HomeClimate Change Experts say climate change demands a sea change in planning
Experts say climate change demands a sea change in planning
Monday, 12 October 2009
International experts have called for Vietnam to establish a national
platform for disaster risk reduction within the next year as the effect of
climate change loom ever larger on the horizon.
Margareta Wahlstrom, the UN Secretary General’s
Special Representative for Disaster Risk Reduction, said a “nationally owned
and nationally led forum” for advocacy, analysis, and advice on disaster risk
reduction could help improve disaster response and prevention efforts in Vietnam.
The UN official was speaking at the Vietnam
National Forum on Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaptation in Hanoi on Wednesday, which
attracted officials from the highest levels of government, international
agencies working on climate change reduction in the country and representatives
from 20 provincial flood and storm control steering committees.
“We need to be very clear that these losses can be
reduced,” Wahlstrom said. “We need to be very clear also that it is in our
power to control many of the factors that lead to disasters.”
The country has been identified as among the
world’s five countries worst affected by climate change effects. If sea levels
rise one meter, some 10 percent of Vietnam’s population will be
directly affected, 10 percent of its
GDP will be lost and about 40,000 kilometers of
its coastal areas will be inundated, according to the three climate change
scenarios released in August by the government.
Vietnam has implemented serious measures to battle the effects of
climate change, including the approval of the National Target Program to
respond to climate change and a national strategy for natural disaster
prevention, response and mitigation through 2020, according to Deputy Prime
Minister Hoang Trung Hai.
But Wahlstrom emphasized that “we cannot keep
focusing on response” while neglecting the root causes of disasters. That
includes tasks such as improving disaster preparedness, establishing risk maps
and early warning systems, and incorporating climate adaptation and risk
reduction in policy planning and national socio-economic plans.
Allaster Cox, Australian Ambassador to Vietnam, suggested Vietnam combine its action plans on
disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation to ensure greater policy
coherence.
“For every dollar spent on disaster risk
reduction, around US$7 are saved in avoided or reduced response and recovery
costs,” Cox said.
Nguyen Xuan Dieu, general director of dike
management, flood and storm control unit under the Ministry of Agricultural and
Rural Development, said there were still many shortcomings in the government’s
disaster management and mitigation efforts, such as slow response times, a lack
of staff at the local level and weak forecasting and warning systems.
“We can’t just leave the residents in the dark
when disasters approach,” Dieu said at the forum.
According to Dieu, the implementation of the
national strategy, which was approved in late September and could cost up to
VND250 trillion (US$14 billion), also aims to boost “non-structural” measures.
For example, it includes plans such as educating
more than 70 percent of the population in 6,000 disaster-prone communes
nationwide about disaster prevention, improving forecasting and warning
capacities, and also implementing long-term measures such as forests planting
and environmental protection.
However, the key for countries, according to
Wahlstrom, was moving from “talking” to “action.”
“We’re going to have to live with more extreme
weather,” she said. “Climate change is not a short-term environmental problem.
It will seriously change the risk landscape and will preoccupy civil society
and governments for the foreseeable future.”