RBM for climate change adaptation and mitigation.
Presented on 23 January 2015.
By Bruce Campbell, Phil Thornton, Ana María Loboguerrero.
CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture, and Food Security (CCAFS).
DESERT ECOSYSTEM AND ITS CHARACTERISTICS AND TYPES
RBM for climate change adaptation and mitigation
1. RBM for climate
change adaptation
and mitigation
Bruce Campbell, Phil Thornton, Ana María Loboguerrero
2. Outline
• Background (Climate change targets, CCAFS)
• Global and regional impact pathways and targets
• Regional coherence
• Planning and reporting system
• Managing for results
• Lessons learnt
• Q & A
3. Climate change targets
• UNFCCC
“measurable, reportable and verifiable” (MRV) – GHGs and
adaptation actions
• Alliance for Climate Smart Agriculture
Protect 500 million farmers from climate change
• SDG No 13
Strengthen resilience and adaptive capacity
Integrate climate change measures into national policies,
strategies, and planning
• Building farmer resilience
• Emissions reductions
4. FS2. Climate information
services and climate-
informed safety nets
FS3. Low emissions
development
FS4. Policies and institutions
for climate-resilient food
systems
FS1. Climate smart
technologies, practices,
and portfolios
5. Regional Programs
• Key feature: fits into an impact pathway
• Large bodies of work (e.g. US$1.5 million)
• Any kind of funds; single or multiple Centers
Projects
6. Process adopted
• RBM trial on one Flagship/Theme (2013-2014)
• Iterative planning (2014)
• Knowledge platform: Planning & Reporting system
• Define global impact pathways
• Define regional impact pathways
• Calls for ideas
• Regional planning meetings: targets, IPs
7. Intermediate Development Outcomes
(IDOs)
2025 Flagship Outcomes
2025 Regional Outcomes
2019 Flagship Outcomes
2019 Regional Outcomes
Cluster of
Activities
Cluster of
Activities
Cluster of
Activities
Project
Project
Project
Project
Project
Project
Project
Project
8. 4 +5
25national and subnational major development
initiatives and public institutions prioritize and inform
project implementation of equitable best bet CSA
options using CCAFS science and decision support tools
2 +3
15public-private actors at national and subnational
levels are using incentive mechanisms and new
business models/ markets that explicitly promote
equitable climate smart approaches along the value
chain, using CCAFS science
30mio. farmers, at
least 12 mio. of
whom are women,
with strengthened
adaptive capacity and
food security as a
result of programmatic
CSA investment.
Targets, e.g. Flagship 1: CSA practices
Regional targets
Project targets
Regional targets
Project targets
Regional targets
9. VISION: Agricultural sector in LAM manages climate to its advantage, understands and reacts
knowledgeably to climate variability and challenges using tailored climate information, and implements
sustainable and climate adapted practices to reduce food insecurity. Policy makers and planners are truly
using climate information and tools to design and implement plans and strategies that combine and
consider the trade-offs between adaptation and mitigation towards a low emissions agricultural
development.
CCAFS LAM Impact Pathway
Farmers, private sector and
governments choose,
invest and promote CSA
context-specific practices
through demand-driven and
strengthened extension
services rescuing traditional
knowledge to support
scaling up and out
processes. Governments
develop equitable local
agricultural development
plans that prioritize
investments focusing on
climate variability
challenges.
Meteorological Services,
Ministries of Agriculture,
generate and
communicate tailored
climate information for
decision-makers at national
and local level to help
smallholder farmers to
reduce climate risks.
Research institutions,
public and private Sector
develop demand-driven
insurance options based on
agro-climate information,
seed markets, and CSA
context-specific options.
Governments formulate
and implement NAMAS
and LEDS based on
improved data on
smallholder agricultural
GHG emissions generated
by research organizations
and implement equitable
policies to avoid
deforestation from
commodity agriculture,
promote restoration to
increase carbon
sequestration and reduce
GHG emissions from
livestock and commodities.
National governments
design and enact
equitable food systems
policies and strategies
taking adaptation into
consideration to support
national and regional policy
and global climate change
negotiations and
supported by private
institutions in their
implementation at national
and local level.
Climate-Smart
AGRICULTURE
Climate
INFORMATION
Services and Safety Nets
Low
EMISSIONS
Agriculture
Policies and
INSTITUTIONS
O
U
T
C
O
M
E
S
10. Portfolio in Latin America
AGROCLIMAS
(CIAT)
Livestock Plus
(CIAT)
Relevant climate change
Information meets
Decision-Making to
influence Policy and
Institutions for Climate
Resilient Food Systems
Evaluation Platform in Latin
America CSVs (Bioversity)
Coffee Landscapes
(Bioversity)
CSMS
(CIAT)
Citizen Science
(FP1, Bioversity)
Value Chains
(CIAT)
Extension Services
in Latin America
CSA Prioritization
Framework
Power Mapping in Central
America
Engagement with MoA and
Regional Bodies
Agroclimatic Network for
Central America
Index Insurance in Central
America (IRI)
Interdisciplinary research to
improve information for
decision making. (IRI)
LEDS
(IFPRI)
Cattle in Brazil
(CIFOR)
CCAC Agriculture Initiative
on Paddy Rice Capacity
Sustainable cattle
certification in Brazil
Capacity building in
conducting GHG
measurements in LAM
Monographs for Latin
America (IFPRI)
Socioeconomic
Scenarios
Bioversity Global
Policy Work
Support to Ministry of Agriculture of Colombia and CIAT Agreement
Climate-Smart Villages in Trifinio (Guatemala, Honduras, Tuma-La Dalia (Nicaragua), Cauca (Colombia)
Addressing Gender in Latin America
Climate-Smart
AGRICULTURE
Climate
INFORMATION
Services and Safety Nets
Low
EMISSIONS
Agriculture
Policies and
INSTITUTIONS
11. Colombia’s own CCAFS
Improved
crop varieties
Agroclimatic
forecasts
Policies
& NAMAs
Adaptation Plan for
the Agricultural Sector
Farmers
Government Private
sector
Producers’
associations
Socioeconomic
Scenarios
Climate-Site-
Specific
Management
(CSMS)
Climate-Smart
Villages
GHG
measurements
methods for
smallholders
Scaling up
activities
12.
13.
14. P&R process
Project Leaders Managers
Annual planning
Generate info
needed for
POWB
Annual reporting
against:
• outcomes
• targets
• deliverables
Generate reports
on topics needed
for annual reporting
M&E RBM
15. Managing for results
• Each Project has to:
Collect data on the indicators
Detail achievements in terms of its contributions to the
steps in the impact pathway
Produce case studies on outcomes achieved
• Annual achievements of Projects, Regions, Flagships
can be assessed
• Bonus allocation for excellent performances
16. Lessons learnt
• Time and resources needed
• New capacities needed
• Make systems “good enough”, practical, not the
best they could be
• RBM trial projects are doing things differently
17. Summary
• Major shift for CCAFS – new portfolio
• Interlinked impact pathways, from project to global
levels
• Interlinked targets and milestones along impact
pathways
• Platform for planning, reporting and monitoring
• Continual learning for RBM, adaptive managment:
learning briefs, wiki, M&E resources