4 results on '"CLIMATE CHANGE FUND"'
Search Results
2. Climate Information Services Providers in Kenya
- Author
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World Bank Group
- Subjects
COMMUNICATIONS ,INFORMATION ,INFORMATION SERVICE ,CLIMATE RISKS ,RAINFALL DATA ,COMMUNICATION ,CLIMATE INFORMATION ,EXTREME WEATHER EVENT ,GASES ,CLIMATE APPLICATIONS ,TEMPORAL SCALES ,CHEMICALS ,EXTREME WEATHER ,TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ,SUNSHINE ,DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEM ,RAINFALL ,LAND USE ,CLIMATE CHANGE FUND ,PRODUCTIVITY ,CLIMATE EXPERTS ,SCIENCE ,TEMPORAL RESOLUTION ,LICENSES ,INCENTIVES ,EVAPORATION ,BUSINESS ,METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION ,LIGHTNING ,FERTILIZERS ,TECHNOLOGIES ,CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION STRATEGIES ,SEASONAL CLIMATE ,PHOTOS ,NATIONAL METEOROLOGICAL SERVICES ,HUMIDITY ,INFORMATION SERVICES ,CLIMATE SYSTEMS ,EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS ,REGIONAL CLIMATE ,CLIMATE PREDICTION ,CLIMATE MODELS ,WEATHER PATTERNS ,ASSESSMENT OF CLIMATE RISKS ,INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY ,INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,CAPACITY ,CLIMATE RISK ,LEAD ,CLIMATE PROJECTIONS ,COLORS ,PHONE ,PRICES ,AEROSOLS ,VALUE CHAIN ,CLIMATE VALUE ,SEA LEVEL RISE ,GLOBAL WARMING ,CLIMATE CHANGE ISSUES ,CLIMATE STATISTICS ,RELATIVE HUMIDITY ,METEOROLOGICAL SERVICES ,RAIN ,GLOBAL CLIMATE ,DATA PROCESSING ,ATMOSPHERE ,COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES ,COPYRIGHT ,HYDROLOGICAL INFORMATION ,COMMUNICATION MEDIA ,CAPABILITIES ,CLIMATE DATA ,GREENHOUSE ,MARKETING ,VISIBILITY ,TELEPHONE ,SEVERE WEATHER ,CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,INNOVATION ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,SEASON ,ENERGY ,WIND SPEED ,CLIMATE VARIABILITY ,TEMPERATURES ,FERTILIZATION ,NETWORK ,TEMPERATURE ,CLIMATE IMPACTS ,SATELLITE ,DROUGHT ,RESULT ,PHOTO ,SECURITY ,THUNDERSTORM ,LONG-TERM CLIMATE CHANGE ,IPCC ,AIR ,ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES ,FOREST ,USES ,REGULATORY CONSTRAINTS ,TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS ,WMO ,CLIMATE PREDICTIONS ,CLIMATE- SENSITIVE SECTORS ,PRIVATE SECTOR ,BUSINESS MODELS ,PRICE ,CLOUD COVER ,CLIMATE EVENTS ,GREENHOUSE GASES ,CLIMATE RESILIENCE ,CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ,CLIMATE EVENT ,FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,CLIMATE SYSTEM ,SURFACE TEMPERATURES ,METEOROLOGY ,ADMINISTRATION ,MOBILE PHONE ,CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION ,MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES ,SEASONS ,TROPICS ,MATERIAL ,FLOODS ,CLIMATE SCIENCE ,HYDROLOGICAL SERVICES ,RESULTS ,RADIATIVE FORCING ,WIND ,CLIMATE FORECASTS ,CLIMATE ADAPTATION ,CLIMATE ,QUERIES ,ICT ,SOLAR RADIATION ,RADIATION ,ECOSYSTEM ,PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP ,EMISSION - Abstract
Agriculture is a major driver of the Kenyan economy, contributing 54 percent to the national gross domestic product (GDP) and accounting for 65 percent of total export earnings. Kenya’s GDP growth is highly correlated with the sector’s performance, and its performance is highly volatile. The frequency and intensity of severe weather events has increased, and will be further exacerbated as a result of climate change. The country’s overwhelming reliance on rain-fed agricultural production systems renders it highly vulnerable to food supply disruptions and shortages. Climate information services (CIS) include immediate and short-term weather forecasts and advisories and longer-term information about new seeds and technologies and market developments. CIS is especially useful in helping farmers to manage risks in what is already an exceptionally risky sector in which to operate, and in offsetting much of the uncertainty that so often constrains decision making and innovation. CIS is a relatively new area in extension service delivery. Case studies reported on in this report reveal that only a small number of Kenyan farmers currently access CIS.
- Published
- 2016
3. The Cost of Adapting to Extreme Weather Events in a Changing Climate
- Author
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World Bank
- Subjects
GENERAL CIRCULATION MODEL ,SURFACE DATA ,EVACUATION ,CLIMATE RISKS ,CYCLONE TRACKS ,SEA-LEVEL RISE ,LAND SURFACE ,UNCERTAINTIES ,CLIMATE CHANGE PROGRAM ,DISASTER MANAGEMENT ,DISASTER RECOVERY ,EXTREME WEATHER ,RISKS FROM CLIMATE CHANGE ,REGIONAL CLIMATE MODEL ,CYCLONE ACTIVITY ,WIND STRESS ,FLOOD PROTECTION ,HEAT WAVE ,RAINFALL ,EARLY WARNING SYSTEM ,INCOME ,CLIMATE CHANGE FUND ,CLIMATE-CHANGE ,TIDAL WAVES ,CLIMATE CHANGE RISK ,EMISSIONS SCENARIO ,EVAPOTRANSPIRATION ,INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT ,TROPICAL CYCLONE ,HEAVY RAINFALL ,FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGE ,CLIMATE RISK SCREENING ,SEVERE WEATHER EVENTS ,CLIMATE- CHANGE SCENARIOS ,SURFACE RUNOFF ,METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION ,SEA-SURFACE TEMPERATURE ,PALEOCLIMATE ,MANGROVE FOREST ,DISASTER PREPAREDNESS ,CLIMATE HAZARDS ,SEA-LEVEL ,EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS ,FARMERS ,SUPER CYCLONES ,REGIONAL CLIMATE ,ANNUAL GROWTH RATE ,SCIENTIFIC CONSENSUS ,INFORMATION ON CLIMATE ,CLIMATE-PROOF ,INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,CLIMATE RISK ,TOTAL COST ,COLORS ,INTENSITY OF CYCLONES ,CLIMATE RESEARCH ,CYCLONIC STORM ,GLOBAL CLIMATE-CHANGE ,SUPER CYCLONIC STORM ,BUILDING CODES ,FLOOD ,GLOBAL WARMING ,CLIMATE-CHANGE SCENARIO ,CYCLONIC STORMS ,DEVASTATION ,RELIEF OPERATIONS ,EROSION CONTROL ,INFORMATION SYSTEM ,RAIN ,CYCLONES ,GLOBAL CLIMATE ,COST ESTIMATES ,CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGY ,MONSOON ,CLIMATIC VARIABILITY ,NATURAL HAZARDS ,NEGOTIATIONS ,CLIMATE CHANGE INVESTMENT ,SURFACE TEMPERATURE ,HYDROLOGICAL DATA ,IMPACT OF CLIMATE ,DROUGHTS ,SEVERE WEATHER ,PROBABILITY OF OCCURRENCE ,WIND VELOCITY ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,STORM SURGE ,STORM SURGES ,FLOODING ,SEASON ,STORMS ,COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS ,RAINWATER ,WIND SPEED ,CLIMATE VARIABILITY ,CLIMATE EXTREMES ,TEMPERATURE ,CASUALTIES ,IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ,IPCC ,IRON ,FOOD SECURITY ,HYDROLOGICAL SCIENCES ,INCREASE IN WIND SPEED ,FOREST ,FLOOD CONTROL ,CLIMATE HAZARD ,FATALITIES ,PRECIPITATION ,ECONOMICS OF ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE ,TEMPERATURE RISE ,TOTAL DAMAGES ,CLIMATE- CHANGE ,NATURAL DISASTERS ,TROPICAL STORMS ,EMERGENCY SHELTERS ,TROPICAL DEPRESSIONS ,BANKS ,CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ,DISASTER RELIEF ,CLIMATE-CHANGE SCENARIOS ,EARLY WARNING ,IMPORTS ,CLIMATE PROOFING ,FLOOD DAMAGE ,SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE ,RAINY SEASON ,CLIMATE CHANGE SCENARIO ,BASES ,TROPICS ,DISASTER RISKS ,DAMAGES ,SURGE HEIGHT ,ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE ,CLIMATE-RELATED RISKS ,FLOODED ,WIND ,CAPITAL COST ,INFORMATION ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,DISASTER ,FINANCIAL SUPPORT ,CLIMATE ,FLOOD FORECASTING ,AFFORESTATION ,EMISSION ,RISK EXPOSURE - Abstract
Bangladesh is one of the most climate vulnerable countries in the world. Situated in the delta of the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna (GBM) rivers, the country is exposed to a range of river and rainwater flood hazards due to climate variability, the timing, location, and extent of which depend on precipitation in the entire GBM basin. The Government of Bangladesh is fully committed to global climate-change advocacy and action, having already invested heavily in adaptation measures and policies. In recent decades, the government has invested more than US$10 billion to protect its population and assets in the floodplains. Given the uncertain magnitude and timing of the added risks from climate change, it is essential to identify the costs of climate proofing Bangladesh's critical infrastructure from intensified monsoon floods and cyclonic storm surges. Previously, few if any detailed studies have been developed on the costs of climate-proofing the country's infrastructure assets from inland monsoon floods and cyclones. Most analytical work to date has been confined to case studies, with relatively limited sets of locations, impacts, and adaptation measures. This study aims to fill that knowledge gap by providing detailed vulnerable population estimates and estimates of the incremental costs of asset adaptation out to the year 2050. It is part of a larger World Bank-supported study, entitled Economics of Adaptation to Climate Change (EACC), funded by the governments of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Switzerland.
- Published
- 2011
4. Development and Climate Change : A Strategic Framework for the World Bank Group - Technical Report
- Author
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World Bank, International Finance Corporation, and Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency
- Subjects
MANAGEMENT OF CLIMATE CHANGE RISKS ,CLIMATE RISKS ,CARBON FINANCE ,SEA-LEVEL RISE ,UNCERTAINTIES ,CLIMATE CHANGE REGIME ,CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES ,CLIMATE POLICIES ,ENERGY PRICE ,EMISSIONS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY ,CLIMATE CHANGE FUND ,GROSS NATIONAL INCOME ,TEMPERATURE CHANGE ,CLIMATE-RELATED DISASTERS ,FINANCIAL MECHANISM ,METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION ,FOSSIL FUELS ,CLIMATE DAMAGE ,SEA-LEVEL ,ECONOMIC DIVERSIFICATION ,WEATHER PATTERNS ,SUSTAINABLE FOREST MANAGEMENT ,CLIMATE INVESTMENT ,COLORS ,GLACIERS ,SEA LEVEL RISE ,LOW-CARBON ,EXTREME PRECIPITATION ,SOCIAL AFFAIRS ,ENERGY POLICIES ,NATIONAL CLIMATE CHANGE ,ECONOMIC GROWTH RATES ,METEOROLOGICAL SERVICES ,WIND STORMS ,GAS FLARING ,GHGS ,COST ESTIMATES ,CORAL REEFS ,EMISSIONS FROM DEFORESTATION ,ENVIRONMENTAL ,GREENHOUSE GAS INVENTORY ,EMISSION REDUCTIONS ,FOSSIL FUEL ,SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ,CARBON INTENSITY ,GREENHOUSE ,CARBON TECHNOLOGIES ,CLIMATE ANALYSIS INDICATORS ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,EXPOSURE TO CLIMATE RISKS ,SUSTAINABLE FOREST ,ANTHROPOGENIC GREENHOUSE ,FOREST DEGRADATION ,CARBON ,CARBON MARKET ,CARBON CREDITS ,FORESTS ,ENERGY INTENSITY ,GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE ,TEMPERATURES ,PORTFOLIO ,UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES ,CLIMATE RISK INSURANCE PRODUCTS ,TEMPERATURE ,INNOVATIVE FINANCING ,AIR ,GLACIER MELTING ,FOREST ,SUSTAINABLE GROWTH ,CLIMATE-SENSITIVE SECTORS ,DIFFUSION ,CO ,GLOBAL TEMPERATURE CHANGE ,ENERGY SECURITY ,EXCHANGE RATE ,FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS ,PRECIPITATION ,CO2 ,CLIMATE POLICY ,GLOBAL TEMPERATURE ,EMISSIONS LIMITATION ,FEASIBILITY ,FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,ADAPTATION FINANCING ,FINANCIAL RESOURCES ,CLIMATE-RELATED RISKS ,FLOODS ,AIR QUALITY ,ENERGY INFORMATION ADMINISTRATION ,PUBLIC GOODS ,MOUNTAIN GLACIERS ,CLIMATE ,INTERNATIONAL EMISSIONS ,IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ,UNEP ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ,GHG ,FINANCIAL FLOWS ,CLEAN DEVELOPMENT MECHANISM ,CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION ,MITIGATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE ,CLIMATE CHANGES ,GLOBAL EMISSIONS ,ECONOMIC GROWTH ,GLOBAL GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,TRANSACTION COSTS ,APPROACH TO CLIMATE CHANGE ,CARBON MARKETS ,EXTREME WEATHER ,IMPLICATIONS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ,LAND MANAGEMENT ,LAND USE ,COSTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ,CARBON NEUTRAL ,ACCESS TO CLIMATE RISK INSURANCE ,FINANCIAL CRISIS ,ANTHROPOGENIC GREENHOUSE GAS ,MANAGEMENT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ,FOSSIL FUEL USE ,CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGIES ,POLICY DECISIONS ,ABSOLUTE EMISSIONS ,POWER SUPPLY ,EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS ,RISK MANAGEMENT ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS ,INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,CLIMATE RISK ,EXTREME TEMPERATURE ,CLEAN TECHNOLOGY ,CERTIFIED EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS ,GOLD ,GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY ,EXTREME PRECIPITATION EVENTS ,EMISSION SCENARIOS ,GLOBAL CLIMATE ,CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGY ,RESPONSE TO CLIMATE CHANGE ,ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT ,FOREST CARBON ,FINANCIAL PRODUCTS ,GLOBAL CLIMATE POLICY ,IMPACT OF CLIMATE ,DEVELOPED COUNTRIES ,ENERGY PRODUCTION ,WIND POWER ,ELECTRICITY ,STORMS ,COAL ,CLIMATE VARIABILITY ,FROST ,CARBON DIOXIDE ,FUEL PRICES ,VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE RISKS ,HURRICANES ,GLOBAL CARBON MARKET ,CLIMATE IMPACTS ,POLICY ADVICE ,IPCC ,ALTERNATIVE ENERGY ,RESILIENCE OF ECONOMIES ,ATMOSPHERIC CONCENTRATION ,EMISSION REDUCTION TARGETS ,COMPACT FLUORESCENT LAMPS ,WMO ,LAND DEGRADATION ,FOREST FIRES ,ENERGY PRICES ,ENERGY USE ,INSURANCE ,EMISSION REDUCTION ,NATIONAL CLIMATE ,LAND USE CHANGE ,CLIMATE RESILIENCE ,CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ,CLIMATE ANALYSIS ,CLIMATE SYSTEM ,ANNUAL COSTS ,CLEAN ENERGY ,FINANCIAL_MECHANISM ,PRICE VOLATILITY ,EMISSION PROFILE ,ECONOMICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ,FORESTRY ,AIR TRAVEL ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,WIND ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY MEASURES ,RISKS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ,EXTREME TEMPERATURE EVENTS ,CLIMATE ACTION ,FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGES ,AFFORESTATION ,CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT ,ECOSYSTEM ,EMISSION ,GLOBAL GREENHOUSE GAS - Abstract
This strategic framework serves to guide and support the operational response of the World Bank Group (WBG) to new development challenges posed by global climate change. Unabated, climate change threatens to reverse hard-earned development gains. The poorest countries and communities will suffer the earliest and the most. Yet they depend on actions by other nations, developed and developing. While climate change is an added cost and risk to development, a well-designed and implemented global climate policy can also bring new economic opportunities to developing countries. Climate change demands unprecedented global cooperation involving a concerted action by countries at different development stages supported by "measurable, reportable, and verifiable" transfer of finance and technology to developing countries. Trust of developing countries in equity and fairness of a global climate policy and neutrality of the supporting institutions is critical for such cooperation to succeed. Difficulties with mobilizing resources for achieving the millennium development goals and with agreeing on global agricultural trade underscore the political challenges. The framework will help the WBG maintain the effectiveness of its core mission of supporting growth and poverty reduction. While recognizing added costs and risks of climate change and an evolving global climate policy. The WBG top priority will be to build collaborative relations with developing country partners and provide them customized demand-driven support through its various instruments from financing to technical assistance to constructive advocacy. It will give considerable attention to strengthening resilience of economies and communities to increasing climate risks and adaptation. The operational focus will be on improving knowledge and capacity, including learning by doing. The framework will guide operational programs of WBG entities to support actions whose benefits to developing countries are robust under significant uncertainties about future climate policies and impacts-actions that have "no regrets."
- Published
- 2008
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