Role of Local Communities in Adaptation to Climate Change Impacts in Ukraine

Published: 11 November 2009 y., Wednesday

Klimato kaita
In Ukraine local communities are directly affected by climate change impacts. These impacts include warmer temperatures, storms, floods, droughts, heat waves, windstorms and forest fires. These extremes have a direct negative impact on local, especially rural, population (losing homes, harvest, etc). Local authorities have enormous potential to address climate change impacts through their functions as transport and planning authorities, through other service delivery such as building control, community care providers, waste, housing, environmental health and trading standards, and as providers of green space (cited from Be aware, be prepared, take action: How to integrate climate change adaptation strategies into local government, printed by LGA, UK). However, local authorities rely mostly on central government to take adaptation steps. In the absence of national climate adaptation policy and other national level initiatives, climate change risks remain unaddressed and leave local communities with no local response.

The Resource and Analysis Center “Society and Environment” developed a project to stimulate local authorities to take climate change adaptation measures by assessing their performance on adaptation to climate change, making this information publicly available and putting public and media pressure on local authorities to improve their performance (target region – Lviv oblast). The Resource & Analysis Center “Society and Environment” is a non-profit organization focusing on environmental policy research, capacity building and implementation of innovative initiatives in Ukraine and regionally (Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia). The Center is based in Lviv, Ukraine.

The strategy is based on Center’s experience in rating environmental performance of enterprises. Rating environmental performance of enterprises and disclosing publicly the rating results has proved to be a promising complement to conventional regulation. This scheme in Lviv region– called PRIDE - is an initiative that rates firms’ environmental performance, according to specially designed criteria, from best to worst using colour labels (green, blue, yellow, red and black). After verification with enterprises the ratings are disseminated to the public through the mass media. The rating is periodically reviewed and updated which allows enterprises to be re-categorized.

Resource & Analysis Center “Society and Environment” intends to develop and apply a Climate Change Adaptation Rating Scheme to rate at least 50 local authorities in Lviv oblast, ranging from village to rayon councils/administrations, and reaching about 10,000 population. The outcomes of the rating are to be widely disseminated via mass media. Easy-to-understand comparative information brought to local population by mass-media will not merely educate them about climate change impacts, the need to adapt, but also intends to divert this into action – to put public pressure on local authorities. When developed, the scheme is easily replicable in other countries, especially in Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia.

This week, Nov 10-13, 2009, Resource & Analysis Center “Society and Environment” is presenting its project proposal - Rating Local Communities Performance in Adaptation to Climate Change - at the World Bank’s project contest Development Marketplace in Washington, DC (USA). The event brings together 100 top projects selected from almost 1,800 proposals submitted from all countries worldwide. Rating Local Communities Performance in Adaptation to Climate Change is the only project from Ukraine at the event.

Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Kidnapped teacher beheaded

Militants in the Philippines have killed a head teacher from this school in Jolo. An official from the army said the man was beheaded. more »

Police dog sniffs out pirate CDs

Ruca is no ordinary police dog. Instead of sniffing out drugs and explosives, he puts his nose to fighting the piracy industry. more »

Afghan protests over Koran burning

Afghans vent their anger on the streets of Kabul. They accuse American troops of burning a copy of Islam's holiest book, the Koran, during a raid in Maidan Wardak province last week. more »

9 out of 10 Europeans want urgent action on poverty

73% of Europeans consider poverty to be a widespread problem in their country while 89% want urgent action by their government to tackle the problem. more »

Human rights: Guinea Conakry, Iran and Sri Lanka

Parliament adopted three urgent resolutions on the need for the EU to impose sanctions further to the violent repression of a demonstration in Guinea Conakry, the abolition of the death penalty in Iran, and access for humanitarian organisations to the 250,000 civilians displaced by the civil war and held in camps in Sri Lanka. more »

The Natali Grand Prize is awarded to Chinese journalist Yee Chong LEE for his report on the Sichuan earthquake

The award ceremony of the Lorenzo Natali Prizes for Journalism took place today during the 2009 European Development Days. more »

Sakharov Prize 2009 awarded to Memorial

The European Parliament's 2009 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought has been awarded to Russian civil rights defence organization Memorial, and their three representatives Oleg Orlov, Sergei Kovalev and Lyudmila Alexeyeva, as well as all other human rights defenders in Russia. more »

DnB NORD Bankas revises term deposit rates

Taking into account changes on domestic money markets AB DnB NORD Bankas, a member of international financial group shall change individual and corporate time deposit rates from October 22. more »

Wild birds protected under common wings

Wild birds know no borders, so the conservation of endangered species requires trans-frontier cooperation. more »

EU to set new safety standards for sleeping products for newborns and young children

New safety standards for children's sleeping items - including duvets, baby sleeping bags and cot mattresses - which should help to prevent many cot –related accidents, were given a green light today by EU Member States. more »