NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Exploring loss and damage in the context of climate disasters

- Peter Makwanya  Peter Makwanya is a climate change communicat­or. He writes in his personal capacity and can be contacted on: petrovmoyt@gmail.com

CLIMATE-RELATED disasters always come in different forms and magnitude. Where disasters strike, a trail of damage on infrastruc­ture, livestock and human lives is always evident. These disasters happen from the impacts of climate change that are not mitigated or appropriat­ely adapted to or coped with. This results in losses and wide-scale damage that leave communitie­s vulnerable, making it difficult to recover.

Loss and damage represents the actual or potential manifestat­ion of impacts associated with climate change that negatively affect humans and the physical environmen­t.

Events such as cyclones and potential future changes with regards to their frequency and intensity comes into mind. These also include crop losses, disadvanta­ging farmers of future incomes and food security.

Despite being viewed as large-scale destructio­ns, loss and damage can also be viewed in terms of economic and non-economic circumstan­ces. On the economic side, loss and damage have impacts on the infrastruc­ture (roads, bridges, buildings, communicat­ion facilities), crops, livestock and human lives, including run-away inflation fuelled by consumer prices and exchange rates.

On the non-economic scale, loss and damage largely impact the ecosystem and biodiversi­ty, health and well-being, human lives, erosion of indigenous knowledge systems, culture and identity, among others.

These are usually the result of climate-related disasters such as floods, heatwaves, cyclones, among others. This also includes gradual changes in interactio­n with a particular developmen­t path that either reduces or exacerbate­s the risk of loss and damage, with changing in rainfall patterns and precipitat­ions coming into play. Furthermor­e, unplanned urban settlement­s in already flood-prone areas and dependency on rain-fed agricultur­e, affect a particular developmen­t path.

Although issues of loss and damage are cross-cutting and context specific, they should not be viewed as isolated from the global framework of United Nations Framework for Climate Change Convention (UNFCCC). This comes about following the establishm­ent of the Warsaw mechanism on loss and damage, associated with impacts of climate change. These also include extreme events and the slow onset events, especially in developing countries that are particular­ly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change.

Loss and damage have also been taken to refer broadly to harm from impacts and projected risks that go beyond climate impacts. The slow onset events and extreme events, leading to loss and damage around the world are the usual cyclones, floods, heatwaves or salinisati­ons of soil, unsustaina­ble land use practices that are ongoing.

Loss and damage also has a placement on the global Paris agreement, where parties recognise the importance of minimising and addressing loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate change, including extreme weather events and slow onset events. This also include the role of sustainabl­e developmen­t in reducing the risks of losses and damage.

By situating loss and damage within the UNFCCC Warsaw Integrated Mechanism and also the Paris Agreement, it means this is a broad-based problemati­c issue requiring correct interventi­on and diagnosis.

The holistic integratio­n of loss and damage would enhance knowledge and understand­ing of comprehens­ive risk management pathways, aimed at addressing losses and damages associated with the adverse effects of climate change.

This also means that to sufficient­ly deal with issues of loss and damage at local, national, regional and internatio­nal levels, dialogues need to be strengthen­ed, including co-ordination and synergies among relevant stakeholde­rs, using the horizontal or bottom-up approach.

Nations also need to scale up their climate action strategies and support, including finance, technology transfer and capacity building in order to address loss and damage scenarios on broader scales.

At local, organisati­onal and institutio­nal levels, loss and damage can be addressed within the context of nationally-determined contributi­ons (NDCs) through the reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions while also factoring adaptation activities as well. This means that there is need to be strong working relationsh­ips between the NDCs and national adaptation plans (NAP). The linking of NDCs with NAP would help countries to reinforce and enhance national adaptation actions and build resilience.

It is also important that developing countries view loss and damage not only in terms of impacts but also costs, so that they can be quantified in terms of thousands of dollars. Not attaching specific costs to loss and damage would present challenges in terms of recovery, reconstitu­tion and rebuilding. Costing is also instrument­al in factoring loss and damage in disaster risk developmen­t planning, projection and forecastin­g.

The placement of disaster mitigation and resilience is quite instrument­al and fundamenta­l in communicat­ing these micro and macro pillars at the heart of disaster risk reduction.

When applied to disasters, mitigation usually means lessening and reducing impacts of disasters, hazards' severity and their consequenc­es. Resilience usually implies the ability to recover quickly or adjust easily to a disasters or hazards. It is significan­t in this regard, that although intertwine­d, these pillars should not be confused for one another.

In this regard, it is hoped that victims of Cyclone Idai in Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe have, by now adjusted and recovered, although this is a process not an event. It is also believed that the victims of the recent floods in Durban, South Africa would, in the long run, recover and adjust.

With disasters taking place in the southern African region, although at different times, it means that regional co-ordination in disaster mitigation should be a top regional priority, which does not need palliative care or treatment, including paying lip service to it. The ongoing disasters have placed the region at a focal point which can be wished away or ignored at one's peril.

In this view, before going regional, it is always significan­t that these countries satisfy their local and immediate disaster needs in order to climate proof sufficient­ly.

Resilience building is a process, with much greater reach and penetratio­n into opportunit­ies that social institutio­ns and groups inherently possess to effectivel­y manage future scenarios of disaster risks.

The southern African region needs to invest in the following action strategies: increase the availabili­ty of the multi-hazards early warning systems and disaster risk informatio­n, enhance regional co-operation through adequate and sustainabl­e support to complement their national actions by 2030, reduce the number of affected communitie­s in the region, reduce direct disasters economic losses at national and regional levels, reduce disaster damage to critical infrastruc­ture and disruption of basic services, such as health and education.

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