• News
    • Latest news
    • News search
    • Health
    • Finance
    • Food
    • Career news
    • Content series
    • Try Devex Pro
  • Jobs
    • Job search
    • Post a job
    • Employer search
    • CV Writing
    • Upcoming career events
    • Try Career Account
  • Funding
    • Funding search
    • Funding news
  • Talent
    • Candidate search
    • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Events
    • Upcoming and past events
    • Partner on an event
  • Post a job
  • About
      • About us
      • Membership
      • Newsletters
      • Advertising partnerships
      • Devex Talent Solutions
      • Contact us
Join DevexSign in
Join DevexSign in

News

  • Latest news
  • News search
  • Health
  • Finance
  • Food
  • Career news
  • Content series
  • Try Devex Pro

Jobs

  • Job search
  • Post a job
  • Employer search
  • CV Writing
  • Upcoming career events
  • Try Career Account

Funding

  • Funding search
  • Funding news

Talent

  • Candidate search
  • Devex Talent Solutions

Events

  • Upcoming and past events
  • Partner on an event
Post a job

About

  • About us
  • Membership
  • Newsletters
  • Advertising partnerships
  • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Contact us
  • My Devex
  • Update my profile % complete
  • Account & privacy settings
  • My saved jobs
  • Manage newsletters
  • Support
  • Sign out
Latest newsNews searchHealthFinanceFoodCareer newsContent seriesTry Devex Pro
    Sponsored Content
    ODI Global
    • News

    Why a Focus on Mitigation and Adaptation Conceals the Real Challenge of Climate Change

    Simon Maxwell proposes that developing countries use a “climate compatible development” model for developing a national climate change strategy.

    By Devex Editor // 27 July 2010

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Developing countries should focus not only on adaptation and mitigation as they develop their national climate change strategies, says Simon Maxwell, executive chair of the Climate and Development Knowledge Network. They would benefit more if their strategies also take into account economic challenges and opportunities that accompany climate change, he adds.

    Climate research and policy make extensive use of two concepts, ‘mitigation’ and ‘adaptation’. In the Kyoto Protocol (1997), and more especially the Bali Roadmap (2007) and the Copenhagen Accord (2009), action on climate change is organised under these two headings. The UNDP Human Development Report on climate change (2007) and the World Bank’s World Development Report on the same subject (2009) use the same distinction.

    Many countries are preparing two key documents: their NAMA and NAPA: the former a country’s Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Action, the latter its National Adaptation Programme of Action. Crudely, NAMAs are about replacing coal mines with solar cell factories, and reducing carbon emissions by protecting forests; NAPAs are about flood defences and drought-proof crop varieties.

    Mitigation is regarded largely as the responsibility of developed countries (the so-called Annex 1 countries) and now the larger and faster-growing developing countries, such as the BASIC countries (Brazil, South Africa, India and China). Adaptation is regarded as a requirement for all countries, with the poor in developing countries most likely to suffer the increased hazard and also most vulnerable to the consequences.

    Mitigation and Adaptation thus defined are necessary components of a strategy to tackle climate change, but far from sufficient. Indeed, any national leader or planner would surely want to take account of a range of other, largely exogenous, factors, which will modify comparative advantage and shape development strategy. Some will be positive, some negative, but all are likely to be disruptive, possibly in a non-incremental way. In other words, some sectors or industries will find opportunities closed off, sometimes suddenly, others will find opportunities opening. This is not exactly ‘creative destruction’, a phrase coined by Joseph Schumpeter to describe the impact of innovation in capitalist societies; but climate change will certainly cause both creation and destruction, in ways not seen by those who focus only on mitigation and adaptation.

    In terms of simple economics, climate change, or the measures taken to deal with it, can be expected to change:

    • The relative prices of inputs;

    • The relative prices of outputs; and

    • The physical relationships between inputs and outputs.

    Thus, the shape of the production possibility frontier will change, for firms and countries, and so will the price lines which determine the optimal balance of resource use and the optimal mix of outputs. All this can be analysed in the context of partial equilibrium, but will also have general equilibrium effects over the medium term, as resources shift between sectors. There are likely to be many winners and losers, within and between countries.

    In practical terms, the following challenges and opportunities need to be considered:

    • Exporters of all kinds affected by the rising cost of transport, or changing relative prices of transport types, perhaps challenging or requiring modification of export-oriented growth strategies;

    • As a sub-set of the above, island economies dependent on tourism – indeed all developing country long haul destinations – affected negatively by an increase in the cost of flying;

    • Agricultural producers affected negatively (or positively, depending on location) by changes in temperature and the volume and distribution of rainfall, affecting agriculture-led development strategies, and perhaps especially agricultural export-led sectors like horticulture and flowers;

    • Conversely, some developing country producers exploiting the demand for biofuels, or taking advantage of new market opportunities if greenhouse production in Northern countries becomes uneconomic, or carbon markets create incentives to conserve forest;

    • Lower demand for carbon-based fuel sources (oil, gas), disrupting the development strategies of certain resource-rich countries;

    • Conceivably, a shift away from energy-intensive sectors to the less energy-intensive, perhaps affecting resource-rich countries hoping to invest in processing;

    • Globally, a rapid increase in technological innovation, offering opportunities for innovators’ rent, disadvantaging late adopters, but also, in some cases, offering opportunities for technological leap-frogging;

    • New resource opportunities arising from technological innovation, as for example with lithium in Bolivia, in demand for a new generation of batteries.

    None of these challenges and opportunities is captured easily by a focus on mitigation and adaptation, as normally understood. Of course, the economic impacts of climate change described above are on the agenda, and there is a respectable literature dealing with general equilibrium modelling of climate change. The Stern Review of 2006 provides a comprehensive overview of economic consequences, albeit not uncontroversial. Some authors have looked at wider development planning (see for example this paper by Richard Klein and others). Some agencies are working on comprehensive development challenges, for example through the World Bank Strategic Framework , or in non-governmental groups like Project Catalyst , The Climate Group , or McKinsey . ODI researchers, led by Karen Ellis, have reviewed the options for growth in a carbon-constrained world .

    It remains true, nevertheless, that developing country governments are ill-served if asked to focus on mitigation and adaptation, rather than the transformatory challenge of climate change – and being offered fast start and other financing for these narrow purposes. That is why a term like ‘climate compatible development’ is more useful. It allows for mitigation and adaptation, but also for other effects. It also emphasises that decision-making on climate change needs to put development needs, including poverty reduction and human development, at the heart of the process. More on that shortly.

    Re-published with permission by the Overseas Development Institute. Visit the original article

    .

    • Environment & Natural Resources
    • Institutional Development
    Printing articles to share with others is a breach of our terms and conditions and copyright policy. Please use the sharing options on the left side of the article. Devex Pro members may share up to 10 articles per month using the Pro share tool ( ).

    About the author

    • Devex Editor

      Devex Editor

      Thanks a lot for your interest in Devex News. To share news and views, story ideas and press releases, please email editor@devex.com. We look forward to hearing from you.

    Search for articles

    Related Stories

    Climate financeOpinion: On climate, multilateral institutions must work with national banks

    Opinion: On climate, multilateral institutions must work with national banks

    Climate ChangeOpinion: Africa’s climate adaptation efforts need locally led metrics

    Opinion: Africa’s climate adaptation efforts need locally led metrics

    Sponsored by CropLife InternationalOpinion: Can a pro-innovation agrifood vision meet climate challenges?

    Opinion: Can a pro-innovation agrifood vision meet climate challenges?

    Food Systems Opinion: Agriculture is missing in climate action. NDCs can change that

    Opinion: Agriculture is missing in climate action. NDCs can change that

    Most Read

    • 1
      How low-emissions livestock are transforming dairy farming in Africa
    • 2
      Opinion: Mobile credit, savings, and insurance can drive financial health
    • 3
      The UN's changing of the guard
    • 4
      Opinion: India’s bold leadership in turning the tide for TB
    • 5
      USAID's humanitarian bureau is under pressure and overstretched
    • News
    • Jobs
    • Funding
    • Talent
    • Events

    Devex is the media platform for the global development community.

    A social enterprise, we connect and inform over 1.3 million development, health, humanitarian, and sustainability professionals through news, business intelligence, and funding & career opportunities so you can do more good for more people. We invite you to join us.

    • About us
    • Membership
    • Newsletters
    • Advertising partnerships
    • Devex Talent Solutions
    • Post a job
    • Careers at Devex
    • Contact us
    © Copyright 2000 - 2025 Devex|User Agreement|Privacy Statement