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How Canada Should Support Low-carbon Growth Abroad

At last year's Paris climate change agreement, all countries committed to help adapt to climate change and reduce emissions. Canada's official development assistance (ODA) now needs to focus on realizing these commitments. Ensuring maximum impact will require attending to areas where need is greatest and where Canada has particular expertise.
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FILE - In this Dec. 3, 2009 file photo smoke billows from a chimney of the cooling towers of a coal-fired power plant in Dadong, Shanxi province, China. The International Energy Agency says the world's energy-related carbon dioxide emissions rose 1.4 percent in 2012 to a record high of 31.6 gigatons, even as the U.S. posted its lowest emissions since the mid-1990s. In a report released Monday June 10, 2013, the IEA says China saw the largest emissions growth last year, but the increase was among the lowest seen in a decade amid investments in renewable energy and energy efficiency. (AP Photo/Andy Wong, File)
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FILE - In this Dec. 3, 2009 file photo smoke billows from a chimney of the cooling towers of a coal-fired power plant in Dadong, Shanxi province, China. The International Energy Agency says the world's energy-related carbon dioxide emissions rose 1.4 percent in 2012 to a record high of 31.6 gigatons, even as the U.S. posted its lowest emissions since the mid-1990s. In a report released Monday June 10, 2013, the IEA says China saw the largest emissions growth last year, but the increase was among the lowest seen in a decade amid investments in renewable energy and energy efficiency. (AP Photo/Andy Wong, File)

By Jason Potts

At last year's Paris climate change agreement, all countries committed to help adapt to climate change and reduce emissions. Canada's official development assistance (ODA) now needs to focus on realizing these commitments. Ensuring maximum impact will require attending to areas where need is greatest and where Canada has particular expertise.

A core focus should be on supporting fragile states where climate change is rapidly eroding prospects for peace and development. A decade of work by the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) has demonstrated the links between climate events such as severe drought or flooding, and the cornerstones of development such as food security and human health, as well as migration, and conflict. Proportionately, fragile states are the most vulnerable. These countries tend to be dependent on rain-fed agriculture, while poverty and weak governance undermine their ability to respond to climate stresses.

There is therefore a pressing need to better prepare fragile states for climate change. Here the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change has established a process for assisting developing countries, known as National Adaptation Plans (NAPs). In addition to providing targeted support for climate-responsive growth across vulnerable sectors like farming, the NAP process provides a foundation to improve governance, which is so critical in fragile states and a key component of Canada's international development strategy.

In March, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and United States President Barack Obama announced support for the National Adaptation Plan Global Network, created to promote peer learning among developing nations, improve co-ordination between bilateral donors, and support on-the-ground development and implementation of adaptation plans. Having pledged its support, Canada should take advantage of this network (whose secretariat is hosted by the IISD) to help make sure our support for adaptation planning in developing countries can be as effective as possible.

Climate-resilient technologies in agriculture will be particularly important for developing countries facing an increasingly volatile environment. Canada should be a leader in supporting resilience-based innovation by, for example, bringing global climate impact mapping to scale, working with farmers to pinpoint vulnerable storage facilities, and supporting climate-resilient seed development.

In addition to assisting countries to adapt to the impacts of climate change, the Paris agreement demands that all countries curb carbon emissions over time. Heading into the Paris conference, 188 countries outlined the actions they intend to take to do that; now they face a significant challenge in not only realizing those substantial emission reductions, but increasing the ambition in the years ahead.

Here again, a focus on agriculture is needed. The sector is responsible for one third of global emissions, and two thirds of global mitigation potential from agriculture is located in the developing world. Climate-smart agriculture can both reduce emissions and stimulate economic growth through improved infrastructure and more efficient practices.

Growing markets for certified sustainable products (such as organics, fair trade, and other eco-labels) represents an opportunity for facilitating this transition; however, this will require targeted investment from ODA sources to ensure that more marginalized producers can access these markets as they expand.

More broadly, the Paris objectives require a rapid scaling up of financing from both public and private sources for the large-scale investments needed in areas like clean energy and infrastructure. There are a growing number of options available, ranging from the use of innovative instruments, such as voluntary offsets and green bonds, to improved co-ordination and transparency among actors committed to providing green finance through initiatives like the Global Impact Investing Network and Montreal's own Finance Alliance for Sustainable Trade. For Canada there is an opportunity to engage its world-class financial service sector to stimulate new and innovative climate finance approaches.

Finally, there is the question of Canada's own contribution to assisting developing countries in the transition to lower-carbon, more resilient economies. Since 1970, developed economies have repeatedly committed to providing 0.7 per cent of their gross national income to official development assistance. But, as of 2015 only six members of an OECD donors club met the 0.7 ODA target (Sweden, the Netherlands, Norway, Denmark, Luxembourg, and the United Kingdom). The United Kingdom is the most recent, and the first G7 country, to formally commit to meeting this target. Canada has an opportunity to turn the U.K.'s bold move into a trend among G7 countries by making a similar commitment.

Today we know so much more; we know just how monumental the challenges are, and that it is now entirely untenable to consider ODA at anything below these 1970 targets as meaningful. The world is ready for change, but it will not be possible without significant investment.

This blog was first published on July 20 in the Hill Times.

Jason Potts is a senior associate at the International Institute for Sustainable Development.

The views expressed are those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect the views of CCIC or its members.

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