POPULATION DYNAMICS, REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND CLIMATE CHANGE Daniel - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

population dynamics reproductive health and climate change
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POPULATION DYNAMICS, REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND CLIMATE CHANGE Daniel - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

POPULATION DYNAMICS, REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND CLIMATE CHANGE Daniel Schensul, Ph.D. Technical Specialist, Population and Development Branch, UNFPA Population in the IPCC Framework Source: IPCC Fourth Assessment Report, 2007. The history of


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POPULATION DYNAMICS, REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Daniel Schensul, Ph.D. Technical Specialist, Population and Development Branch, UNFPA

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Population in the IPCC Framework

Source: IPCC Fourth Assessment Report, 2007.

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The history of population in the climate change talks

 The links have not been adequately addressed in

international circles

 When they are addressed, it is often simplistically

 Media reports swirling about the risks of population

growth

 UNFPA is working with partners to establish a

nuanced, evidence-based, and human-rights based perspective on the operational links between population, reproductive health and climate change

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Outline of the presentation

 Part 1: Population, RH and vulnerability/adaptation  Part 2: Population, RH and emissions/mitigation  Conclusion: Avenues for the links between RH and

environment

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Population, reproductive health, vulnerability and adaptation

A woman in Bangladesh hangs bottles of grain and

  • ther goods from her

roof to protect them from flooding

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The importance of adaptation

 The impacts of climate change have already begun,

and will accelerate; adaptation is a necessity

 We have good projections of what and where the

impacts of climate change will be:

 Temperature increase, sea level rise, change in precipitation,

storm severity, spread of vector borne disease, decreased agricultural production, etc.

 Low elevation coastal zones, floodplains, drylands, mountain

areas relying on glaciers/snowfall

 Missing or incomplete: who will be impacted, and how

to help vulnerable people adapt to climate change

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Vulnerability to climate change

 Vulnerability is unevenly distributed between:

 The wealthy and poor  Men and women  The young, the middle-aged and the elderly  Urban and rural populations

 Population change therefore matters for vulnerability  Understanding this changes the nature of adaptation

 Building adaptive capacity among people and

communities

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Population Action International http://www.populationaction.org/climatemap

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Zooming in: Ethiopia drought risk

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Zooming in: Ethiopia TFR

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Zooming in: Ethiopia CPR

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Intersecting vulnerabilities

 Vulnerability is seldom just about climate hazards  Poverty, limited access to services and climate

vulnerability co-occur

 In many places, this is happening in a context of

rapid population change

 “Mainstreaming” climate into the development

project

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Deepening the conversation

Population and emissions: What role for reproductive health?

A Bangladeshi woman, with her child, gardens on her roof to prevent losses during flooding

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Population projections to 2050

UN Population Division, 2011

6 6.5 7 7.5 8 8.5 9 9.5 10 10.5 11 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 2050 Billions High Medium Low

9.3b 10.6b 8.1b

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Population, emissions and mitigation

 Population size and growth matter for emissions  Population acts as a multiplier, with consumption and

technology; there is no set relationship between the number of people and the amount of emissions

 Example: USA versus Democratic Republic of Congo  Where population growth has occurred, and where

it will occur, matter for the resulting emissions growth

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Fertility and per capita emissions

0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 8.0 10 20 30 40 50 60

Other Developing Countries Least Developed Countries Developed Countries

Total fertility rate Per capita emissions (tonnes)

Qatar United Arab Emirates United States Switzerland China India Brazil Bahrain Kuwait Equatorial Guinea Democratic Republic of Congo

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Population, climate change and sustainable development

 Population growth will occur in the lowest emitting

countries

 How much slowing population growth reduces emissions

depends on consumption growth and poverty reduction

 Climate change is global; sustainable development is

both global and local

 Every country and person has the right to development  Slowing population growth will reduce pressure on

natural resources, and give governments time and resources for sustainable development

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How to link RH and environment?

 We must achieve universal access to reproductive health  Rio+20 should include population and reproductive

health – Agenda 21covered it in depth

 Funding and implementation for Rio+20 may be

limited, though the emerging Sustainable Development Goals may have more support

 The mitigation negotiations are complex and contested

– and population has never been included

 There are major opportunities in adaptation – and RH

provides mitigation co-benefits in the long term

 Our key avenues for RH linked to environment are

Rio+20 AND climate change adaptation

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UNFPA work on climate change

 2009 State of World Population, “Women, Population

and Climate”

 Population Dynamics and Climate Change  Climate Change Connections, resource kit on gender and

climate change

 Supporting UN CC:Learn and climate change training  Census data for climate adaptation analysis  Country projects, e.g. Indonesia, Malawi, Vietnam,

Dominican Republic

 COP14-17: leading in UNFPA mandate areas  Rio+20

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Daniel Schensul schensul@unfpa.org

Thank you!