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While government officials negotiate greenhouse gas emission reductions, poor communities are already feeling the impacts of a changing climate through increased incidence and severity of climate-related disasters such as hurricanes, floods and droughts.
The Winnipeg-based International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD), along with project partners IUCN-The World Conservation Union and Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI), are working together to demonstrate how community-based natural resource management can increase resilience to climate impacts.
"Because the poorest and the most vulnerable tend to rely more directly on natural resources for their livelihoods, and because many ecosystems can provide a natural buffer against climate hazards, sustainable environmental management can be important in building the resilience of these communities to climate-related disasters,” says John Drexhage, Director of Climate Change and Energy at IISD.
The IISD, IUCN and SEI are undertaking a three-year international research project to highlight successful examples of locally based natural resource management activities that enable communities to cope with disasters and prepare for the anticipated impacts of climate change.
"The rising toll of current climate-related disasters foreshadows the likely adverse effects of climate change. We need to find a more proactive, anticipatory approach that helps vulnerable communities prepare for and withstand the impacts of such change,” says Brett Orlando, IUCN’s Climate Change Focal Point.
They will be presenting their joint initiative at the Eighth Conference of the Parties (COP-8) in New Delhi, India. An event will be held on October 28, 2002 at 6 p.m.
The IISD is an independent, not-for-profit corporation. Its mission is to champion innovation, enabling societies to live sustainably. Established in 1990 with continuing support from the governments of Canada and Manitoba, IISD also receives revenue from foundations and other private sector sources.
John Drexhage is the Director of Climate Change and Energy at the International Institute for Sustainable Development. As a former Canadian negotiator on climate change, he has detailed expertise on many aspects of climate change.