Zubair Qureshi
Experts at a roundtable on climate challenges called upon the government and policy makers to come up with an inclusive and holistic approach to meet the exacerbating climate crisis through anticipatory adaptation.
The roundtable titled “Foresight and futuristic thinking for Anticipatory Adaptation in Pakistan” was organized by the Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) in collaboration with the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) to address how various stakeholders are thinking of future risks, and how these risks could be integrated into existing plans and policies.
In his opening remarks, Dr Babar Shahbaz, Faculty of Social Sciences, Institute of Agricultural Extension Education and Rural Development, set the ground for the participants to deliberate on pertinent and relevant issues precisely. To become future-fit, he said, it is important to understand future risks and take anticipatory actions.
Amina Maharjan, Senior Specialist Livelihoods and Migration, ICIMOD briefed the participants on the foresight and futures thinking for anticipatory adaptation in the region, methods to explore future pathways in terms of foresight, scenario development, development of efficient strategies and understanding foresight beyond predictions.
She briefed the participants on the emerging concept of foresight as the method of scoping, sensitization, participatory scenario development, integration into plans and policies and gender inclusive steps to address data gaps, and other shortcomings hampering climate resilient future development through a futuristic approach.
Sultan Mehmood, a representative from the World Food Programme (WFP) spoke about the climate adaptation related interventions being implemented through the WFP collaboration particularly the Living Indus Initiative. He underscored the need to address water management, governance, land cover area protection and multi-hazard vulnerability risk assessment (MHVRA) as crucial components to successfully meet the challenge of climate foresight.
Muhammad Farooq, Senior Joint Secretary, Ministry of Climate Change and Environmental Coordination, briefed the roundtable about the steps taken by the Ministry in the aftermath of rising magnitude of climate catastrophes. He highlighted baseline data based on modern techniques, MHVRA being done for high resolution data work underway on climate on mapping and prediction by 2090.
Farooq also pointed out lacunas in existing strategies particularly no linkage between adaptation and NDCs which has been done by developed countries. Pakistan has submitted its National Adaptation Plan to UNFCCC and is the 40th country to do it. Moreover, adaptation cells have been created at the Ministries including climate change, planning and at the provincial ministries. Pakistan is losing 8% of its GDP due to climate recurring catastrophes and it has crossed the tipping point of climate crisis and entered into a new normal, he added.
Dr Shafqat Munir, Deputy Executive Director, SDPI informed the forum that amid discourse on anticipatory approaches, it is required to have systems capable to workout disaster risk reduction and climate change anticipatory adaptation and foresight models. He said the stakeholders and partners are working in silos that need to end, whereas risk governance and financing need to be looked at with an anticipatory approach.
United Nations Environment Programme representative Arshad Samad Khan presented a brief view of climate vulnerability of the region and mentioned glacial melt in the north and sea level rise at the coasts in the south among the major climate crises faced by the country. He maintained that the lack of awareness at community level was the problem that needed to be addressed at the priority.