Building Resilience : Integrating Climate and Disaster Risk into Development

This report presents the World Bank Group's experience in climate and disaster resilient development and contends that it is essential to eliminate extreme poverty and achieve shared prosperity by 2030. The report argues for closer collaboration between the climate resilience and disaster risk management communities through the incorporation of climate and disaster resilience into broader development processes. Selected case studies are used to illustrate promising approaches, lessons learned, and remaining challenges all in contribution to the loss and damage discussions under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The introduction provides an overview of the UNFCCC and also introduces key concepts and definitions relevant to climate and disaster resilient development. Section two describes the impacts of globally increasing weather-related disasters in recent decades. Section three summarizes how the World Bank Group's goals to end extreme poverty and boost shared prosperity are expected to be affected by rising disaster losses in a changing climate. Section four discusses the issue of attribution in weather-related disasters, and the additional start-up costs involved in climate and disaster resilient development. Section five builds upon the processes and instruments developed by the climate resilience and the disaster risk management communities of practice to provide some early lessons learned in this increasingly merging field. Section six highlights case studies and emerging good practices in climate and disaster resilient development. Section seven concludes the report, summarizing key lessons learned and identifying potential gaps and avenues for future work.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2013-11
Subjects:ADVERSE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE, AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, ASSESSMENT OF CLIMATE CHANGE, ATMOSPHERE, BANKS, BUILDING CODES, CIVIL PROTECTION AGENCIES, CLIMATE, CLIMATE ACTION, CLIMATE CHANGE, CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION, CLIMATE CHANGE FUND, CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS, CLIMATE CHANGE RESILIENCE, CLIMATE CHANGE RISK, CLIMATE CHANGE RISKS, CLIMATE CHANGE SCENARIOS, CLIMATE DATA, CLIMATE EFFECTS, CLIMATE EVENT, CLIMATE EVENTS, CLIMATE EXTREMES, CLIMATE HAZARDS, CLIMATE IMPACT, CLIMATE INFORMATION, CLIMATE INVESTMENT, CLIMATE MODELING, CLIMATE RESILIENCE, CLIMATE RISK, CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT, CLIMATE RISKS, CLIMATE SYSTEM, CLIMATE VARIABILITY, CLIMATE VARIATION, CLIMATE VULNERABILITIES, CLIMATE-RELATED DISASTERS, CLIMATE-SENSITIVE SECTORS, CLIMATES, CLIMATIC CHANGES, CO, COLORS, CONSUMPTION PATTERNS, CONTINGENCY PLANS, CONVERGENCE, DAMAGES, DEEP UNCERTAINTY, DEVELOPMENT NETWORK, DISASTER, DISASTER FINANCING, DISASTER MANAGEMENT, DISASTER PREPAREDNESS, DISASTER PREVENTION, DISASTER RECONSTRUCTION, DISASTER RECOVERY, DISASTER REDUCTION, DISASTER RESPONSE, DISASTER RISK, DISASTER RISK REDUCTION, DISASTER RISKS, DISASTER-PRONE COUNTRIES, DISASTERS, DOCUMENTS, DROUGHT, DROUGHTS, EARLY WARNING, EARLY WARNING SYSTEMS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC IMPACT, ECONOMIC RECOVERY, ECOSYSTEM, ELECTRICITY, EMERGENCY RESPONSE, EXTREME DRY, EXTREME EVENTS, EXTREME POVERTY, EXTREME WEATHER, EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS, FARMERS, FATALITIES, FINANCIAL CONSEQUENCES, FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL RESILIENCE, FINANCIAL RESOURCE, FINANCIAL RESOURCES, FINANCIAL SUPPORT, FLOOD, FLOOD MANAGEMENT, FLOODING, FLOODS, FOOD SECURITY, FOOD SHORTAGES, FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE, FUTURE CLIMATE CHANGE, GLACIAL MELT, GLOBAL CLIMATE, GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY, GREENHOUSE, GREENHOUSE GAS, GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS, GREENHOUSE GASES, HEAT WAVES, HEAVY RAINFALL, HURRICANE, HYDRO-METEOROLOGICAL DISASTERS, IMPACT OF DISASTERS, IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE, INCOME, INFECTIOUS DISEASES, INSURANCE, INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE, INTERNATIONAL STRATEGY FOR DISASTER REDUCTION, IPCC, LAND DEGRADATION, LAND USE, LONG-TERM FINANCING, METEOROLOGICAL DATA, METEOROLOGICAL DISASTERS, METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION, MMA, MONETARY FUND, MONETARY TERMS, MONETARY VALUES, NATIONAL CLIMATE, NATURAL DISASTER, NATURAL DISASTERS, NATURAL HAZARD, NATURAL HAZARDS, NEGATIVE IMPACTS, PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION, PHYSICAL DAMAGES, POLICY MAKERS, PORTFOLIO, PRECIPITATION, PUBLIC SPENDING, RAINFALL EVENTS, RAINFALL PATTERNS, RATE OF CLIMATE VARIATION, REHABILITATION NEEDS, REINSURANCE, RETROFITTING, RISK ASSESSMENT, RISK EXPOSURE, RISK REDUCTION, RISKS FROM CLIMATE CHANGE, SAFETY, SAVINGS, SEA LEVEL RISE, SEASON, STORM, STORM SURGES, STORMS, TEMPERATURE, TEMPERATURE RISES, TEMPERATURES, TROPICAL CYCLONES, TROPICAL STORM, TYPHOON, TYPHOONS, UNCERTAINTIES, VULNERABILITY TO CLIMATE CHANGE, WARNING SYSTEMS, WEATHER EVENTS, WEATHER EXTREMES, WIDOWS, WIND, WMO,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/11/18513435/building-resilience-integrating-climate-disaster-risk-development-world-bank-group-experience-vol-1-2-main-report
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/16639
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!