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Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAS) Globally

Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAS) Globally. An overview. Outline. Timeline of the international climate negotiations. Bali 2007:

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Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAS) Globally

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  1. NationallyAppropriateMitigation Actions (NAMAS) Globally An overview Niklas Höhne

  2. Outline Niklas Höhne

  3. Timeline of the international climate negotiations Bali 2007: “Nationally appropriate mitigation actions by developing country Parties in the context of sustainable development, supported and enabled by technology, financing and capacity-building, in a measurable, reportable and verifiable manner” Niklas Höhne

  4. NAMAs submitted in 2009 Targets South Africa: GHG reduction target of 34% from business as usual (BAU) emissions growth trajectory by 2020 and of 42% by 2025 Strategies Côte d'Ivoire: Elaboration of an action plan for renewable energy Policies and programmes Botswana: Various policies in the transportation sector Projects Togo: Projects to replace existing lamps with high efficiency lamps Niklas Höhne

  5. Financing of NAMAs Niklas Höhne

  6. Outline Niklas Höhne

  7. Niklas Höhne

  8. Financial support can narrow the gap Source: UNEP 2013 Niklas Höhne

  9. Progress in climate policy Countries covering 67% of global emissions implement climate laws or strategies Source: Dubash et al. 2013 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2013.845409 Size scaled to national GHG emissions in 2010 Niklas Höhne

  10. Outline Niklas Höhne

  11. Global NAMA action • 83 NAMAs and 32 feasibility studies in 34 countries  Source: www.nama-database.org Niklas Höhne

  12. State of play of NAMAs • 40 submissions to the UNFCCC Registry: 50% from two countries; 4 unilateral • NAMA Database contains 83 NAMAs and 32 studies from 34 countries Source: www.nama-database.org Niklas Höhne

  13. Regionaldistribution of NAMAs NAMA • Latin America most active region • Followed by Africa (not Asia!) • Europe: Serbia submitted 12 NAMAs • Broader regional spread than CDM • Africa and Least Developed countries notably larger share • Possible reasons • NAMA emphasize on national appropriateness and sustainable development • Flexibility in design • Asian reluctance to phrase mitigation action as NAMAs Source: Ecofys et al 2013 CDM Source: http://cdm.unfccc.int/Statistics/Public/CDMinsights/index.html, accessed 15/01/2014 Niklas Höhne

  14. Sectoraldistribution of NAMAs NAMA • Energy supply still largest share (36%) • Followed by transport and buildings • Broader sectoral coverage than in CDM • Esp. transport and buildings notably more relevant • Possible reasons • Less stringent MRV requirements • Accounting for medium to long term emission reduction and transformational change possible Source: Ecofys et al 2013 CDM Source: http://cdm.unfccc.int/Statistics/Public/CDMinsights/index.html, accessed 15/01/2014 Niklas Höhne

  15. Types of NAMAs NAMA • Policy, programmes, strategies and plans NAMA is the focus (59%) CDM only projects Niklas Höhne

  16. Outline Niklas Höhne

  17. NAMA success stories • NAMA facility (UK/Germany) has been set up and finances the implementation of 5 project • Chile: Self-supply Renewable Energy • Costa Rica: Low Carbon Coffee NAMA • Mexico: NAMA for Sustainable New Housing • Colombia: Transit-oriented Development • Indonesia: Sustainable Urban Transport Program Indonesia • Best practice examples for NAMA process • Indonesia - Institutional framework and coordination of NAMAs • Bhutan - Application of a rapid gender assessment to identify entry points and targets for women in LEDS/NAMA design • Lebanon - NAMA Prioritization Process Source: nama-facility.org Niklas Höhne

  18. NAMA outlook and challenges • Overall level of ambition not sufficient to reach 2°C limit • Fast progress on NAMAs essential • Progress on NAMA finance in 2015 agreement • Is the vague definition of NAMAs an opportunity or a barrier? • National appropriateness will need to be balanced with need for defining NAMAs further • Transparency • Submitted proposals vary in degree of detail • (Best practice) learning across countries difficult • Financing • Level of financing available needs to be sufficient • Difficult determination of which share of the action is financed Challenges on NAMA will be covered in a later presentation Niklas Höhne

  19. Backup slides Niklas Höhne

  20. Climate Action Tracker Niklas Höhne

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