6% live in urban areas of the district, the majority of the population still faces a considerable challenge when it comes to accessing information. In recent times, however, the increasing availability and affordability of mobile phones and Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) phones has helped the local population stay informed.
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IDenTIfICATIon of VDCS
once Kapilbastu had been selected as an appropriate district, the next step was to identify VDCs for piloting. This required an iterative process which pushed beyond the level of understanding achieved through the initial scoping. The process selected was SlD. The research team needed to choose among the 77 VDCs and single municipality in the district, a choice made difficult by the diversity among them. The districts can be broadly divided into three zonesthe north, the central and the southeach with different geographic, social and cultural contexts. nine, 30 and 39 districts fall respectively into the northern, central and southern zones (see Table 6). While in the north the population consists largely of Tharus
Shivaghadi
Shivagadhi
Dubiya
Bhalwad Mahendrakot
Jitpur
Gugauli Gajehada Buddhi Chanai Birpur Hariharpur Thunhiya Manpur Lalipur Jawabhari Ganeshpur Ramnagar Udayapur Bharahipur Bhalubari Balrampurj Rajpur Mahuwa Dhankauli Tilaurakot Niglihawa Hathausa Panta Jayanagar Kopuwa Highway
Fulika Nandanagar
Khurhuriya
Bishunpur
Patthardehiya
Hardauna Below 500m 500-1000m 1000-1500m Highway River Foot Path Main Trail Gravelled Metalled Selected VDC 0 8 16km Rangapur Hathihawa
Bhagawanpur
Bahadurganj Nandanagar Maharajganj Bidyanagar Pakadi Dohani Ajigara Shivanagar Sisawa Dumara Banskhor Sirsihawa Kjarhawa Purusottampur Kushahawa Gotihawa Postal road Labani Gauri Bhilmi Krishna Nagar Simhakhor Basantapur Harnampur Kapilbastu Abhirawa Hardauna Pithuwa Parsohiya Baluhawa Somdih Titirkhi Southern Bedauli Bijuwa Hathihawa Pipara Rangapur
Meteorological station
Southern
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Social
Tharu and hill migrants
and migrants from the hills, the central and southern zones have few hill migrants and more Kurmis and yadavs in addition to the Tharus. The south sees the addition of Muslims. Table 7 specifies the characteristics of each zone, while figure 5 shows the gradual decrease in elevation along a northsouth transect. each zone is characterised as follows. Northern zone: This region of nine VDCs lies in the Chure foothills and bhabar zone north of the east-West Highway. Most people are farmers but the land is not fertile and agricultural productivity is low. Though the zone has many natural resources, it is socially and economically marginalised. Central zone: This zone of 30 VDCs lies between the east-West Highway and the old hulaki (postal) road. not only does it get more rainfall than the other two zones but it is served by the banganga irrigation system. Jagadishpur reservoir, a ramsar wetlands site, also serves as a source of water for irrigation. Agricultural productivity is high in this zone. Southern zone: This zone encompasses the 39 VDCs which lie between the old hulaki road and the border with uttar Pradesh. Collecting water from its tributaries, the banganga river enters uttar Pradesh from Hardauna in zone three. The livelihoods of the majority of the population are based on rain-fed agriculture as irrigation facilities are absent. Since there is no forestland, people burn animal dung to cook. recently,
reforestation programmes have been initiated in some parts of the zone by creating community forests run by local community forest user groups. In line with the concept of SlD, which seeks to synthesise local, experiential knowledge and scientific study, to identify the most vulnerable of VDCs in each zone, the research team referred to secondary documents and held discussions with officials of rural Self-reliance Development Centre (rSDC) and other non-government organisations to get their input. rSDC implements poverty alleviation programmes in the most deprived communities and districts of nepal, including Kapilbastu. Together, the reports and discussions formed the basis for identifying the five most vulnerable VDCs in each zone (see Table 8). This would give researchers a wider canvass to locate the most vulnerable VDC in each zone. When the preliminary list of VDCs selected was shared with DDC officials during a district-level SlD on August 8, 2010, the team discovered the DDC office had
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Table 8 The preliminary identification of the five most vulnerable VDCs in each zone
Zone northern Central Southern VDCs identified after initial ranking Motipur Ganeshpur Hardauna bhalwad Khurhuriya Somdiha Mahendrakot Patthardehia Kajarhawa Dubiya bishanpur Simhakhor bakalpur birpur baidauli
already developed criteria (see annex I) to identify the most vulnerable and deprived VDCs in the district.5 This was one of the benefits of the SlD which allows/facilitates two way information exchanges. using this ranking, the team identified the single most vulnerable VDC in each zone (see Annex II and figure 9): Dubiya in the north, Khurhuriya in the Central and Hardauna in the South. These were endorsed by the DDC and other participants in the SlDs as the most vulnerable and were the VDCs selected for the pilot. Shivagadi, a VDC that experienced communal violence in the aftermath of ending of nepals Maoist insurgency was also selected. figure 9 shows the locations of these four VDCs and Table 9, their characteristics.
Almost 80% of the people in the four VDCs depend on agriculture to earn their livelihoods. livestock is an important component of the system and rice is the major cereal crop. Wheat, maize, pulses and mustard are other commonly cultivated crops, and some families also grow vegetables, mostly for domestic consumption. A few families sell their produce at butwal. other common means of earning a livelihood include: work in the service sector, off-farm wage labour and seasonal migration to India. Migration to Gulf countries is a recent phenomenon, and is on the rise. All four VDCs are ethnically diverse but Tharus dominate in Dubiya and Muslims in Hardauna. The ethnic compositions in Shivagadi and Khurhuriya include Kurmis, Tharus, Muslims, yadavs, brahmins, Chhetris, Magars and Dalits.
Central
Khurhuriya
location: Western Kapilbastu District Area: 24.62 km2 Population: 7,881 living in 1,334 houses
Southern
Hardauna
location: Adjoining the Indian border Area: 9.13 km2 Population: 4,757 people living in 652 houses.
northern
Shivagadi
location: Chure foothills Area: 76.34 km2 Population: 6,349 living in 1,091 houses.
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ClIMATe-InDuCeD HAZArDS
Floods: TThe Tarai region as a whole has a long history of frequent flooding and Kapilbastu is no exception. It is prone to inundation, riverbank cutting and erosion and sediment deposition, all events which affect local livelihoods and debilitate the poor. All four of the selected VDCs experience frequent flooding. Hardauna is threatened by the banganga river, Dubiya by the Guduriya and Shivagadi by the Surai. Khurhuriya, which lies in the central zone, is threatened by flash floods. field-level assessment found that river erosion had consumed land, destroying livelihoods and displacing populations. In the northern zone floods had deposited boulders and sand on fertile agricultural land. farmers suggest that rainfall has grown more erratic and flash floods more common, and that the resultant droughts and inundations have decreased agricultural production. However, when floods bring fertile alluvial soil, productivity goes up. In Hardauna, the fact that sedimentation causes the banganga river to change its course every year has threatened settlements along both of its banks (see figure 10). In fact, erosion along the banganga has forced almost the entire population of Ward number 4 to move to adjoining wards.
figure 8: The shifting course of the Banganga River at Hardauna (Modified from Google maps)
Ward
River
River cutting
Settlements
Road
Drought: The people of all four selected VDCs report that drought, which they define as the condition of having no rain when it is most needed, is increasing. Drought conditions affect seed bed preparation for the sowing of paddy, wheat and other winter crops. none of the four have reliable irrigation facilities and rainfall is variable, leaving them vulnerable. Some
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farmers are proactive and use rainwater collected in ditches and ponds for irrigating crops. Khurhuriya VDC in the central zone is most severely affected by droughts. Fog: fog is a natural phenomenon in the Tarai winters but over the last 10 years, the number of days of thick fog and cold waves has increased. Winter fog now lingers for several weeks to even entire months. When there is fog for extended periods, the production of winter crops, especially potatoes and pulses, is adversely affected. Winter fog is heaviest in Hardauna. In Khurhuriya it is moderate and only light fog affects Shivagadi and Dubiya VDCs. Fire: According to the nepal Disaster report of 2009, fire is a recurring disaster in nepal.
every year, particularly during the dry season from february to May, a large number of incidents of fire are reported, mostly in the Tarai, where about three-quarters of houses are built with thatched roofs. As is the case elsewhere in the Tarai, fire is a major hazard in Kapilbastu. Tharu communities are especially vulnerable to fires because of the density of their settlements and because they build thatched houses due to their poor economic condition. Windstorms: farmers report that the gentle winds of the past have been replaced by powerful storms that damage crops. They claim that the absence of gentle winds has forced them to use machines to separate grain from the chaff and that strong westerly winds blow more frequently, often fiercely enough to seriously damages crops.
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In order to assess the status of the gateway systems of each VDC at the ward level, the pilot team began by conducting an SlD at the district level with the staff of local government bodies at the DDC, VDC and ward levels, non-government organisations and other stakeholders. Topics of discussion included issues such as education, literacy, womens literacy, access to health services, communication and the availability of and access to resources. The information shared was then used to assess how vulnerable each ward in each VDC is. This assessment is essential for preparing effective local-level adaptation plans, as it is only after a thorough understanding has been arrived at, of the points at which gateway systems are fragile, poor quality, inaccessible and or subject to disruption by climate change, that practical steps can be taken to increase the resilience of those points and thereby increase the adaptive capacity of the system as a whole. The evaluation considered the nature and accessibility of the services which the three levels of gateway service provide, and the degree to which each could be disrupted by the direct impacts of climate change.
Core systems
Core systems are foundational. As discussed above, if such systems are of poor quality, inaccessible, or likely be affected by climate change, adaptive resilience will be depleted. Table 10 summarises the status of core gateway systems in the four selected VDCs. Ward-level details are provided in Annex I and summarised below.
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Gateway systems analysis for assessinG vulnerability and buildinG local adaptive capacity to climate chanGe impacts
Energy: A supply of energy, whether it is biomass, electricity, solar, fossil fuels or other source, is important for adaptation. The current status of the energy system - its accessibility, reliability and affordability needs to be mapped so that it is clear how it can be exploited to diversify productive sectors. In Kapilbastu, 28.4% of households are supplied with electricity from nepals national grid, all of whom use it for lighting. The proportion of households in the four selected VDCs which have access to electricity is much higher - 59.9% overall - with service in Dubiya and Shivagadi high - at 88.7% and 84.6% respectively - and that in Khurhuriya and Hardauna low, just 36.7% and 29.4% respectively. because the nationally available supply of electricity has not kept pace with rising demand, Kapilbastu, like every other district in the nation, faces power cuts of 12-14 hours a day. for cooking, the majority of the population in the selected VDCs use traditional sources of energy, including firewood and animal dung. VDCs such as Dubiya, which are close to the Chure Hills use firewood, while those along the border with India, rely on animal dung because these VDCs have no forest. All VDCs rely almost exclusively on traditional sources of energy to cook - 99.8%, 99.5%, 99.1%, and 94.8% of households in Hardauna, Dubiya, Khurhuriya and Shivagadi respectively use these sources. Water: Water is a central component of both the weather and climate, as well as being essential for meeting basic human needs for survival. Drinking water and irrigation coverage varies considerably in the four selected VDCs. Drinking water: In Kapilbastu as a whole, the main source of drinking water is tube wells. This is also the case in the four VDCs, none of which have any piped drinking water systems. on average, four households share a tube well. The proportions of households using tube wells for drinking water in Dubiya
and Hardauna is high - 90% and 95% - while that in Shivagadi and Khurhuriya is low about 45%. In Dubiya VDC, 5 households depend upon 1 tubewell while in Hardauna it is 2.5 and in Khurhuriya it is 2. In Shivagadi VDC, every household has a tubewell. Irrigation: In Kapilbastu District as a whole, 31.14% of arable land is irrigated. Dubiya in the north has the highest proportion of irrigated land of the four VDCs - 44.8% - and with just 14.7% of its land irrigated, Hardauna in the South has the lowest. In Khurhuriya and Shivagadi VDCs, the proportions irrigated are 27.9% and 31.9% respectively. The ponds in Kapilbastu are in poor condition. Some have silted up because they are not cleaned regularly while others have dried up or been encroached upon. Some are in such a bad state that people no longer use them. recently, however, there has been an effort to restore some ponds, including Phubia lake in Dubiya VDC. Food sufficiency: The total agricultural production of Kapilbastu is enough to meet the needs of the local population. According to the nepal District Profile (2006), the annual production of the district is 138,912 MT, of which 45,794 MT is surplus. The picture at the local level, however, is very different indeed. field assessments in the four selected VDCs revealed that only 25.75% of households produce enough food for a year. Landholdings: According to the 2001 Census, the average size of landholdings in Kapilbastu District is second largest in the nation1.25 ha per household. The estimated landholding sizes are greatest in the northern and central zones - 1.35 ha, 1.64 ha, and 1.46ha in Dubiya, Khurhuriya, and Shivagadi VDCs respectively - and smallest in Hardauna in the southern zone (0.93 ha). With the growth in population over the last decade, the average landholding sizes have obviously decreased.
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Secondary systems
While core systems help meet basic needs and are a necessary condition for adaptation, they alone are insufficient to enable individuals, households and communities to switch strategies. Shifts need the additional support of secondary systems, which include transportation, communication, means of livelihood and shelter. If these systems are in a fragile state or of poor quality or have been damaged by natural disasters, a strategy switch will be difficult to achieve. The status of the secondary gateway systems in each of the four selected VDCs is summarised in Table 11 below. Mobility: not all areas of Kapilbastu have a year-round transport system, as some are served only by seasonal roads which are impassable during the monsoon season. The northern VDCs, Dubiya and Shivagadi, are better served than the central and southern VDCs of Khurhuriya and Hardauna, with locals having to walk shorter distances to the nearest road and road density three or more times greater. The road density in Dubiya, Khurhuriya, Shivagadi and Hardauna is 1.12, 0.24, 1.49 and 1.49, respectively. Communication: Communication opens up many opportunities for adaptation, but there are few telephone services available in Kapilbastu and most are concentrated in Table 11 Secondary systems
VDC Transportation Average distance to highway (km) Dubiya Hardauna Khurhuriya Shivagadi 7.2 24.1 13.8 4.1 Road density (distance/area)
urban areas. In recent times the availability of mobile phones and CDMA has improved communication facilities in Kapilbastu, but the average for the four VDCs is just 10 individuals to a mobile phone. Khurhuriya with over 16 to a mobile - is least serviced and Hardauna -with 5.6 - is best serviced. Though Dubiya VDC lies in the Chure region, it has the highest mobile phone coverage among the four VDCs. Livelihood: As Kapilbastu District has a favourable environment for cultivation and a large proportion of arable land, the majority of people depend on agriculture to earn a livelihood. even in Hardauna, where landholdings are small and irrigation facilities limited, 58.41% of the population are farmers. In the other three VDCs, reliance on agriculture is much higher: 80.2% of people in Shivagadi, 85.96% in Dubiya, and 93.83% in Khurhuriya 93.83% depend on agriculture. Paddy, wheat and maize are the major crops grown. Smaller proportions of people depend on services business, forest products and small industries for their livelihood. People in each VDC reported that they are affected by climate related hazards. Among the four VDCs, Hardauna is severely affected by climate related hazards and Khurhuriya is least affected. In Hardauna 39.9 percent, in Shivagadi 17.9 in Dubiya 11.03 and in Khurhuriya 9.6 percent of households are reportedly affected by climate related hazards.
Communications Households per mobile (no.) 7.57 5.6 16.3 9.46 Population engaged in agriculture (%) 85.96 58.41 93.83 80.2
Shelter Households living in cement houses (%) 38.37 66.91 49.4 22.8
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Gateway systems analysis for assessinG vulnerability and buildinG local adaptive capacity to climate chanGe impacts
Shelter: The type of house a household lives in, determines both the health condition of the people living there and their level of resilience to climatic hazards. fewer people in Dubiya and Shivagadi live in cement houses (38.37% and 22.8% respectively) than those in Hardauna and Khurhuriya (66.9% and 49.4% respectively). Those who do not live in cement houses build with local materials such as mud and thatch.
Tertiary systems
Tertiary-level systems, which embed both secondary and core systems, include banking and credit, health, education and political representation. both the fragility of the systems and the quality of their service provision must be assessed since their dysfunction prevents or hinders local populations from shifting strategies. The status of tertiary systems in the four selected VDCs is summarised in Table 12 below. Education: The literacy rate of Kapilbastu District as a whole is almost 42%. While Dubiya and Shivagadi have higher than average rates (57.8% and 55.09% respectively), Hardauna and Khurhuriya have much lower rates (38.1% and 13.6% respectively). All four VDCs have both primary and lower secondary schools but only Shivagadi has a higher secondary school that includes classes 9 and 10. Students generally go to Taulihawa, butwal or Kathmandu for higher education. Generally hill groups who have migrated tend to be more educated. Table 12 Tertiary systems
VDC Literacy (%) Dubiya Hardauna Khurhuriya Shivagadi 57.8 41.1 13.6 55.09 Sanitation coverage (%) Cooperatives (no.) 2 1 2 1
Health and sanitation: eeach VDC has a health post which provides basic health services, but local people have to travel to butwal, Gorusinghe, Taulihawa or Kathmandu for better quality treatment. Water-related diseases such as diarrhoea, dysentery and typhoid are common in all four VDCs and the consumption of arseniccontaminated ground water has caused major health problems. Mosquito-borne diseases, such as Japanese encephalitis, malaria and dengue fever, are also prevalent. except for Khurhuriya, which claims to have 100% sanitation coverage, sanitation is poor in the pilot area. In Dubiya, just 32.4% of households have toilets; in Shivagadi, 26.2%; and in Hardauna, 2.1%. Most people use open fields or riverbanks as their toilets. The case of Khurhuriya needs an explanation. About one year prior to the survey, the DDC as part of its open-toilet free zone initiative had helped construct a temporary toilet for every household in the VDC. However, most of those toilets no longer exist. This lacuna suggests that deeper sensitivity will be needed in implementing adaptation activities. Financial institutions: Despite the fact that the rural Self-reliance Development Centre, as part of its programme for promoting selfreliance, helped establish cooperatives in the district, the cooperative density in Kapilbastu District is very low with just an average of 2.15 per VDC. Dubiya and Hardauna each have one cooperative, Khurhuriya has two and Shivagadi has three. none of VDCs
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Gateway systems analysis for assessinG vulnerability and buildinG local adaptive capacity to climate chanGe impacts
have a bank or other financial institutions so people have to walk a long distance to get a loan or to deposit their earnings. Markets: Chandrauta, Gorusinghe, Krishnanagar, Jitpur and Taulihawa are the nearest markets and where people in the pilot area sell their agricultural, livestock and other products. These markets are 5 - 25 km away. The average distance of the nearest market from both Shivagadi and Dubiya is 8 km; from Hardauna, 11 km and from Khurhuriya, 14 km. Local organisations: All four VDCs have local community-based organisations which help mobilise local resources. They include community forest user groups, irrigation user groups, livestock groups, agricultural groups, youth clubs and mothers groups. Hardauna and Shivagadi each have 24 local organisations; Dubiya has 19; and Khurhuriya 14.
Government organisations: To assess the accessibility of local government services, the distances of the closest agriculture service center, livestock service center, police station, forest range post to the wards were estimated. In the Tarai, this distance is accessible but it can be large in the hills. In Kapilbastu each VDC has an office but the local level functionaries are either not present, possess no capacity, or/ and have no resources. In many cases local armed outfits have threatened the functionaries with physical threats and they are absent. This causes an institutional vacuum at that level. It is expected that these limitations will improve as the political context stabilizes. for the purpose of this pilot, the average from the main village of the ward was calculated and the distance estimated. The average distance to these services from Dubiya is 6.9 km; from Shivagadi, 2.6 km; from Khurhuriya, 2.2 km and from Hardauna, 9.7 km.
385
VulnerAbIlITy rAnKInG
Ahmad and Mustafa (2007) suggest that the concept of vulnerability is at the heart of our understanding of how individuals, households, communities, institutions, social relationships and natural systems are affected by climate variability and climate change and their associated risks. They argue that vulnerability is both a conceptual lens and a discourse that facilitates engagement with both the biophysical aspects of disaster risk and the social structures that create conditions of differential risk in any given society. Vulnerability is embedded in the social context and is a function of the marginality of different groups, the fragility of the systems they rely on, the exposure of those systems and populations, and their activities in response to specific climate hazards. Vulnerability is dynamic and will alter as climate change begins to impact the inter-linkages among the gateway systems described above. The challenge the pilot team faced was to devise ways to find out which individuals and households in each of the four selected VDCs were most vulnerable to climate change impacts, so that they could be targeted for the pilot interventions. There was a need to both establish clarity about the concept of adaptive capacity and to develop a process that would include both the natural hazard-based and the social approaches to vulnerability in its efforts to build adaptive capacity. In considering socially imbedded vulnerability, we began with the definition of vulnerability offered by Wisner et al. (2004), the characteristics of a person or group and their situation that influence their capacity to anticipate, cope with, resist and recover from the impact of a natural hazard (an extreme natural event or process). Their definition suggests that adaptive capacity is the inverse of vulnerability. To capture the vulnerability of a local region and the population living there, however, requires more than a conceptual understanding: there needs to be an analytical tool. every group in every community across nepal has, at any given point in time, its own unique set of differential vulnerabilities (Dixit, 2010). The question is how climate change will alter them, whether by mitigating or exacerbating them. To suggest an answer, we used gateway systems as a set of indicators of vulnerability, both elaborating our conceptual framework and establishing an operational method to measure adaptive capacity. our work has an insightful precedent: in discussing indicators of the adaptive capacity to respond to stresses due to climate change and other drivers of change, Smit et al. (2001) identified economic resources, technology, information, skill, infrastructure, institutions and equity as indicators of adaptive capacity in the context of climate change.6 The rationale they associate with each determinant provides guidance for using gateway systems as an indicator for ranking vulnerability.
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Gateway systems analysis for assessinG vulnerability and buildinG local adaptive capacity to climate chanGe impacts
To assess the vulnerability of each of the nine wards of the four VDCs - 36 altogether - we collected information about 14 indicators associated with each of the core, secondary and tertiary systems listed in Table 1 and arranged it in a spreadsheet. The status of the gateway system indicators was converted to a percentage of service coverage (see Annex II) and on the basis of that coverage, the wards of the four VDCs were ranked, with no. 36 being the most vulnerable ward and no. 1 to the least, for each indicator. The totals of the rankings were then calculated to determine the most and least vulnerable wards overall in each VDC (see Table 13). In addition, the wards were classified by degree of vulnerability as very low, low, moderate, high, and very high (see figure 7). for example, because Ward no. 1 of Hardauna VDC has no access to electricity it was ranked 36, or most vulnerable, in terms of that indicator, while Ward no. 8 of Dubiya, which boasts electricity coverage of 98%, was ranked 1, or least vulnerable.
Table 13 Most and least vulnerable wards in each of the four selected VDCs
VDC Most Dubiya Hardauna Khurhuriya Shivagadi Source: Field Study, 2010 1 1 7 8 Vulnerable ward least 8 5 8 7
The ranking of the wards described above is based solely on the natural hazards-based perspective and, while it does not include any assumptions or bias, it is only one side of the proverbial coin. once the most vulnerable ward in each VDC had been identified, the next step was to consider the social marginality of the people in that ward so that we could assess the embedded nature of vulnerability. Different methods of assessment, including wealth ranking and vulnerability capacity assessment, can be used to determine which individuals, households and communities are denied
Arghakhanchi District
Palpa District
9 6 7 8 2 1 5 4
9 4 5
2 3 1
Hardauna 9 8 3 6 5 4 71 2
Very low
Low
Moderate
High
Very high
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Gateway systems analysis for assessinG vulnerability and buildinG local adaptive capacity to climate chanGe impacts
the benefits of a particular gateway service. Determining who is left out, in turn, reveals who is vulnerable and in what way they are vulnerable. once this determination is made, strategies for building adaptive capacity can be specifically targeted towards those people. While this approach helped us assess the current state of marginality (see the next section), our ultimate aim was to capture the dynamic nature of vulnerability, to assess its fluctuations as climate change introduces new constraints and opportunities. We approached this challenge by first assessing how local climates would change and then envisioning different scenarios for the future. Since a VDC is too small a unit to consider with the existing data sets and modelling, the localising of climate change was done, as is discussed later, at the district scale. The resilience of service-providing gateway systems is an important but not exclusive
determinant of adaptive capacity. Access to the benefits these systems provide is critical. Systems may exist but if individuals, households and groups do not have access to them and the services they provide, then the systems are as good as non-existent. In nepal, access to systems and services are influenced by factors such as education, wealth, gender, caste and social position and is not equal for all. These factors enable some groups to gain disproportionate access to the benefits of systems and deprive others. As a result of such differential access to gateway systems, some individuals and groups will be better positioned than others to respond to the opportunities and constraints they face due to climate change and others stresses. Thus, it is the social aspect of vulnerability - the degree of marginalisation from systems essential to resilience - which may determine who will be able to adapt and do well and who will merely cope.
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THe MArGInAlISeD
In deciding what methods to use to identify which individuals and households are most marginalised in each of the four most vulnerable wards, it is useful to examine how the disadvantaged are identified in development programmes in nepal. Different development programmes use a range of tools, including wealth ranking, capacity assessment and gender analysis to identify marginalised and disadvantaged households and to differentiate among them (Jha et al., 2009). Similar methods may be used to identify marginalised or disadvantaged households with respect to vulnerability to climate change. It is important to keep in mind that poverty is different from vulnerability, though the terms are often used synonymously. Poverty is the current status of deprivation, lack or want; it includes, for example, the lack of access to material, political, and cultural resources and of the capacities necessary to participate fully in economic and social life (Ahmad & Mustafa, 2007). Vulnerability, on the other hand, is a dynamic state that varies as new constraints and opportunities arise. While poverty is, in a sense, the unaddressed vulnerability of the past, vulnerability is the everchanging degree of defenselessness, insecurity or susceptibility to loss caused by exposure to disaster, shock, or unequal risk (yamin et al., 2005). It can also be seen as the capacity of individuals, households, communities and systems to be harmed. Table 14 Marginal communities
VDC Dubiya Vulnerability Most vulnerable Ward 1 Reasons for vulnerability lack of income, arsenic-contaminated drinking water, traditional farming systems, mobility problems, no access to health and education VDC office, health post, road, school, settlement of hill migrants Poverty, landlessness Dalits ethnic minorities least vulnerable Hardauna Most vulnerable 5 1 High literacy rate, cooperatives, clubs riverbank cutting, few educational institutes, poverty, lack of clean drinking water, no access to community forestry, inconvenience of transportation, lack of irrigation facilities, high proportion of Dalits few Dalits, land relatively unaffected by floods lack of awareness, schools, drinking water, irrigation, health services, forest resource, nongovernment and community-based organisations, industry, and electrification; poor condition of roads; forest encroachment local market, primary school, non-government and community-based organisations, transportation facilities Chutpatis Dalits bichuduhuwas Tharus Dalits of Hardauna village Marginal communities Dalits of Mormi village
8 8
8 7
least vulnerable
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Gateway systems analysis for assessinG vulnerability and buildinG local adaptive capacity to climate chanGe impacts
During the district-level SlDs held in Taulihawa, the headquarters of Kapilbastu, participants identified ethnic minority and Dalit households as being most disadvantaged in terms of not being able to access services from gateway systems (see Table 14). Though their livelihoods are based on agriculture, very few households are food sufficient. Most do not own their own land, are uneducated, and engage in menial labour. They do not have reliable access to basic clean drinking water and sanitation services, and are unaware of the benefits of good personal hygiene. Wardbased geographical targeting was a useful approach consistent with what bennett et al. (2005) suggest about the nature of marginality, which is that women face additional burdens at households level and that economically deprived groups face additional burdens at community level (figure 12). This continuum of marginality can be used as a tool to assist in assessing vulnerability to climate change.
There is, however, a caveat in the selection of indicators for assessing which groups in a community are the most disadvantaged: a study of marginality in nepal indicates that while there is some consistency in the use of the tools such as wellbeing ranking and the consensus of participants there are also contradictions (Jha et al., 2009), and that both the indicators used and the very definition of the poor itself vary, leading to confusion and inconsistencies in identifying the most disadvantaged groups (Hobley and Paudyal, 2008). The concerns that Jha et al. (2009) raise with respect to the conventional process of identifying disadvantaged households are worth noting. They are as follows: The level of subjectivity is high since categorisation depends on who participates in the discussions. The process is likely to be manipulated due to its linkage with project and programme benefits.
IPCC/UNFCCC Adaptation funding Media Multi lateral bank UN agencies Bilateral and multilateral development agencies
Individual
l
Psychological: self-worth, sense of efficacy, etc. Socialised concepts of personal behavioural norms, obligations and entitlements Inter-personal & intrahousehold relationships Personal endowments
Additional burden for socially and economically diprived Community Presented as harmonious, but contains many different interest groups and often dominated by local elites
Household/ Family
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Gateway systems analysis for assessinG vulnerability and buildinG local adaptive capacity to climate chanGe impacts
The use of different indicators and categorizations creates confusion and contradictions. The cost is high as different projects duplicate each others efforts. Various government bodies do not coordinate to ensure the poor access services. The practice of analysing and reflecting on local power structures in the process of identifying disadvantaged households is minimal.
the above reservations expressed by Jha et al. suggest not only that caution be taken in the process of identifying those likely to be affected by global climate change impacts but also that no one particular method will suffice in this process. they also underscore the need to employ an iterative process that allows experiential learning. once the vulnerable wards in the selected VDCs and the vulnerable local population
within them had been identified, the next stage was to use a climate change lens to develop local climate change scenarios to explore future hazards and changes in vulnerability. This step helped the team and the local participants identify options for adaptation. for adaptive options to be effective, our approach to addressing climate vulnerability must seek to bring about the sorts of system-level reform that removes deprivation. Making strategic shifts is possible only in an institutional environment in which all individuals and groups have equal opportunities to realise their potential. The extant gateway systems, however, provide different levels of service to different individuals and groups, unduly benefiting some while marginalising others. What is needed, then, is to build a social-political system in which rule of law supports the provision of equal opportunities to all (bennett, 2005). This task is part of the larger challenge of governance mentioned in the conceptual framework (figure 4).
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General circulation models suggest that one impact of climate change - rise in average temperatures - may be most intense at high elevations and in regions with complex topographies, as is the case in nepals Mahabharat and Himalayan ranges. Indeed, temperatures are increasing in nepal (Shrestha et al., 1999) and rainfall is becoming more erratic. More recently, a 2009 modelling exercise found that temperatures in the Middle Mountains will increase in the future and that the region is likely to grow more arid in the non-monsoon seasons. The study also revealed that precipitation is likely to be more erratic and that storm intensity will probably increase (nCVST, 2009). To generate a picture of climate change in nepal, nCVST (2009) followed the classification of Kansakar et al. (2004) and divided nepal into three regions based on the rivers draining them: from east to west, the Koshi, the narayani, and the Karnali river basin regions (see figure 13). Since Kapilbastu District falls within the Karnali river basin, it was the regional climate scenario generated for this basin that was used to develop local climate scenarios for Kapilbastu. Developing scenarios involved synthesising three key sets of information: data on historical trends, future projections, and local experiences.
figure 13: The three river basin-based regions used for developing climate scenarios: A is the Karnali; B, the Narayani; and C, the Sapta Koshi river basin Source: NCVST, 2009
firstly, years of temperature and rainfall data for Kapilbastu District recorded by the Department of Hydrology and Meteorology (DHM) was analysed by season - pre-monsoon, monsoon, post-monsoon and winter. A key piece of data was the maximum daily rainfall recorded in the Karnali region: 460 mm in 24 hours in August 1998 in nawalparasi District east of Kapilbastu. Secondly, the temperature and rainfall scenarios for the years 2030, 2060 and 2090 developed by nCVST (2009) using the Copenhagen projection of a two-degree rise in average global temperatures were considered. finally, the research team solicited local perceptions about climate change. Together, these three sources of informationhard facts about past and present climatic Jumla trends, scientifically-generated models of future climate and the local experiences of climate changewere N used to develop localised climate Pokhara change scenarios.
Butwal Kapilbastu
B Hetauda C Biratnagar
High himalaya
High mountains
Middle mountains
Siwalik hills
Tarai
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Incorporating the third source of information was potentially problematic in conceptual terms. People experience current variability; models, in contrast, project future
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variability. The challenge lies in combining the two. Synthesising local perceptions with the trends documented in districtlevel meteorological data required making certain assumptions, including temperature increase and its impact on rainfall. However, since the very nature of projecting scenarios itself involves making assumptions - no one, after all, has a crystal ball with which to look into the future - this fact was particularly difficult. People recognize the current variability and the constraints it imposes on them. They make strategies to deal with it, but it is difficult to relate the current state to future anticipated conditions that climate change is likely to bring. The pilot team did not have a readymade tool to address this, and began by presenting the global and national climate change scenarios to the SlD participants. This scenario was then synthesised with existing temperature and rainfall data for the district and in the next stage with the perceptions of the participants. This later step needed an exercise in visioning and thinking about the future. The visioning process was also used later to assess future vulnerability to climate change at the ward level and how strengthening gateway systems would build adaptive capacity. In line with global projections, national and district level data sets suggest that average temperatures in nepal are increasing. According to nCVST scenarios, by 2020 the mean temperature will have risen by 1.4C. Precipitation data, in contrast, does not show a clear trend; on the contrary, there are large variations in projections of rainfall. Some GCMs suggest that there will be no significant changes in the total amount of annual rainfall though the number of rainy days will decrease (implying that the intensity of rainfall will increase). In contrast, one of the nCVST scenario models for the Karnali river basin in 2030, suggests rainfall will decrease by 31% relative to the mean of the three decades between 1970 and
1999. yet another GCM suggests that rainfall will actually increase by 16%. Such different estimations of future rainfall hardly inspire faith in scientific projections. In addition, all of these projections suffer a methodological limitation: no local-level rainfall data is available to validate or invalidate the projections. The GCM results, which are an output of assumptions, face major limitations in localising. While it is true that local people do suggest that both the spatial and temporal characteristics of rainfall have changed, these claims are based on feelings, memories and intuitively arrived at conclusions, not the indisputable testimony of empirically generated facts. nCVSTs closest projection is for 2030, 20 years from the present 2011. The question arises as to how one projects what will happen in two decades, let alone five or eight (nCVST makes projections for 2060 and 2090 as well). Conceptually, this is a difficult question to answer. To help participants in SlDs grapple with this taxing concept, they were asked to imagine the future on the basis of current trends. Their response was typical. At first, they said it could not be done; they simply could not say what the climate would bring in 20 years. However, by introducing the idea of making assumptions, the participants were able to elicit two key perceptions that they all agreed the future would bring: A greater number of hot days and more erratic rainfall Participants suggested that there would be no significant decrease in the total annual rainfall, but that pre-monsoon, post-monsoon and winter rainfall would decrease, as would the total number of rainy days. The details of these perceptions are presented in Tables 15 and 16. With local perceptions recorded, they were then synthesised with globally-generated scenarios of climate change for the region as a whole as well as with the meteorological data on the existing conditions in the
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Karnali river basin region, to provide a climate change lens with which to view the planning process. This synthesis formed the basis for assessing how climate change, in terms of a two-degree rise in average temperature, will impact the gateway systems in the
four selected VDCs, thereby making marginalised households more vulnerable than they already are and threatening their development. once this impact was established, the next stage was to identify options for adaptation, which comprise elements of both planned and autonomous strategies.
Decease
Increase
Source: DHM, NCVST, 2009 and Field Study, 2010 Recorded at Nawalparasi east of Kapilbastu in 1998.
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With a clear local climate change scenario, our next step was to develop future impact scenarios that could assist in developing effective plans for building adaptive capacity at the ward, VDC and DDC levels. This step required consideration of what planning as an activity entails. Conventionally, governments have been at the forefront of planning. Their intention is to achieve the wellbeing of their citizens and they see planning, which can be defined in simple terms as an operational mechanism to achieve certain goals, as a key instrument. The limitation lies in guiding that mechanism effectively to reach the goal. With this understanding of what planning is, to serve as our guide, we determined that lAPA should expand and improve the quality of coverage of various gateway systems while at the same time attempting to reduce climate change-induced damage to those systems. The ultimate objective is to build adaptive capacity. During the district-level SlD held at this stage, attempts were made to develop ward-level scenarios which would address two questions: 1. What are the likely implications of a two-degree temperature rise for the least vulnerable ward of the 36 wards in the four selected VDCs? 2. How would the vulnerability ranking of the most vulnerable ward in each selected VDC change once the condition of the gateway systems in that ward were strengthened? In seeking answers to these questions, the participants decided at the outset that it would be the marginalised groups in the ward identified as most vulnerable that should be the primary beneficiaries of whatever plan was formulated. To address the likely implications of a two-degree temperature rise, participants developed a scenario of impacts on the gateway systems found in Ward no. 8 of Dubiya VDC, the least vulnerable of the 36 wards. As mentioned in Annex III(a), a number of assumptions, including impact on water resources and change in use of energy systems were made. following are some of assumption made for developing the scenario Increase in instances of water induced disasters, Degradation of drinking water quality, Decrease in arable land, Loss of livelihood opportunities. Participants identified the four hazards - drought, floods, fires and winter fog - which they believed would most likely occur in Kapilbastu District due to climate change and mapped them to show where they would most likely occur - agricultural fields, river junctions, forests, and low-lying land (see figures 14a and 14b). The exercise revealed that Dubiya VDC as whole will become more vulnerable to drought, floods, and fire and that, by implication,
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figure 14: (a) The natural features of Kapilbastu vulnerable to climate change; (b): The sections where systems are fragile
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Ward with very low vulnerbility changes to ward having moderate vulnerability (Scenario 2 OC rise in temperature) 6 6 8
7 8
9 9 2 4 5 3 4 1 5 3 2 1 Kapilbastu
Very low
Low
Moderate
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Ward no. 8 will also become more vulnerable. Currently, while the vulnerability of the north-western portion of Ward no. 8 of Dubiya is high, its central region has a moderate vulnerability rating and the southern region is low (see figure 15). obviously, since this ward, the most robust of the 36, would slip in its vulnerability ranking, so would those already at the bottom of the hierarchy. In fact, intuitively, it is clear that the slippage would be far greater in the most marginalised ward and within that ward, it would be the most marginalised individuals, households and communities who would be hit hardest. Thus, the initial, un-deliberated determination to make these players the primary beneficiaries of plans to promote adaptive capacity was confirmed by a consideration of the natural hazards at play. To answer the second question, it was assumed that various interventions would be made to enhance the status of the gateway systems (see Annex III (b) for a list of those assumptions) in the most vulnerable of the 36 wards - Ward no. 8 in Hardauna VDC - and that the most marginalised
community in that ward, the Dalits, would be the primary beneficiaries. The participants discussed how the vulnerability of the ward would decline if the gateway systems were made more robust. This process involved making assumptions such as follows: Improving access to reliable renewable energy for cooking and lighting, Reduction in loss due to water induced disaster by installing an early warning system, Improvement in the quality of and access to drinking water, Improvement in mobility, Opportunities for diverse livelihoods. The changes in ranking after adaptation interventions is shown in figure 16. Considering both how the least vulnerable would become more so and also how the least robust would become more so, set the stage for identifying options for building local adaptive capacity. Conceptually, it was understood that if this process, of identifying the most vulnerable wards using biophysical data and the most vulnerable populations within them through
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discussion, were mainstreamed at the VDC or DDC level, it could be said that the local level governance unit would have used a climate change lens to assess vulnerability. Such a lens would incorporate both the natural hazardsbased perspective (a top-down approach) and a social-political perspective (a bottom-up perspective) and yield a comprehensive range of options for adaptation. Prioritising a sub-set of these options would produce a programme to be implemented at the VDC level. ultimately, the SlD process would generate a fully-fledged project proposal, specifying a set of activities with objectives, tasks to be implemented to meet those objectives, the resources needed to do so, the agents responsible for performing the tasks and a plan for monitoring and evaluating the activities.
options, specifying the improvements in core, secondary and tertiary systems that the national government, VDCs, DDCs and civil society groups would need to implement to increase adaptive capacity. These are listed in Table 17. In a conventional development approach, the monitoring and evaluation stage is seen as the point at which interventions are assessed to see if objectives have been effectively met. In a world facing climate change, however, this approach is no longer valid as, with the passage of time, the nature of the problem and inevitably, of the solutions to address it, will change. To address the ever-changing conditions introduced by climate change, we incorporated one additional stage to the project planning process: risk assessment. This stage is necessary to identify new constraints for the risk they pose and to introduce adjustments to the particular project as needed.
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The process for planning lAPA has three stagesdevelopment, implementation and the iterative reassessment of riskeach of which includes a number of activities, as shown in figure 17. Development: Developing a local adaptation plan begins with assessing the vulnerability of gateway systems and the marginality of individuals, households and communities at the VDC level. Then, a localised climate scenario is projected by synthesising current climatic conditions and past trends at the river basin level, future climate scenarios at the national level and the perceptions of local populations about local-level future scenarios. In the next step, the development of an impact scenario, which details the likely effects of a specified temperature rise on these systems and on marginalised people, is envisioned. This step is akin to preparing a VDC-level development scenario which takes climate change into consideration. This scenario, in turn, serves as the foundation of the next step of identifying options for reducing vulnerabilities or building adaptive capacity. These options will not only support
Development Assessment of gateway systems and state of marginality Prepare localised climate scenario using current conditions, national scenario and perspectives Assess current impact scenarios Prepare future climate change impact scenario Generate development scenario and identify options for adaptation Conduct a qualitative cost-benefit analysis of each option Prioritise option Government organisations CBOs/NGOs Private/business organisations Experts
Implementation
Reassessing risk
Identify tasks
Consider new risks which arise as the nature of the problem changes and new constraints emerge
Assess financial and other resources needed Define roles and responsibilities Monitor and evaluate Enhanced gateway systems and improved adaptive capacity
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development but also enable communities to respond to the stresses that climate change will likely impose. To decide which of these options should be implemented, they must be prioritised using a qualitative costbenefit analysis. Implementation: The second stage focuses on making the plan a reality. It begins with selecting adaptation measures to be implemented and for each: formulating clear objectives; setting well-defined tasks; assessing the need for resources and delegating roles and responsibilities to civil society, government and private organisations. The final step in the process is to monitor and evaluate the success of the measures implemented. evaluating an adaptation option is not a straightforward task and may take a long time because the benefits of some adaptation measures will not be evident until the climate changes significantly. This approach will enhance gateway systems and help improve adaptive capacity by doing so. each plan should be scalable and flexible and reflect the degree of urgency, innovation, complexity and sensitivity associated with the particular adaptation measure it puts in place. They
figure 18 Risk assessment cycle Source: Adapted from Willows and Connel (eds. 2003)
will comprise a package of prioritised options and will be drafted in such a manner that they assist agencies in implementing, monitoring and evaluating them. Re-assessing risk: This stage involves revisiting the very first process of assessment, of identifying the vulnerability of systems and the marginality of the people who rely on them, as new constraints emerge. It involves a careful examination of what harm climate change could cause to gateway systems and local populations, and a weighing of whether enough precautions have been taken to prevent that harm or more needs to be done. The following steps are involved in a reassessment of risk: Assessing the potential impact of new threats to gateway systems, evaluating the likelihood that those threats will, in fact, occur, and Creating a consolidated analysis of risk, based on the degree of impact of those threats on critical systems and the likelihood of their occurrence.
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risk reassessment involves exercising judgment about new constraints as they emerge and whether the strategy originally selected is still appropriate or needs to be revisited. Making a well-informed decision about the need for and nature of strategy changes, entails identifying the sources of uncertainty about the future and understanding how they affect the decisions made. To this end, it is important to build locallevel capacity to deal with the uncertainties inherent in any climate change assessment and the associated decision-making processes. only if stakeholders, both local people and external agents, are willing to grapple with the inevitable dynamism of both climate change and the resultant vulnerability, and to bring together knowledge past and present, global and local, empirical and intuitive, will they be able to develop a local adaptation plan of action that will truly build the resilience of the target group of the marginalised and enable them to adapt to, rather than just cope with, climate change.
SuMMAry
The benefits of the pilot exercise are many. It helped to establish a process which, by bringing together local and external actors to act in concert, can boost adaptive capacity. In particular, it demonstrated how to: Assess the status of gateway systems at the ward level using a set of measurable indicators based on the natural hazards-based perspective, Use that information to assess the vulnerability of each ward and then rank them, Carry out an iterative cross-validation of the preliminary results using SLDs and finalise the ranking of ward-level vulnerability, Apply a social perspective on vulnerability, identifying which populations in the most vulnerable wards are the most marginalised and as a result, the most vulnerable to climate change, Establish a local climate change scenario by integrating past and current trends, national-level future scenarios and local perspectives, Synthesise the assessment of the current state of systems vulnerability and marginality with the localised climate change scenario to create a future impact or climate vulnerability scenario, which, in turn, serves as a development scenario, Develop indicative scenarios of new vulnerability to climate change, and Identify options for autonomous and planned adaptation in order to build resilience.
figure 19 Framework for the pilot exercise
Discussion, literature review and clustering
District
Climate scenarios
This ward-level process can serve as the foundation of similar processes which can be carried out in other units of governance such as a municipality or a district. The method can also be adapted for a watershed or clusters of VDCs, depending on what is being sought. The processes summarised in figure 19 and Table 18 lay out which activities took place in each of the five SlDs held.
Identification of options to build adaptive capacity by ennancing gateway systems and access to its services
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Table 18 Activities carried out in each of the five shared learning dialogues
Step Scoping and literature review Activities carried out Developed a broad view of the challenge Perused secondary sources to gain a better understanding of the issues and to select District Proposed an initial clustering of VDCs first SlD, district-level Second SlD, district-level Third (round of ) SlDs, VDC-level Selected VDCs Prepared a checklist for assessing the status of gateway systems at the ward level Collected data in the 36 wards of the four selected VDCs edited and compiled the data Assessed marginality at the ward level ranked the vulnerability of each ward based on the status of gateway systems Collected temperature and precipitation data from the nearest stations of the DHM and assessed trends Synthesised these trends with the future climate scenario projected by nCVST (2009) for the Karnali river basin (in which Kapilbastu District lies) fourth SlD. district-level Developed a district-level climate change scenario Validated the ward-level ranking of climate vulnerability Developed a climate change vulnerability scenario Prepared a development scenario to address climate change vulnerability Identified marginal groups and households for targeting Identified and prioritised options With the DDC and each of the four selected VDCs, developed a lAPA for the VDC including y y y y y y fifth SlD, district-level Setting of objectives (production and capacity) Identification of tasks to achieve each objective Assessment of financial and other resources Identification of boundary partners Identification of roles and responsibilities, Mapping of outcomes (monitoring and evaluation)
Two of those options (drinking water and early warning system) were selected as samples and, just as if project planning and management were actually being undertaken, production and capacity objectives were developed for each. The tasks and resources necessary to meet those objectives were also detailed and monitoring and evaluation plans drafted. The feasibility of each plan was also tested. once a menu of adaptation options is identified, it is possible to use qualitative cost-benefit analysis to prioritise them, though this particular pilot exercise did not do so. Any programme for seeing an adaptation option to fruition, which has been shaped using a climate change
impact lens, is the lAPA. because climate conditions are dynamic and new constraints will no doubt emerge in the future, a stage for reassessing risks is built into the plan itself. This stage focuses on monitoring and evaluation. The process showed that gateway systems serve a number of key functions, including the following: Overcoming the limitations of uncertainty, particularly in relation to the development of realistic climate scenarios for local areas, Generating local adaptation options using a climate change lens,
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Assisting households and communities in responding autonomously and in building capacity, Linking planned and autonomous adaptation through robust gateway systems, Connecting action at the national or global level to local-level realities where adaptation to climate change will occur, Bridging the gap between local development and local adaptation, and providing a grounded and nuanced method to estimate the additional cost climate change adaptation will bring to development efforts, Allowing national governments to conceive, design and implement climateresilient mechanisms that will consolidate gateway systems so that adaptive capacity as a whole is increased, and Improving understanding of the principles involved in climate change adaptation and promoting the formulation of improved policies and practices. The use of the analysis of gateway systems allows for the assessment of the fragility of the systems at VDC, municipality, VDC cluster or watershed level, the identification of marginalised groups, and an appreciation of how climate change intersects with both systemic fragility and marginality within a specific region to create vulnerabilities. for communities dealing will current climate variability, thinking about likely future scenarios was a challenging task requiring imaginative envisioning. SlD participants also had to exercise their imagination in identifying possible points of fragility in existing systems, considering how they could be made more climate-resilient and proposing options that would enhance their robustness and in consequence, build local adaptive capacity. The underlying assumption, to reiterate, was that in a context of uncertain local climate projections and multiple vulnerabilityexacerbating drivers, increasing the vigour
and quality of gateway systems would help people switch strategies and do well. The approach recognised the complexity of the problem, offered plural and flexible solutions and made room for multiple institutions at all levels to be engaged. The objective of lAPA for addressing the impacts of climate change is to contribute to social and economic wellbeing without compromising the integrity of the systems on which wellbeing depends; on the contrary, that those systems will see an improvement in their robustness and quality. Interventions in the social and environmental sphere, whether planned or autonomous, must also seek both to bring about reforms at the systems level and to involve multiple actors so that they can eradicate marginality and deprivation (bennett, 2005). Achieving these two objectives requires moving from an institutional environment which, in its very structure, enables certain individuals and groups to benefit more from gateway systems than others, to one in which benefits are shared equally. Since such an environment will have at its foundation the rule of law and accountability and transparency of governance, making the transition to an institutional context in which all benefit equally, will require consideration of such political processes and governance systems. overall, the piloted process has resulted in a proposed local-level adaptation plan of action characterised by the following traits: Simplicity: enables communities to understand uncertain climate conditions and to engage in the process of identifying adaptation needs. Flexibility: facilitates a response to constraints as and when they emerge. Catalytic: Informs sectoral programmes and fosters coordination among them as well as establishes synergy between national, top-down and local, bottom-up assessments of climatic risks.
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Rootedness: Starts at the community level and engages multiple stakeholders. Practicality: Can be mainstreamed into existing village development planning processes, which, in turn, can inform district-level plans. Meso-level focus: Strengthens mesolevel institutions, thereby promoting consolidated and coordinated adaptation responses. The process of adapting to climate change involves dealing with terms such as risks, hazards, exposure, capacity, vulnerability and adaptation.1 These terms have varying nuances within different disciplinary communities. While hazard, exposure, capacity and adaptation can be treated in comparative straightforward way the terms risk and vulnerability present analytical challenges. In our study we have suggested that perceptions of risk also vary depending upon ones worldview. In the adaptation strategy proposed, therefore, attempts have been made to create space for different worldviews to be engaged in the process. from scientific perspective risk is encapsulated as probability of events in a geographical area where population in
all its diversity live. flexibility should remain foundation of such a strategy because individual motivations, their values and meanings guide how life is conducted and shape social behaviour (rayner and Malone, 1998). Thus vulnerability of both the area and people living within that area are important in formulating strategies for adaptation. The relationship between risk and vulnerability is captured well in the following quote by national oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (noAA).xi According noAA, The difference between risk and vulnerability is an important distinction. risk areas identify geographically (typically on maps) those areas most likely to be affected by a given hazard. People and resources located within the risk areas are considered to be at risk from hazards [exposed] and may or may not be vulnerable to hazard impacts. The vulnerability of the people and resources within the risk areas is a function of their individual susceptibility to the hazard impacts. The gateway system approach used in this exercise captures noAAs formulation of risk and vulnerability: vulnerability of geographical area and people living that area are considered in formulating lAPA.
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See National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); Coastal Services Centre; Risk and Vulnerability Assessment Tool (RVAT) http://www.csc.noaa.gov/rvat/hazardEdd.html This section is adapted from an unpublished report on disaster and participation written by Ajaya Dixit and Dipak Gyawali in the late 1990s.
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The process outlined above is a simple framework that can be used to formulate plans for local-level adaptation to climate change at a local scale. It is a strategy that considers human systems and the choices that we make and the strategies we adopt to respond to social and environmental changes that we either observe in the present or project that it will occur in the future. Within the social and political boundaries which confine us, we move toward the opportunities we perceive and retreat from or seek to overcome the constraints we face. How we conceive the changes shape our behaviour whether we see them as constraints or opportunitiesdepends on our perceptions, social relations, network of institutional relationships, political factors, historyin short, the whole array of variable that frame our worldviews. local-level adaptation to climate change is no different from any other of our responses: our responses to climate change impacts do not occur in a social and political vacuum; on the contrary, they are shaped and conditioned by our reality. That reality includes the historical context of local-level planning efforts in nepal, an appreciation of which provides useful lessons for designing and implementing local strategies for adapting to climate change impacts. In the mid-1970s, under the rubric of planned state-led development, the framework of local planning and popular participation emerged as the driving development philosophy for providing basic services such as drinking water, education and irrigation. The origin of this interest in the participatory and decentralised approach stemmed in part from the failure of the previous two decades of development efforts to yield satisfactory results. foreign aid, it had become clear, did not bring about expected changes in recipient societies. As a major recipient of Western financial and technical aid, nepal, with its complex social, economic and physical milieus and its still unexamined autonomous resource management practices, provided a potent test bed for both empirical studies in and theorisation about the participatory approach, especially as it applied to rural development. between 1976 and 1986, the government of nepal implemented several integrated rural development projects with the objective of speeding up the pace of development by overcoming the obstacles that the implementation of uncoordinated and disintegrated programmes by different government agencies had faced. These projects were designed to solve the interrelated problems confronting the rural populace and focused on specific target groups, including small farmers, landless or near-landless agricultural workers and the urban poor. The planning procedure during this period, whose political regime was that of the partyless panchayati polity, was not, however, based on a critical feature of participation; it
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did not encourage bottom-up involvement but instead imposed top-down blueprints. In this approach, by and large, participation was considered equivalent to the contribution of labour. In many cases, such contributions were voluntary, but, in some cases, people were coerced into implementing projects without being accorded any decision-making roles. The outcome was a gradual distortion of the true nature of developmentthe opening up of opportunities and the increasing of self relianceuntil it became a reason for inaction and dependence. Instead of seeing development as a continual process one strives for oneself, donors, the state and recipients all began to see development as a one-time gift from outside. on the odd occasion that dialogue was opened with stakeholders, the outcomes were positive. As a result, despite the failure of development at the macro, national scale, at the meso and micro levels nepal can boast of numerous successes. Community-managed forestry, drinking water, rural electrification, irrigation, trail bridges and other people-centred programmes offer a promising alternative to the prevailing state-led or market-based approaches. They are based on policies supportive of genuine participation rather than being top down and project-centric. The decentralisation of decision-making and by implication, the process of allowing local issues to be addressed by local people that was initiated with the introduction of the party-less panchayat system in the early 1960s was political in nature. Though the concept underwent 30 years of multiple revisions within the same participatory framework for development, its basic tenets did not change: participation was always seen as the means by which to maintain the hegemony of the party-less political system.
As long as a multiparty political system ceased to exist, participation remained bureaucratic and hierarchic. by the end of 1980s, the non-party polity was untenable: it was making no progress either politically or in development. It did not create space for political actions or meet the basic needs of the population. Those integrated rural development projects initiated soon after the fall of the rana autocracy and the rise of popular democracy in 1951 were showing signs of fatigue and inertia and many fizzled out (Pradhan, 1985). Then, following a protest movement which swept the nation in 1990, the party-less panchayat polity was dismantled and a multi-party democratic system introduced. Its advent came hot on the heels of the end of the era of integrated rural development programmes. The Constitution of 1991 recognised the decentralisation of authority as a means to provide opportunities to the people to govern themselves and as a result, to enjoy the benefits of democracy and development, but it made no constitutional provision for autonomous local governments. It took the promulgation of the local Self-Governance Act in late 1999 to give local bodies to make decisions about the course of their development. However, because the Maoist insurgency had peaked at that time, local bodies, which had been elected on two separate occasions and served their full tenure the first time, were dissolved in 2002. In 2008 nepal abolished the constitutional monarchy provided for in the Constitution of 1991 and adopted a federal democratic political order. As of March 2011, however, local bodies have not been re-elected. Whatever federal structure is adopted will naturally have dramatic implications for decentralisation and locallevel adaptation planning, but the details of the federal units have not yet been decided.
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lAST WorDS
It is the intent of the local planning approach that uses climate change to assess vulnerability and adaptation measures described above that local institution be incharge, yet the challenges confronting those institutions will be hard to overcome immediately. The approach described above can link the development adaptation continuum, operate in an environment of uncertainty, open space for both and planned adaptation measures while opening opportunities for the government, private sector and the civil society groups to be involved in the process of adaptation. In doing so the approach brings together climate science, the physical systems, the notion of marginality in society to assess who is more vulnerable to climate change impacts. At the same time, it also recognises roles of human agency in adaptation. Some of the factors which will constrain the attempt of local institutions to make local adaptation plans of action include their limited problemsolving and management capacity, the development deficit, the prevalence of self-serving motives of those in public services, poor accountability and the absence of systemic checks and balances. These weaknesses are deeply ingrained. To move forward will require overcoming many barriers and ensuring that: top-down governmental planning and operations balance genuine participatory approaches, the democratically elected government institutionalises processes wherein citizens can actively participate in decision-making processes and make informed choices, there are mechanisms at all levels of governance wherein competing and conflicting interests are negotiated in a transparent manner, and arrangement that enable public funds to be governed in a manner that prevents misappropriation and ensures proper targeting exists. At the end, what remains is to implement the piloted approach at a large scale and to tease out from that expanded experience, new learning to be put to use to improve practices, formulate effective policies and develop principles that will assist us in responding to the challenges of adapting to anthropogenic climate change. As climate change and the attendant vulnerability are both dynamic states, the hallmark of the approach should be that it should be always open to modifications.
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1. The informal sector, in contrast with the formal economy, is economic activity that is neither taxed nor monitored by a government and is not included in that governments gross national product. examples include barter and gift economies. Informal economies are often associated with developing countries, where up to 60% of the labour force works and as much 40% of the gross national product is generated, but all economic systems contain an informal economy in some proportion. A fully developed banking system can be a gateway to everything from savings and credit to insurance, knowledge of a global language such as english is a gateway to global knowledge, a multi-function communications system is a gateway to a diversity of resources and networks and a resilient transport system is a gateway to global goods. The vast opportunities offered by gateway systems contrast with the limited access to resources and networks that limited systems, such as those based on local languages or singlepurpose communications facilities, provide. See ISeT (2008) for details. for further details see ISeT (2008). nepals Drinking Water Quality Standards for arsenic is 0.05mg/lit. See CbS (2008) environmental State of nepal. This insight emerged from the SlD in which information exchange is two way. When researchers presented the need to develop criteria to rank VDCs, the representatives of DDC mentioned that it already had developed one. The locally developed criteria were relevant, had sense of local ownership and were used. The third assessment report of the IPCC identified these elements key to adaptation. nCVST (2009) used data sets from 1970 to 1990 as well as 15 global climate models to prepare climate projections for nepal using the A2, A1b, and b1 assumptions made by Special report on emission Scenario (SreS)s. number outside the parenthesis is multimodal mean while first number inside is minimum and second is maximum projected temperature in C number outside the parenthesis is multimodal mean while first number inside bracket is minimum and second is maximum percentage change in precipitation According to ISeT (2008) the definitions of the terms are as follows. risk: The combination of the probability of an event and its negative consequences. Hazard: A dangerous phenomenon, substance, human activity or condition that may cause loss of life, injury or other health impacts, property damage, loss of livelihoods and services, social and economic disruption, or environmental damage. exposure: People, property, systems or other elements present in hazard zones that are thereby subject to potential losses. Vulnerability: The characteristics and circumstances of a community, system or asset that make it susceptible to the damaging effects of a hazard. This definition assumes vulnerability as a characteristic of the element of interest (community, system or asset) which is independent of its exposure. Adaptation: The adjustment in natural or human systems in response to actual or expected climatic stimuli or their effects, which moderates harm or exploits beneficial opportunities. This definition taken from the secretariat of the united nations framework Convention on Climate Change (unfCCC) aims to address the concerns of climate change. Capacity: The combination of all the strengths, attributes and resources available within a community, society or organization that can be used to achieve agreed goals. See national oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (noAA); Coastal Services Centre; risk and Vulnerability Assessment Tool (rVAT) http://www.csc.noaa.gov/rvat/hazardedd.html This section is adapted from an unpublished report on disaster and participation written by Ajaya Dixit and Dipak Gyawali in the late 1990s.
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Adger, W. n., 2006: Vulnerability, Global Environmental Change, Vol. 16, pp. 268-281. Ahmed, S. and Mustafa, D., 2007: understanding Vulnerability, building Capacity: Concept, Approaches and Insights, In Working with the Winds of Change: Towards Strategies for Responding to the Risks Associated with Climate Change and other Hazards, Moench, M; Dixit, A (eds.), Institute for Social and environmental Transition, boulder and Kathmandu and ProVention. CbS, 2005: Poverty Trends in Nepal (1995-96 and 2003-04), September, His Majestys Government of nepal, national Planning Commission Secretariat, Central bureau of Statistics, Kathmandu. CbS, 2004: Nepal Sample Census of Agriculture Nepal 2001/02, District Nawalparasi, Central bureau of Statistics, HMGs, national Planning and Commission Secretariat, Kathmandu. Chambers, r., 1994: Irrigation against rural Poverty, Socio-Economic Dimensions and Irrigation, Gurjar, r. K. (ed.), pp. 50-83, Printwell, Jaipur. Cutter, S., 1996: Vulnerability to environmental Hazards, Progress in Human Geography, Vol. 20, no. 4, pp. 529-539. Cutter, S., Mitchell, J. K. and Scott, M. S., 2000: Revealing the Vulnerability to People and Places: A Case Study of Georgetown County, South Carolina, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 90, no. 4, pp. 713-737. Dixit, A., 2010: Climate Change Challenges in Nepal Policy for Adaptation Decision-Making a Adaptive Policy, ISeT-n and ICIMoD, Kathmandu. Hobley, M and Paudayal b 2008: Study of Income-Generating activities in Kapilbastu and ramechhap districts. SDC, Kathmandu Holling, C. S., Gunderson, l. H. (eds.), 2002: Sustainability and Panarchies, In Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems, pp. 63-102, Island Press, Washington DC. IPCC, 2007: Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis, Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, In Solomon, S., Qin, D., Manning, M., Chen, Z., Marquis, M., Averyt, K. b., Tingnor, M. and Miller, H. l. (eds.), pp. 996, Cambridge university Press, Cambridge, united Kingdom and new york, ny, uSA. ISeT, 2008: From Research to Capacity, Policy and Action: Enabling Adaptation on Climate Change for Poor Populations in Asia Through Research, Capacity Building and Innovation, report from the Adaptation Study Team to IDrC Coordinated by ISeT, July, ISeT and ISeT-nepal.
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ISeT/ISeT-n, 2009: Shifting the Response Terrain, opitz-Stapleton, S., Seraydarian, l, Moench, M. and Dixit, A. (eds.), Institute for Social and environmental Transition (ISeT) and Institute for Social and environmental Transition-nepal (ISeT-n), boulder and Kathmandu. Jha C. and Prasai S, Hobley M. and bennett l. 2009: Citizen Mobilisation in nepal building on nepals Tradition of Social Mobilisation to make local Governance more Inclusive and Accountable, Supported by World bank, Department for International Development (DfID) and Swiss Development Cooperation (SDC) Kansakar, S. r., et al., 2004: Spatial Patterns in the Precipitation regime of nepal, International Journal of Climatology, Vol. 24, pp. 1645-1659. lewin, K., 1946: Action research and Minority Problems, Journal of Social Issues, Vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 34-46. Mark Stafford Smith, lisa Horrocks, Alex Harvey, and Clive Hamilton 2011; rethinking adaptation for a 4C world Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A. January 13, 2011 369:196216;doi:10.1098/rsta.2010.0277. Moench M and Dixit A (2004) Adapative strategies and livelihood resilience ISeT-n and ISeT. nCVST, 2009: Vulnerability Through the Eyes of Vulnerable: Climate Change Induced Uncertainties and Nepals Development Predicaments, Institute for Social and environmental Transition-nepal (ISeT-n, Kathmandu) and Institute for Social and environmental Transition (ISeT, boulder, Colorado) for nepal Climate Vulnerability Study Team (nCVST) Kathmandu. pradhan, b. b., 1985: Integrated rural Development Projects in nepal, a review, icimod occasional, icimod occasional paper no. 2, december, international centre for integrated mountain development, Kathmandu. rayner, S. and Malone, e. l., 1998: The Challenge of Climate Change to the Social Sciences, in Human Choice and Climate Change, rayner, S. and Malone, e. l. (eds.), Vol. 4 , battelle Press, Pacific northwest national laboratory, Columbus, ohio. sharma s. (2001) Procuring Water nepal water conservation foundation, nepal Shrestha, A. b., Wake, C, P., Mayewski, P. A., and Dibb, J. e., 1999: Maximum Temperature Trends in the Himalaya and its Vicinity: An Analysis based on Temperature records from nepal for the Period 197194, Journal of Climate, Vol. 12, pp. 2775-2786, September. bennette et al, 2008: Unequal Citizens: Gender, Caste and Ethnic Exclusion in Nepal, executive summary, the world bank (wb) and department for international development (dfid), Kathmandu. willows, r. i. and connell, r. K. (eds.) 2003: climate adaptation: risk, uncertainty and decision-making, uKcip technical report, uKcip, oxford. Wisner, b., blaikie, P., Cannon, T. and Davis, I. (eds.), 2004: At Risk: Natural Hazards, Peoples Vulnerability and Disaster, routledge, london and new york. yamin, f., rahman, A. and Huq, S., 2005: Vulnerability, Adaptation and Climate Disasters, A Conceptual overview, IDS Bulletin, Vol. 36, no. 4, pp. 1-14.
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An Assessment of Institutions and experience to provide a foundation for climate Adaptation designing and piloting
Submitted to Climate Change Adaptation and Design Project Nepal (CADP-N) Lalitpur, Nepal
Submitted by Jiba Raj Pokharel Disaster Risk Management and Urban Settlements
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Acknowledgement
I would like to thank cAdP nepal for giving me this opportunity to contribute to this assessment of institutions and experience to provide foundation knowledge for climate adaptation designing and piloting. thanks are to mr. deepak Rijal, the Project manager cAdP-n for extending all kinds of support for the accomplishment of the task. I would also like to thank ms. nanki kaur for being very helpful towards the completion of this task. I would like to extend my thanks to care nepal, Action Aid nepal, Practical Action nepal, mercy corps, danish Red cross and several other organizations whose work has been cited in this report. I also thank several other ngos who have been working in the area of climate change as mentioned in the Report. I would also like to thank gargee Pradhan who has helped right from the inception of this Project.
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executIve SummARy
the entire globe has been shaken by the adverse effects of climate change. nepal obviously could not remain an exception to it. It is, in fact, considered as the sixth most vulnerable country to climate change. the annual increase in temperature by 0.06 degree centigrade in the country in general, and such increasing tendency observed in the Himalayan region in particular with its delicate glacial lakes, reflects its vulnerability. It is unfortunate that nepal has to face such circumstances when it has generated a negligible percent of green house gases. nepal has been found to be generally vulnerable to climate change in six sectors and they are Agriculture and Food Security, Forests and Biodiversity, water Resources and energy, climate Induced disasters, Public Health, and urban Settlements and Infrastructure. there is thus a dire need in nepal to adapt to this reality, and for this there have to be viable institutions ready to face the challenges successfully. Projects need to be identified and executed to mitigate as well as adapt to the vagaries of the climate change in an effort to be resilient to it. this report seeks to make an assessment of the agencies working specifically with climate induced disasters and also in urban settlements. the first objective was to assess if existing programs/projects/interventions of the institutions enhance the adaptive capacity of the most vulnerable communities and natural systems. In the case of the climate induced disasters, it has been found that the adaptive capacity has been enhanced due to an increase in awareness among community members, the installation of early warning systems, conduction of mock exercises, construction of shelter houses, and the availability of rescue equipment. there are as yet no institutions working exclusively on urban settlements towards the mitigation of the effect of climate change and thus this aspect remains unanswered to a great extent at the present. the second objective was to understand the planning framework, service delivery mechanism, and monitoring and evaluation framework used by the organizations, including frameworks used to mainstream climate change into the organizations planning process. In the case of the climate induced disasters project, the planning framework was in the form of a project report which outlined in detail the activities and the time in which these would be accomplished. the service delivery was made through an I/ngo collaboration whereby the ngo is selected beforehand and then mobilises its employees at different levels in the field. the monitoring and evaluation framework consisted of the projects internal evaluation followed by evaluation by an independent national consultant, and culminating in an evaluation by an international consultant. the mainstreaming of climate change in the organizations planning process however seemed to be conspicuous by its absence. the urban settlements remain unattended on this front, partly due to the absence of institutions working in this area but more due to lack of awareness of the national and local impacts of climate change.
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the third objective was to identify ways that organizations scale up their programmes to enhance adaptive capacity. there have been replications of the programs in neighbouring communities following successful implementation, but not really the scaling-up on a wide scale. Scaling up is not underway at present as the disaster risk management has not been mainstreamed in the periodic plans of some of the districts which have prepared one. It is far from being mainstreamed in the case of some districts which have not yet prepared their Periodic Plan, despite having a sample plan in place. the case is similar for the municipalities; some of them having prepared the plans following the sample plan, whilst some have yet to prepare it. Recently, disaster risk management issues have been mainstreamed but have yet to be implemented, and this does not look likely to take place soon due to the absence of the peoples representatives in local government. the mainstreaming of disaster risk management remains to be done at vdc level as the Periodic Plan has not yet been prepared for them. climate change has not been mainstreamed in any of these plans and hence the activities related to the mitigation of and adaptation to climate change effects have not been making the desired progress. Hence, it is recommended that Periodic Plans are prepared for vdcs, duly mainstreaming climate change and that vdcs are supported through an ngo specializing in climate change. the present I/ngo nexus as practiced in the dePIcHo Projects has been recommended for providing continuity, in view of its successful implementation of interventions despite the absence of locally elected representatives. An alternative could be the mobilization of a donor unit in the area of intervention which could liaise with the district disaster Relief committee and the district technical office of the ddc. Although these alternates have potential, their success cannot be certain, as the dIPecHo, Ingo, ngo axis still needs to be tried in the actual adverse circumstances marked by political uncertainty and the lack of peoples representatives in local government.
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Acknowledgements executive Summary table of Contents background 1.0. Introduction 1.1. climate, induced Risks and vulnerability in nepal 1.1.1. Risk due to Flood and drought 1.2. the objectives 1.3. methodology 1.4. organization of the Report disaster Risk management 2.0 Introduction 2.1. disasters in nepal 2.2. disaster Risk management Finance in nepal 2.3. Selection of dIPecHo Projects 2.4. objectives 2.5. vision 2.6. mission 2.7. Inventory of Programs 2.8. Service delivery mechanism 2.9. Financial delivery mechanism 2.10. effectiveness 2.11. cost Benefit Analysis (cBA) of mercy corps Project 2.12. monitoring and evaluation mechanism 2.13. good Practices 2.13.1. good Practices of cARe nepal 2.13.2. the good Practices of Action Aid nepal 2.13.3. good Practices by Practical Action nepal 2.14. Assessment of the Programs Climate Change and urban Settlements 3.0. Introduction 3.1. urban Scenario of nepal 3.2. manifestation of climate change 3.3. Agencies working on climate change
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3.3.1. RImS, nepal 3.3.2. macchapuchre development organization (mdo) 3.3.3. ecocenteR 3.3.4. environment Study group (eSg) 3.3.5. nepal Institute for development Studies (nIdS) 3.3.6. clean energy nepal (cen) 3.3.7. FoRwARd 3.3.8. environment camps for conservation Awareness (eccA) 3.3.9. Forest Action 3.4. good Practices Creating/enhancing adaptive capacity 4.0. Introduction 4.1. need of mainstreaming 4.1.1. mainstreaming in the nPc guidelines 4.1.2. mainstreaming in guidelines 4.1.3. mainstreaming in guidelines 4.2. need of Preparation of the Periodic Plan for vdc 4.3. need of mainstreaming climate change 4.4. up-scaling of good Practices 4.5. working modalities and approaches 4.5.1. Alternative working modality ReFeReNCeS
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1.0. Introduction
nepal is regarded as the sixth most vulnerable country with respect to climate change despite a negligible carbon emission. As a consequence, it has begun to experience several effects such as unusual floods or droughts throughout the country. Although the climate change science was disputed until recently, it has been recognized as a reality by the recent report of IPcc. there is thus a dire need for nepal to find ways to adapt to climate change. the country is seeking to do this with the formulation and implementation of the national Adaptation Plan of Action. the plan has recognized the six key thematic areas of water and energy, forest and biodiversity, agriculture and food security, urban settlement disasters risk management and health. under nAPA there is a program of preparing local Adaptation Plans of Action. Programs and activities under these plans need to be implemented by local government agencies such as vdcs in collaboration with non government Agencies and donors. there are several different agencies working in disaster and climate change risk management in the country. there is a need to have an overview of which specialist organizations or agencies are working in the aforementioned areas. this report seeks to make an assessment of agencies that are active and working in disaster risk management and in urban settlements that are sensitive to climate change.
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observation of annual participation in the 166 weather stations of the country indicates a positive trend in annual rainfall in eastern, central, western and Far-western nepal. It is followed by a general decline in pre-monsoon precipitation in far-and midwestern nepal. Simultaneously, there exist a few pockets of declining rainfall in western, central and eastern regions. In the country in general an overall trend of increasing pre-monsoon rainfall can be observed. As regards the post-monsoon precipitation, the mid western and the southern parts of the eastern and central/western nepal have displayed an increasing pattern. In most of the far western, northern part of the western, central and eastern nepal, a declining rainfall trend has been encountered. Apart from the northern part of mid-western, western and eastern nepal, an overall increasing trend of winter precipitation can be seen. though the future precipitation in the winter appears to remain unchanged in the western nepal, eastern nepal appears to experience an increase in the range of 5-10 per cent. However in the summer, precipitation is likely to increase throughout the country and it is going to be more in eastern and central nepal compared to western nepal. Projections also indicate an increase in the monsoon and post monsoon rainfall followed by a decrease in winter rainfall leading to drought in winter as well as floods in summer. the observations and projections indicate that key impacts of climate change are likely to include: significant warming, particularly at higher elevations, leading to reductions in snow and ice coverage; increased climatic variability and frequency of extreme events, including floods and droughts; and, overall increase in
precipitation during the wet season but a decrease in the mid hills. climate change thus leads to two main disastrous events, floods and drought. 1.1.1 Risk due to Floods and Drought Flood is one of the major disasters in nepal. the data of the past 36 years reveals that it is a number three killer after epidemics and landslide in the country. It is however a number one disaster when seen in terms of the number of affected people ( 68.4%) with landslides ( 9.8 %), epidemics (9.4%) and fire (4.6%) occupying second, third and fourth positions. In the last 36 years (1971-2007), flood seems to have taken 2936 lives and affected 3.36 million people in the country. the loss due to 1993 flood is as follows. though drought has been reported 152 times compared to 2720 times by flood, it is comparatively a mild customer but affects enormously in an agrarian country like nepal. For example, in the last 36 years (1971-2007), it appears to have resulted in the loss of 329,332 hectares of land.
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1.3. Methodology
this assessment has been made following the secondary data. these were obtained from web sites of the respective agencies, reports prepared by the agencies regarding their activities and the participation in the seminars. the workshop organized by cAdP n( 18-21 August, 2010) and the following site visit was very useful for interaction with several agency representatives. A presentation was also made in that workshop to receive comments from the participants.
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nepal has been a victim to disasters since time immemorial. the frequent interaction with disasters has formed a part of the culture of nepal. consequently, rituals like Rudri are carried out on an annual basis for attaining peace and tranquillity, and considerable mention is made of disasters such as flood, earthquake, bird flu, fire etc in such texts. In the past, disasters were considered as divine acts as well as punitive measures taken against erring individuals. So, the first Act passed by the nepali Parliament to govern disaster risk management, the nepal calamity Relief Act, 1982 of nepal is translated as divine disaster Relief Act as (daibiya Prakop udhhar Ain) in nepali. there was thus no concept of disaster preparedness in nepal as it would be futile to prepare against a divine act. Accordingly, this Act also addresses only post disaster phenomenon. there is, however, a growing awareness that disasters are human created and not divine. So, the need to prepare against disaster events has been felt very strongly. In this context, many International and non government Agencies have been working recently in nepal. this Section assesses the institutions working on disaster risk management in nepal with respect to their objectives, vision, mission, geographical coverage, best practices, service and finance delivery mechanism, effectiveness, cost benefit analysis and their monitoring and evaluation mechanism.
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regional natural disaster relief committee district natural disaster relief committee local natural disaster relief committee
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risk management activities in nepal, the International and national non government organizations help the government in the process. most of these agencies are members of disaster Prevention network nepal. the government does not spend as much as desired on preparedness activities, as is evident from the spending of 177-182 million Rupees in the year 2007-2008. the figure of 2008-09 is special as it is related to the breach in embankment of the koshi and cannot be taken as normal. though the exact amount required for carrying out the preparedness activities has not been computed so far, there is a widespread realization that the annual allocation is far from adequate. the International non government Agencies spend quite a significant amount but again there is no consolidated information
regarding it. Information regarding individual spending by the agencies is available, however. For example, dePIcHo spent 9.6 million euro from 2006 to 2009.
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Area doti, kailali makwanpur, Sarlahi, Rupandehi, Banke, Sunsari and udayapur
NGo cSSd PReRAnA, wcdF, (FScn) Bee group uPcA nepal nP nepal co-Action nepal
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kailali disaster Risk Reduction opportunity Bnakey Bardia Flood warning Program Safer communities through multi Hazard Risk Reduction
kailali chitwan, nawalparashi, Bnakey and Bardiya okhaldhunga, Solukhumbu, morang, Sunsari, lamjung, myagdi,mugu, Humla and mugu
Far west central and west eastern and Far western nepal
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2.4. Objectives
the objectives of cARe nepal is to contribute to the achievement of Hyogo Framework of Action in nepal by building resilience among communities, especially the poor, marginalized and socially excluded to withstand natural hazards with fewer losses of lives and assets. Similarly the objective of Action Aid nepal is to build resilience of the community to disaster in the targeted districts through capacity building, enhancing awareness, advocacy, and small scale mitigation. Its specific objective towards disaster is to strengthen capacities of communities and local institutions to reduce the impacts of disasters and ensure the rights of disaster vulnerable people. likewise the objectives of mercy corps (mc) is to reduce disaster risks in nepal through increased awareness and improved capacity of vulnerable communities to prepare for and respond to frequent natural disasters. the specific objective of mc is to ensure that vulnerable communities and institutions in kailali district are better prepared to respond to natural disasters, are linked into district and national response systems, and contribute to shared learning on risk reduction practices the specific objective of Practical Action towards disaster for the strategic period 2007-12 is to ensure that almost 97,000 poor people living in plains and hills from seven districts of nepal are better able to cope with risks due to floods, landslides, drought and impacts of climate change through improved access to technologies and decision-making processes on disaster risk management. In a similar manner, the objective of mission east is to enable local communities and institutions of Humla district to prepare for, mitigate and respond to natural disasters.
Subsequent operations will consolidate and strengthen the projects and mitigate adverse impact of natural disasters by adding dRR project components, as well as increasing capacity of local authorities to be better prepared in the event of a disaster.
2.5. Vision
the vision of cARe nepal is to seek a peaceful and harmonious society in which poor, vulnerable and socially excluded people live in dignity, and their rights are fulfilled and will be a partner of choice and are recognized for commitment to social justice from the high Himalayas to the plains of the terai. Action Aid envisions poverty as the social, political and economic conditions in which women, men, girls and boys have no security of their basic livelihood and dignity due to the lack of access to and control over basic productive resources affecting their lives and livelihood. one of the local counterparts of Action Aid, Bheri environmental excellence group (Bee) envisages facilitating the empowerment process of poor, women and children at the grassroots by organizing training programs and conducting community-based initiatives in suitable areas. moreover it intends to work as a facilitator for the acquisition of social security through creating safety nets for a healthy and safe environment for poor communities. Bee group is also AAns longterm development partner and as well as partner for disaster Risk Reduction through Schools project. Practical Action has the vision of a sustainable world, free of poverty and injustice in which technology is used to the benefit of all.
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2.6. Mission
the mission of cARe nepal is to facilitate the empowerment of poor, vulnerable and socially excluded people to fulfil their basic needs and achieve social justice. It seeks to attend this through: (a) Addressing social, cultural and political discrimination (b) facilitating micro/macro linkages for policy influence (c) Building local, regional and global alliances and partnerships (d) sustainable economic development (e) conflict sensitive programming (f ) disaster risk reduction and emergency response the Action Aid nepal has a mission to eradicate poverty through the process of empowerment of the poorest and most marginalized women, men, girls and boys. the values of AAn include empathy with the poor and marginalized, mutual respect and equity, non sectarian, quality and excellence. disability is an area of AAn engagements with these core values to address inequality and injustices in disabilities. Its local partner Bee has a mission of the attainment of peace, development and justice through peoples meaningful participation and a bottom-up approach. Similarly, the mission of mercy corps is to alleviate suffering, poverty and oppression by helping people build secure, productive and just communities. Its local counterpart nepal Red cross Society has the mission of relieving human suffering and reducing vulnerability through community participation and mobilization of increased numbers of volunteers by mobilizing the power of humanity through expansion and strengthening of the organizational structure of the society and by building links with governmental and non governmental organizations.
Practical Action has a mission of using technology to challenge poverty by: building the capabilities of poor people improving their access to technical options and knowledge, and working with them to influence social, economic and institutional systems for innovation and the use of technology
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Practical Action nepal has implemented four projects: Strengthening the capacity of communities to manage ewS, Banke Bardia flood warning program, mainstreaming livelihood-centred approaches to disaster management, and increasing community resilience to cope with impacts of climate change. these projects have been implemented in chitwan, nawalparasi, Banke and Bardia districts. mission east has executed the Projects in Humla district one of the most remote districts of nepal. the objective is to secure increased resilience to natural disasters for remote and vulnerable mountain communities in Humla district so as to enable local communities and institutions of Humla district to prepare for mitigate and respond to disasters.
field officer
field officer
social mobilizer
the intervention is to be done. the work of the Social mobilizer is to familiarize the community with the project, arrange the meetings when the district officer and the Field officer visit, and for other activities as necessary. the Field officers execute the Project with the direction of the district officer and the support of the Social mobilizer. they do so following the work schedule.
2.10. Effectiveness
the effectiveness of the projects was assessed by both international and national
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consultants. the international consultant Aguaconsult ltd. prepared a report in which was written, the projects were well targeted and largely contributed to reducing vulnerability of populations living in areas most affected by natural disasters. Projects were well designed and planned and based on a comprehensive assessment and Project design process. the national consultant with respect to the projects implemented by Action Aid nepal has written the project was implemented with immaculate plan and systems. though nepal was facing acute crisis through fuel shortage, power shortage and constant road blocks and strikes that hampered movement, particularly in the project areas, AAn dIPecHo project was implemented without being overtly hampered by such incidents. this happened only because of the strong planning and close monitoring, giving adequate room to accommodate last minute changes and alterations without affecting the overall project performance. Similarly the national consultant with regards to the mercy corps project implementation has written, there are several indications that the project was carried out efficiently. the project successfully involved the deprived and marginalized sections of society in designing, planning, implementing and following-up on project activities, which were low-cost, local resource-driven, and indigenous knowledge and skill-based. It celebrated international days and ran start-up and completion workshops and various trainings jointly with care nepal to cut costs. despite its limited resources, it managed to carry out bio-engineering work on a wide scale. community contributions exceed more than 90% in activities like the construction of safe shelters and bioengineering. effective monitoring systems made sure activities ran smoothly.
In addition, there is considerable evidence of the effectiveness of the project. the project was able to complete the majority of its activities within the set timeframe and before the danger of any flooding. It exploited the strengths of youths, in part by forming youth groups and yRcs in neighbouring communities and their schools. In general, the nRcSs proven relationship with communities and schools made it easy to administer the project. River protection work was chosen so that there would be no harm done to other river communities and public auditing is carried out at the community level to ensure work will be transparent. the efficiency and effectiveness of the project has resulted in its sustainable results.
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Construction of 2 storied houses with raised plinth levels. Before the 2008 flood there were no 2 storied (thati) houses in the village. there are about 30 houses of that type built after this years flood. Mobilization of local people for the preparation of Iec materials. Use of local people to write the script of the street dramas and also their involvement in the play. Use of local Deuda, Tharu and Raji song competitions to convey disaster preparedness messages. Arrangement of drills in every community and the preparation of contingency plans. Other practices are in the form of cultural leaps, such as the construction of elevated and two floored houses in the tharu community.
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Photo 2.12.2b: Search and Rescue Source: Web Site
Street Drama for Disaster Awareness (gangapur Banke). 30 local youths were organized in 2 street theatre groups. Street theatre is memorable especially for those who cannot read or write, and the communitys knowledge and skills for disaster preparedness are enhanced in the process. Preparation of DM and contingency plans. Fistful rice campaigns. School retrofitting. PVA. Mainstreaming PWD in DRR.
REFLECT approach for community empowerment. Visibility material development. Celebration of EQ safety and ISDR days. Publication of a thematic bulletin. Training among DIPECHO projects in Nepal. Pre-and post-monsoon workshops. Orientation to teachers and political leaders on HFA/ddR.
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development of vdc plans and helped reduce the communitys vulnerability during the times of flood. In all locations, pre-monsoon drills were carried out to test the systems, equipment and training. Wall paintings for raising awareness of people in the community. the photograph below shows a lady explaining the wall painting related to disaster preparedness to a small child.
Photo 2.12.2: mock drill to test the Siren in banke - Source: Web Site
Photo 2.12.2: A woman reading the message painted on a wall Source: Web Site
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3.0. Introduction
urban areas have been recognized as being vulnerable to the adverse impacts of climate change, together with other sectors such as water and energy, forest and biodiversity, agriculture and food security, disasters risk management and health. the urban areas in nepal have to be addressed because they contribute to 68 per cent of the gdP of the country, despite the very low investment made on them. kathmandu alone contributes 20 per cent of the gdP. the urban areas are the vehicle of growth in nepal which can be seen by the annual growth of the urban economy by 6.4 per cent, almost double of the growth of the rural economy and these should be protected against the adverse impacts of climate change in all respects. whilst the most northern ecological belt, the mountains, is least urbanized, the rate of urbanization increases in the hills and the terai plains as one moves down south. this section seeks to present the state of the urban areas in nepal with respect to the climate change, and the agencies which are working in them.
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the urban areas lack adequate infrastructure and the continued migration from the rural areas has resulted in a deterioration of the environment. the urban areas in nepal are marked by a shortage of safe drinking water, inadequate sanitation and solid waste collection and disposal facility, clogged drains and a paucity of paved roads. Poor water quality and water and noise pollution are the other glaring problems crippling the urban areas in nepal. the later particularly has come into being due to the vehicular as well as industrial emissions such as brick kilns and burning of solid wastes such as plastics. the kathmandu valley in particular displays the steady erosion of the cultural heritage, with the solitary exception of Bhaktapur municipality. the common problems can be summarized as: the instant flooding due to compact paved development, heat island effect created by asphalt paved roads, large demand of drinking water due to the concentration of people, shortage of power and load-shedding creating inconvenience during the hot and cold waves, combined sewers carrying storm water and sewage, and at times epidemics due to the spill over of sewage into the water supply. nepali cities, as elsewhere, are experiencing the effect of climate change. According to nAPA, climate change has direct impacts on urban settlements, such as more frequent and more hazardous floods, reduced availability of freshwater supplies, and indirect impacts, such as extreme weather events that increase food prices or damage poorer households asset bases. climate change can lead to increased damage to buildings, energy services, telecommunications, transport structures and water services (IPcc, 2007). obviously, these impacts are likely to affect the quality of life and safety of residents in affected areas. the climate vulnerability of nepalese settlements and subsequently the need to adapt varies depending on a range of factors, including their form and size, location, geography, and economy. In this context, the dense and unsafe built form of
urban settlements in nepal is one of the major factors for climate vulnerability. the ongoing physical changes within municipalities can be seen as land-use changes, new built form, land transaction, and land fragmentation. the open spaces as places of escape during major disaster such as fire and floods are decreasing, thereby adding to the vulnerability of settlements. most of the construction works are carried out haphazardly without proper planning or monitoring and without following building codes.
Structural collapse 1%
epidemic 57%
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by climate change, eleventh with respect to the earthquakes and 30th with regards to water-induced disasters such as flood and landslides.
Clean Energy Nepal Natural Disaster Management Forum nepal FORWARD Forest Action Nepal ECCA Nepal LI-BIRD RIMS-Nepal MDO- Koshi ECOCENTRE Chitwan Environment Study Group NIDS MDO- Kaski NTNC MFSC
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change issues for community user groups. In Phewa lake and Panchase conservation area, mdo is lobbying with constituent assembly member and politicians to incorporate environmental issues into the drafting of the constitution which is underway.
3.3.3. ECOCENTER
over the last two years, major activities have been in the realm of the climate change. these consist of interaction with media about climate change issues, awareness raising activities such as the celebration of environment day, school level awareness programs and the development of a course for high school students, documentation of local level adaptation, and the building of community resilience through organic farming. the integration of climate change issues in various other programs is one of the major plans of the institution.
raising awareness in schools. It organises climate talk programs regularly to create discussion regarding recent national and international initiatives on climate change. the nepal youth for climate change (nycA) network has been set up, representing youth from all over nepal, to raise awareness on issues of climate change. cen has recently supported cA members with the collection of feedback on the constitution making process through the ghar dailo (Household visit) program. Furthermore, a consultation workshop was organized to prepare policy related to climate change and the resulting
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suggestions were submitted to ministry. the future plan of cen is to establish a resource centre and implement disaster risk reduction program in collaboration with various partners working in this area.
3.3.7. FORWARD
River bed farming (bagare kheti) is being practiced with water melon and various gourds as the predominant species in flood prone areas. diverse activities related to adaptation have been conducted, such as community-based fish farming through rain water harvesting, irrigation from snow harvesting ponds, conservation farming with farmyard manure, and home gardening. Research is underway to identify appropriate varieties in maize for the changed climate. A stress-tolerant variety of mungbean is being released in collaboration with nARc. For disaster risk reduction, awareness raising activities such as celebration of global campaign day and Photo 3.3.8: Solar Lamp- Source: Web Site knowledge transfer, are in progress. the concept of mainstreaming climate change issues into the office program is being developed.
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4.0 Introduction
It can be seen from the preceding sections that the disaster risk management has made quite a headway in nepal compared with what was it like in the past. Whilst it used to be fatalistic and relief oriented in the early days, it now addresses the complete cycle of preparedness, rescue and relief, as well as reconstruction and rehabilitation. moreover, the climate induced disasters such as floods and landslides have been addressed to a great extent. there have been some good practices which can be emulated in the future. However in the area of addressing climate change effects in urban settlements, there has been little progress. there is a need to identify ways that will enable organisations to scale up programmes that enhance adaptive capacity. this section proposes means by which the organizations can develop and scale-up programs for creating and enhancing adaptive capacity.
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a. guidelines for the formulation of regular administrative and annual development program and budget (recurrent and capital) for the respective fiscal year prepared by nPc b. guidelines for the formulation of periodic district development plans, and c. guidelines for the formulation of periodic municipality development plans
Provision for temporary shelter and relief with special consideration for children, women and marginalized communities. Giving special consideration for physically challenged people in disaster situations. Focus on preparedness works for saving industrial establishments during disasters. Mechanisms for rescue, relief storage and lawful distribution after the a disaster. Provision of retrofitting World Heritage sites and tourism spots. Initiating preparation for preventing air hijacking and accidents. Using earthquake resistant technology in the reconstruction of infrastructure destructed during conflict. Carrying out DIA for projects related to electrical power generation. Provision for sufficient drinking water after disasters. Provision of projects for information collection and distribution from satellites, Fm. Giving priority to projects related to Early warning Systems and minimization of likely damage from climate change and gloF.
4.1.2. Mainstreaming DRR into guidelines for the formulation of periodic district development plans
the original guideline was prepared in 2002 by the national planning commission, but, in the course of mainstreaming disaster risk, the following additions were made: The safety of physical structures and the effective implementation of the disaster Risk management Plan. The need to prepare hazard maps. The need to refer to the Disaster Risk Reduction Policy passed by the government. The need to incorporate the aspects related to disaster risk management. The need to refer to the situation of disaster risk. The need to think about the effect likely to
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be created by disasters. The need to identify disaster vulnerable areas, so that the people stay away. The need to provide open spaces, such as for triage, temporary shelter and later for reconstruction and rehabilitation. The need to think about the disturbance in the essential services after the disasters regarding possible alternates. Addition of a separate section on District disaster Scenarios. The need to assess whether agricultural land will be affected after the disaster. The need to arrange for the cost to rehabilitate the land damaged due to disasters. The need to prevent the tree felling. The need to arrange water in the case of disasters. The need to create embankments for flood control. The need to document the deaths due to disasters and the provision of drugs necessary after disasters. The need to make safety services available immediately after disasters. The need to save forest, environment and biological diversity. The need to consider disaster risk possibilities in rural and urban environmental situations. The need to assess the experts required to give training on disaster risk management. The need to consider the likely effects of disasters and to carry out disaster Impact Assessment. Addition of a new section entitled Disaster Risk management. Inclusion of disaster risks amongst other risks.
A statement that the objectives include incorporation of programs related to dRR in view of the vulnerability of many municipalities to disasters. Reference to Acts and Policies related to dRR. A disaster expert among other experts preparing the plan. Disaster Risk Management Plans under environmental management, including mitigation, preparedness, response and recovery programs. Areas affected by and likely to be affected by earthquake, floods and landslides. A hazard map, including the location of forests and rivers. Land use planning so as to maximise safety and minimise loss of lives due to disasters. The principle of feeling safe from disasters. Addition of disaster data (number of deaths, injured, lost etc) in the data base.
4.1.3. Mainstreaming DRR into guidelines for the formulation of periodic municipality development plans
the original guidelines were prepared in 2003 by the ministry of local development, and in the course of mainstreaming disaster risks into development, the following additions were made:
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climate change needs to take place in the aforementioned plans, including vdc plans. whilst its mainstreaming in ddc and vdc level plans will boost the management of climate induced disasters, so its mainstreaming in the municipality plans will encourage the mitigation of climate induced problems in urban settlements.
implementing climate change adaptation projects, a memorandum of understanding should be signed with the ministry of local development as it has its networks flowing down to ddc and vdc level. district development committees generally operate according to the district Periodic Plan. Similarly, municipalities function on the basis of the periodic plan. these plans previously did not include the component of disaster risk, but recently disaster risk management has been mainstreamed into the periodic plans of districts and municipalities. As there is no periodic plan guideline yet prepared for the vdc, there is a good opportunity to mainstream both disaster Risk Reduction as well as climate change. once this arrangement is in place, it will be convenient to scale-up climate change Adaptation Programs. In fact, the flow of funds to the vdc could have been a better option had there been peoples representatives in the office. In their absence, the fund should flow through the nexus of the International and national non government organizations, as is the case at the present under dePIcHo Projects. As this approach has stood the test of time, characterized by the absence of peoples representatives, it should be further given continuity in the future until the arrival of elected peoples representatives in the political scene. the working modality should thus consist of CADP-N entering into a MoU with the ministry of local development. Supporting the MoLD towards the preparation of the Periodic Plan for the vdc, taking the periodic plans of the ddc and municipality as a reference, and ensuring climate change is mainstreamed into this plan. Entering into an agreement with a Local ngo working on climate change. The execution of the Climate Change Adaptation Projects should then be carried out in collaboration with the vdc
4.5 Working modalities and approaches for implementing climate change adaptation programs
disasters are commonly localized phenomena, with exceptions such as earthquakes which can be regional and even bilateral, as was the Pakistan earthquake which shook Pakistan as well as India. disaster Risk Reduction should, therefore, generally be incorporated by local governments, and the local Self governance Act of 1999 gave such authority to local government in nepal. local government in nepal exists in the form of district development committee, municipality and village development committee. For
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execution of the Adaptation projects through ngo in collaboration with the vdcs
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ReFeRenceS
Adpc, 2009, Detailed Scope of Work for Priority Implementation Partnership on Mainstreaming Disaster Risk Reduction ( DRR) into National Development Planning Process in Nepal, Bangkok, Asian disaster preparedness center, January Agua consult ltd., 2010, Evaluation of the DG Echo Action in Nepal, ecHo Bo A. White et al, 2009, Cost- Benefit Analysis for Community Based Disaster Risk Reduction in Kailali, Nepal, mercy corps, nepal government of nepal, 2010, National Adaptation Plan of Action( Draft ), ministry of environment Hmg, 1999, Local Self Governance Act, His majestys government of nepal nepal red cross society, 2008,2009, Annual Report, nepal red cross society ngo group on climate change, 2009, Meeting, ngo group on climate change united nations development program, 2010, Economic and Financial Decision Making in Disaster Risk Reduction, Nepal Case Study, undp and moHA united nations development program, 2010, Economic Gobal Assessment of Risks, Nepal Country Report, Isdr uprety, Bishal nath, 2006, The nexus between Natural Disasters and Development, Key Policy Issues in Meeting the Millennium Development Goals and Poverty Alleviation, paper prepared for economic policy network and Asian development Bank
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