Climate change has the potential to erase much of the progress we have made to improve the lives of people experiencing poverty. Climate shocks and environmental degradation threaten livelihoods, food security, and infrastructure, increase violence, and can result in poorer life chances, especially for people in resource-constrained contexts. Last month, the World Bank’s Development Impact and Data Groups, together with the Center for Effective Global Action and the University of Chicago’s Development Innovation Lab, discussed these challenges at the ninth annual Measuring Development conference, “Mitigating the Risks and Impacts of Climate Change.”
Speakers showcased innovative approaches for measuring and tracking climate-related risk, developing effective responses, and evaluating outcomes in data-sparse environments. The conference brought together scientists pushing the frontiers of climate measurement by using remote sensing technologies, engaging in participatory data collection, and effectively (and meaningfully) integrating different data streams.
During her keynote, the University of Chicago’s Rachel Glennerster pithily stated that “mitigation is one of the true global public goods.” Indeed, the efforts by one country or group of countries to reduce carbon emissions will have worldwide benefits. Recognizing that low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)—who have historically contributed little to climate change nevertheless face growing opportunities to mitigate emissions for the whole planet, Rachel suggested high-income countries could fund highly costeffective mitigation efforts in LMICs. These payments should not be considered aid as they benefit the world and offset high income countries’ damage to the atmosphere.
Many speakers discussed how remote sensing can provide cost-effective measurement:
Of course, remote sensing is not just limited to satellites, and can inform adaptation and resilience alongside mitigation:
Not only are researchers and climate practitioners thinking creatively about the sensors they use to collect data, but they are also innovating on how to make data collection and infrastructure more participatory.
A third strategy to make data collection cheaper and more effective relies on exploiting efficiencies generated by integrating different data streams. The World Bank’s Stéphane Hallegatte stressed the opportunity and challenge of integrating these different data streams. Integration between household surveys and satellites, for example, would allow for better targeting of policy responses to climate shocks. Hallegatte stressed that traditional measures of vulnerability may miss some individuals who may be critically underprepared to face the “long tails” of climate shocks.
Adaptive research designs can accelerate scientific discovery of which interventions work best for particular contexts and communities, improving our understanding of how climate systems affect those who are socioeconomically and environmentally most vulnerable and how we may aid resilience:
Better measurement can improve our collective efforts to meet the challenge of climate change. As Stéphane Hallegate reminded us in his keynote, how we construct these measures of impact fundamentally affects what regions, communities, and interventions we prioritize. A critical part of this effort will be to leverage measurement strategies highlighted during MeasureDev 2023 to channel resources to the places and communities where interventions to mitigate and adapt to climate change will have the greatest impact. In so doing, measurement can contribute to a more equitable future by incentivizing green investments in LMICs.
Source : World Bank
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