Viet Nam: Environment and Climate Change Assessment
Viet Nam: Environment and Climate Change Assessment
Viet Nam: Environment and Climate Change Assessment
Viet Nam
Viet Nam
2013 Asian Development Bank All rights reserved. Published 2013. Printed in the Philippines. ISBN 978-92-9254-131-6 (Print), 978-92-9254-132-3 (PDF) Publication Stock No. RPS135693 Cataloging-In-Publication Data Asian Development Bank. Viet Nam: Environment and climate change assessment. Mandaluyong City, Philippines: Asian Development Bank, 2013. 1. Environmental management. 2. Climate change. 3. Viet Nam. I. Asian Development Bank. The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the AsianDevelopment Bank (ADB) or its Board of Governors or the governments they represent. ADB does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this publication and accepts no responsibility for any consequence of their use. By making any designation of or reference to a particular territory or geographic area, or by using the term country in this document, ADB does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status of any territory or area. ADB encourages printing or copying information exclusively for personal and noncommercial use with proper acknowledgment of ADB. Users are restricted from reselling, redistributing, or creating derivative works for commercial purposes without the express, written consent of ADB. Note: In this publication, $ refers to US dollars. 6 ADB Avenue, Mandaluyong City 1550 Metro Manila, Philippines Tel +63 2 632 4444 Fax +63 2 636 2444 www.adb.org For orders, please contact: Department of External Relations Fax +63 2 636 2648 [email protected]
Contents
Tables and Figures Currency Equivalents Abbreviations Acknowledgments I. Introduction II. Environment and ClimateChange in Viet Nam: IssuesandChallenges A. Drivers of Environmental Degradation and Climate Change B. Viet Nams Natural and Mineral Resources C. Predicted Climate Threats D. Impact of Climate Change on Development E. Transboundary Issues Linked to Environmental Management and Climate Change III. Institutional Framework for Environment and ClimateChange IV. Environmental and ClimateChange Mainstreaming V. ADBs Support Program VI. Development Cooperation VII. Mapping an ADB Strategy for VietNam Operations VIII. Moving from Strategy to Action IX. Guiding Principles Appendixes 1. Review of Climate Change Scenario and Impact Assessment Studies 2. ADB Country and Regional Assistance for Environment and Climate Change in Viet Nam 3. Climate Change Donor Assistance 4. Funds Through ADB for CarbonFinance, Adaptation, and Environmental Initiatives
iv v vi vii 1 2 2 4 5 7 11 12 17 19 22 24 27 31 36 41 48 51
5. Globally Available Funds and Facilities for Carbon Finance, Adaptation, and EnvironmentalInitiatives52 References 54
iii
Tables 1 Key Climate Change Scenario and Impact Assessment Studies 2 Predicted Climate Change Impacts in Viet Nam 3 Key Government Strategies and Plans on Environment and Climate Change 4 ADB Approach to Climate and Environment Activities in Viet Nam (by Sector) Figures 1 Carbon Dioxide Emissions in Viet Nam by Sector, 19802030 2 Areas under Inundation in the Mekong Delta Region of Viet Nam in 2100 under an Assumed 1.0-Meter Sea-Level Rise 3 ADBs Strategic Approach to Environmental Management and Climate Change 2 7 26 6 9 13 32
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Currency Equivalents
(as of 12 December 2012)
Abbreviations
ADB AFD ANR AusAID CCWG CIF DONRE EIA GDP GHG GMS GMS EOC ha IFPRI IMHEN IPCC AR4 km Lao PDR m3 MARD MOC MOIT MONRE MOT MPI MRC NGO NTP-RCC PMR PRC REDD
Asian Development Bank Agence Franaise de Dveloppement agriculture and natural resources Australian Agency for International Development Climate Change Working Group Climate Investment Fund Department of Natural Resources and Environment environmental impact assessment gross domestic product greenhouse gas Greater Mekong Subregion GMS Environment Operations Center hectare International Food Policy Research Institute Institute of Meteorology, Hydrology and Environment Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report kilometer Lao Peoples Democratic Republic cubic meter Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development Ministry of Construction Ministry of Investment and Trade Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment Ministry of Transport Ministry of Planning and Investment Mekong River Commission nongovernment organization National Target Program to Respond to Climate Change Partnership for Market Readiness Peoples Republic of China United Nations Collaborative Programme on Reducing Emissions from Deforestationand Forest Degradation in Developing Countries SEA strategic environmental assessment TA technical assistance UNDP United Nations Development Programme UNFCCC United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
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Acknowledgments
This report was managed by Lauren Sorkin, environment and climate change specialist, Viet Nam Resident Mission (VRM) and Pradeep Tharakan, climate change specialist, Southeast Asia Department (SERD), Energy Division. The report was written by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the International Centre for Environmental Management. Guidance and support were provided by Tomoyuki Kimura, country director, VRM; Ancha Srinivasan, principal climate change specialist, and Richard Bolt, advisor, Office of the Director General, SERD. Useful comments were provided by the ADB social development team, including Bart Edes, director, Poverty Reduction, Gender and Social Development Division, Regional and Sustainable Development Department; Suphachol Suphachalasai, economist, Economics and Research Department; and the Greater Mekong Subregion Core Environment Program team led by Sanath Ranawana, senior natural resources specialist, SERD. Thanks are also due to Pham Quang Phuc, environment officer; Huyen Le, environment and climate change consultant; and Dang Huu Cu, external relations officer; VRM; as well as to the staff of the Department of External Relations for their support in publishing the report.
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I Introduction
1. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved its country partnership strategy for 20122015 to support the Government of Viet Nam (ADB 2012). The objective of this paper is to provide guidance to ADBs Viet Nam country program on applying ADBs corporate strategies on environment and climate change and responding to lessons learned in Viet Nams operations to improve ongoing and future priority sector activities. The paper does not attempt to give a comprehensive scientific analysis of environment and climate change in Viet Nam; rather, it is a review of major environment and climate change issues in Viet Nam and their impact on socioeconomic development. It summarizes these major issues, reviews government initiatives to address them, and discusses ADB strategies for continued technical support and investment. The paper includes a discussion of sector risks and opportunities in the agriculture and natural resources (ANR), energy, health, transport, urban, and water sectors. 2. Viet Nam has made the transition from a centrally planned economy to a market-oriented system with unprecedented success. In 2010, Viet Nams economy grew by 6.8% (ADB 2011a), supported by a recovery in the global economy, accommodative monetary policy, and consumption growth. In 2010, per capita income rose to above $1,000 per annum, and by 2008 poverty levels had fallen to 14% from 60% in 1993. Viet Nam became a member of the World Trade Organization in January 2007. In 2010, the country achieved low middle-income status (ADB 2011c). 3. A key challenge for Viet Nam is to manage its rapid economic development in a sustainable manner and to prevent adverse impacts of environmental degradation and climate change. Industrialization, urbanization, and agricultural intensification have had harmful effects on air, land, and water, and have far-reaching implications for the energy and transport sectors leading to increased greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and reduced resilience to climate change. 4. Viet Nam is extremely vulnerable to climate change impacts given its extensive coastline and river deltas, and highlands that have poor water retention capacity and are susceptible to severe erosion. Reducing environmental degradation and improving resilience to climate change can have mutually reinforcing benefits for sustainability if effectively managed. Adaptation planning to improve resilience should contribute to ecological sustainabilityacknowledging that long-term resilience is built on resilient natural systemsand not simply increase the capacity of infrastructure to absorb more damage.
Source: Asia Pacic Energy Research Centre. 2006. APEC Energy Demand and Supply Outlook 2006. Tokyo.
(ADB 2009a). Due to the growth trend in total energy use and the heavy dominance of fossil fuels, national GHG emissions, 177 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent in 2005, are projected to triple by 2030 (World Bank 2011a). 6. Urbanization. Viet Nam is undergoing one of the fastest urban transitions in the world. It is the main driving force for economic growth. Viet Nam is home to 85 million people, of which 27% live in urban areas. That number is expected to increase to 45%, or 46 million people, by 2020 and to 50% by 2030. Cities already account for 70% of gross national product. Aggregate population growth is not high, but people are moving rapidly to urban centers and leaving agriculture for industry and services (WorldBank 2011a). Urbanization for residential dwellings and industrial expansion focuses on lowland areas that are optimal for high-value agricultural production. According to the Ministry of Labour Invalids and Social Affairs, Viet Nam was losing 73,300 hectares (ha) of cultivated land annually between 2001 and 2005 due to urbanization, affecting the lives of 2.5 million farmers.1 7. The rapid growth of industry and urban expansion have meant that the absolute levels of land, water, and air pollution are rapidly increasing. Untreated domestic, hospital, and industrial wastewater, poor urban drainage, and an expansion in the use of rivers, lakes, and ponds as dumping grounds for solid waste has seriously affected water quality through increases in the concentration, toxicity, and variety of pollutants (International Center for Environmental Management 2007). Air pollution is worsening with increasing costs and harm to public health and the environment. Some 667,000 tons of sulfur oxides, 618,000 tons of nitrogen oxides, and 6.8 million tons of carbon monoxide are generated annually in Viet Nam (Ministry of Environment 2011). There is a strong correlation between the sharp rise in absolute levels of nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides emissions and increased GDP. Particulate matter is also a problem affecting public health (World Health Organization 2005). An initiative to grade Asian cities for air quality ranked HaNois particulate problem as worse than that of Bangkok but better than those of Jakarta and Manila (Clean Air Initiative 2010). 8. Agricultural intensification and encroachment. Land use intensity is high, with yields above the mean level for Asia and an average of nearly two rice crops per year. Much of this intensity is achieved through high applications of agricultural inputs. Pressure to develop land and the conversion of marginal lands previously regarded as unsuitable for agriculture, with consequent deforestation and over-intensive land utilization is leading to greater levels of soil erosion and reduced soil fertility. High-intensity rainfall, suboptimal irrigation techniques, and a lack of incentives for farmers to adopt sustainable natural resources management lead to high levels of soil loss and pesticide and fertilizer runoff, which result in decreased productivity, and groundwater and surface water contamination. 9. Pressure to further intensify agriculture is increasing as arable land decreases. During 20002007, the total area under rice cultivation declined by 6%, or 360,000 ha, mostly due to rapid industrialization and urbanization (ADB 2010a). The land area allocated to rice production is projectedto drop by nearly 10% by 2030, to 3.8 million ha. While current rice yields in Viet Nam are high compared to those in other Southeast Asian countries, yields have begun to stagnate at about 4.7tons/ha (International Food Policy Research Institute 2010). 10. Viet Nam has seen a total transformation of the forest landscape since Doi Moi.2 The combinedforces of industrialization, urbanization, and agricultural encroachment have reduced forest cover. During 20002010, official figures show an increase in forest area, but this is due to increases in plantation forest and poor quality secondary forest. Intense exploitation and conversion led to a cover
Ministry of Labour Invalids and Social Affairs website Job creation for agricultural workers in urbanization and industrial zone development, 31 March 2008. Doi moi is the Vietnamese phrase describing the economic reforms initiated by the government in 1986 to transition toward a socialist market economy.
decline from 43% in 1943 to about 27% in 1990; but this then rose, approaching 40% in 2009. The loss of mangrove forests has been and continues to be particularly acute. Mangrove cover has declined from 400,000 ha in 1943 to less than 60,000 ha in 2008 (World Bank 2011a). Terrestrial and aquatic biodiversity continues to decline undermining climate resilience.3
Recent studies have shown the benefits of maintaining mangroves for building flood resilience in coastal communities in the Mekong Delta. Pilot investments from the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID) and GIZ are supporting community-based adaptation efforts that include mangrove replanting.
the Mekong River in the PRC for hydroelectric power is already affecting flows and sediment deposition in the Mekong Delta. Similarly, intensive hydropower development in Viet Nam is having significant effects on water flow and quality with impacts on agriculture, fisheries, industry, and biodiversity (ICEM 2010). Large-scale deforestation and reduction in forest density for conversion to plantation monoculture impacts evapotranspiration and alters stream flows reducing water availability. Current average annual countrywide water availability is 9,800 m3 per capita, although there are significant regional variations due to local microclimatic and geological conditions. In some basins, demand will exceed supply by 2020 based on current rates of development and water resource projections (ADB 2009b). 16. Viet Nam has abundant groundwater resources and an estimated total renewable potential of 63billion m3 per year; however, it is subject to countrywide variations. High-yielding aquifers are located near the Red River, the Mekong River, and the coastal plains. Some aquifer levels have shrunk by as much as 30 meters in Ho Chi Minh City and HaNoi due to overuse, causing land subsidence and water shortages (ADB 2009d). In areas with naturally forming arsenic, such as in the Red River Delta, overextraction can contribute to increased contamination of shallow wells. Expansion of brackish aquaculture, particularly in the Mekong Delta, has led to contamination of groundwater from both seawater and pollution from aquaculture inputs. 17. Agriculture. Approximately 28% of Viet Nams total land area is suitable for agriculture, although there are significant variations by region, with the highest production capacity in lowland areas. The agriculture sector is dominated by rice production, which comprises approximately 75% of total national crop production value. Viet Nam is the worlds second-largest rice exporter after Thailand. Other significant crops include coffee, tea, rubber, and cashews. Viet Nam is the worlds largest producer of pepper. The export market is constrained by insufficient infrastructure, particularly non-trunk road quality and penetration, as well as limited port capacity and efficiency. Export value and revenue is also limited as most products leave the country as bulk commodities due to the limited processing in VietNam.
IMHEN = Institute of Meteorology, Hydrology and Environment; IPCC = Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; ISPONRE = The Institute of Strategy and Policy on Natural Resources and Environment; MONRE = Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment; SIWRP = Southern Institute for Water Resources Planning; UNFCCC = United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Source:ADB.
Impact assessment and adaptation response development models and tools are insufficient, in particular for cross-sector or interregional assessments. There is a shortage of technical experts capable of running studies focused on climate change impact assessment and adaptation strategies. The current hydro-meteorological observation network is insufficient and inadequately distributed across climate zones and therefore unable to meet the demands for climate monitoring and/or early disaster warning. Broad national and/or multi-sector studies that assess climate change impacts and develop adaptation measures for the most vulnerable sectors and ecosystems have not been conducted. Climate change education, training, and awareness-raising plans and programs are unavailable at the national level. 21. It is necessary to assess the level of climate changerelated technological and analytical needs at the ministerial, agency, and provincial levels. Technical experts and professionals in Viet Nam need to be trained in order to facilitate the prompt and successful adoption of new climate change-related technologies. More importantly provincial and district officials must understand the implications of applying or not applying climate change-related technologies in their work. Furthermore, Viet Nam would benefit from a review of how existing guidance could be applied to minimize climate risks identified by the above analyses. 22. Recent or ongoing studies. Comprehensive climate scenario modeling work, which represents an update to the scenarios produced in MONRE (2009), has recently been completed by the Institute of Meteorology, Hydrology and Environment (IMHEN). The latest MONRE scenarios give further insight into the wider band of climatic variability predicted for Viet Nam. The 2012 reports show average temperature increases from 1.9C3.1C over large parts of the country with most extreme increases in the Central Region from Ha Tinh to Quang Tri of more than 3.1C. Worth noting is that days with temperatures above 35C are predicted to increase by 1020 days in large parts of the country. Furthermore, changes in precipitation show the risk of drought rising in the South and North Central Coast regions during the dry season. The combination of sea-level rise and increased precipitation in
Figure 2 Areas under Inundation in the Mekong Delta Region of Viet Nam in 2100 under an Assumed 1.0-Meter Sea-Level Rise
asl = above sea level, m = meter, SLR = sea level rise. Note: The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (2009) has projected a rise of100 centimeters (compared withthe 19801999 period) by 2100 under the A1F1 Scenario. While the Government of Viet Nam applies the more conservative B2 Scenario, the A1F1 Scenario is consistent with current global emissions patterns and relevant for long-term planning. Source: J. Carew-Reid. 2007. Rapid Assessment of the Extent and Impact of Sea Level Rise in Viet Nam, Climate Change Discussion Paper 1. Brisbane, Australia: International Center for Environmental Management.
the rainy season, on the other hand, increase the risk of extreme events countrywide, and in particular in the Mekong River Delta (Figure 2). Specific impacts on socioeconomic development are discussed in the next section. Studies have employed a variety of tools, models, and approaches. In 2012, MONRE published this work in Vietnamese and English under the title Climate change, sea level rise scenarios for Viet Nam. IMHEN, with support from the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation will produce more precise regional and provincial modeling for Viet Nam in 2013.
health problems; (ii) droughts and heavy rainfall causing significant reductions in crop yields and productivity of subsistence agriculture, which may lead to malnutrition, micronutrient deficiencies, or, in more extreme cases, starvation; (iii) an increase in the number of very hot days in large cities, along with forest fires and dust storms adversely impacting air quality over broad areas (both urban and rural) and exacerbating the occurrence and intensity of health complications associated with high temperatures (e.g., heat stroke) and respiratory diseases (e.g., asthma); and (iv) changes in temperature and rainfall patterns impacting not only the occurrence of vector-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue, but also changing and possibly extending the geographical habitat of the vectors of such diseases (ADB 2011d). 24. In addition, sea-level rise and more frequent extreme weather events are expected to increase climate-induced migration. Various studies have estimated the impacts of climate change on migration in Viet Nam, including a recent multiagency study that estimated that a 1 m sea-level rise could displace more than 7 million residents and flood the homes of more than 14.2 million residents in the Mekong Delta as well as submerge half of the regions agricultural land (Warner et al. 2009). Relocation of human settlements and agricultural production on this scale would require a concerted government response to respond to ensuing health, economic, and safety concerns. 25. Water resources. Altered precipitation patterns will lead to less reliable and reduced river flows during dry periods. Further pressure on the water supply will come from the projected increases in evaporation from paddy fields that are brought on by climate change. The agriculture, industry, and energy sectors will be negatively impacted at times of reduced water availability, and they will be forced to compete for limited water supplies. In 2020, water use is expected to increase to 120 billion m3 from 2008 consumption of about 80 billion m3 (ADB 2009). Upstreamdownstream water management issues will become acute with climate change. For example, the development of upstream hydropower can affect flow and sediment deposition patterns for downstream irrigation and agriculture, especially in the Mekong and Red river deltas. There are increasing but poorly understood effects on agricultural productivity due to constraints on water access for irrigation during the dry season and reduced sediment deposition on agricultural lands from irrigation and floodwaters. 26. The implications of climate change for the relationship between the energy and agriculture sectors requires thorough analysis. Hydropower generates a third of Viet Nams electricity, and agriculture accounts for 80% of the surface-water consumption (ADB 2009b). With increases in energy demand to supply urban and industrial centers, conflicts over water management are likely to increase. Much of the potential shortfall in absolute water supply is a consequence of inefficiencies in rural and urban water management practices and suboptimal water utilization. Water loss in Asia is estimated to cost between $9billion and $10billion per year (ADB 2011b) and includes a large component of wasted energy to pump it. Low flows may also magnify the effects of surface water contamination and render some surface water unsuitable for agricultural and human use. 27. Agriculture. In 2050, total GDP could be reduced by 0.7%2.4% as a result of climate change impacts on agriculture (World Bank 2010). Some 1.1 million ha, or 70% of land under cultivation in the coastal areas, are threatened by a sea-level rise of 1 m and resulting saltwater intrusion, of which more than 930,000 ha is in the Mekong Delta. Kien Giang is the most affected province, with almost 75% of its cultivation land being threatened (IMHEN 2010). The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) projects the impact of a sea-level rise of 1 m to be greater, resulting in over 2 million ha of lost land for crop cultivation (ADB and IFPRI 2009). By 2030, rising sea levels in the delta would expose 45% of the land to extreme salinization and crop damage, with rice productivity falling by 9% (United Nations Development Programme 2007). Also, climate change will affect temperature and precipitation patterns, both with a direct effect on crop production and indirect effects through changes in irrigation water availability and potential evapotranspiration. 28. Table 2 provides a summary of potential impacts of climate change in Viet Nam.
Medium term
Long term
Source: Adapted from Mekong River Commission. 2009. Climate Change Adaptation in the Lower Mekong Basin Countries, Regional Synthesis Report. International Centre for Environmental Management, Ha Noi.
29. Energy. Viet Nams growing population, rising living standards, and overall pace of development are driving increased energy demand, with per capita energy consumption projected to reach 5,400 kilowatt-hours by 2030 from 985 kilowatt-hours in 2010. The share of electricity consumption is 52% from industry, 39% from residential areas, and 8% from agriculture. The large increase in energy demand and requisite infrastructure investment required to satisfy energy needs in an environmentally sustainable manner pose a significant challenge, especially as climate change takes hold. Increased temperatures and reduced dry season rainfall will increase power demand for cooling and pumping. Medium-term government plans to meet these growing needs include a mix of new coal and hydropower projects. Hydropower has GHG emission benefits compared to other energy options, but it has serious implications for competing water uses and for biodiversity. Coal usage, promoted by controlled pricing, will increase GHG emissions and further reduce air quality even with plans to utilize more efficient technology. 30. A clean, affordable, and reliable power supply is needed to meet the energy demand and minimize environmental impacts. Current plans estimate that energy demands by 2015 will be met through coal, hydroelectricity, and natural gas, and increasingly supplemented by nuclear and renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, and small-scale hydropower. The Government of Viet Nam has committed to market-oriented pricing that would reduce the demand for coal compared to cleanerburning natural gas and other energy sources. 31. Transport. During 20012005, extreme weather events cost the transport sector D2,571 billion in damage. If mean sea level rises by 1 m, MONRE estimates that 11,000 km of roads could be submerged. The total length of national highways threatened would be 695 km, including 495km in the Mekong Delta alone (MONRE 2010). About 4.3% of existing national and local roads would be permanently submerged with a sea-level rise of 1 m, including 574 km of dikes. Almost 90% of affected road infrastructure is in the Mekong Delta region, most in Soc Trang, Kien Giang, Bac Lieu, and Tra
Vinh provinces (Carew-Reid 2007). At the same time, GHG emissions from the transport sector are expected to triple between 2010 and 2030 (MONRE 2010). 32. Industry. A recent study suggests that if Viet Nam experiences a 1 m rise in sea level, manufacturing enterprises in 20 provinces would be inundated. Most provinces with large numbers of firms affected are in the Mekong River Delta and southeast regions, which contribute 56% of national industrial production by value.4 In Long An Province, 100 enterprises would be inundated. Close to 500 large and medium-sized enterprises would be affected in Ho Chi Minh City. Many of the 24,000 small manufacturing enterprises operating in the city would also be affected; most are located in areas that are already vulnerable to inundation. Ho Chi Minh City has 16 industrial estates that would be affected; 9 of them would be inundated and the others would be within reach of storm surges. In the southeast region overall, 55 industrial estates would either be inundated or at high risk of disruption due to storm surges and other impacts related to sea-level rise (Carew-Reid 2007). 33. The same study points out that damage to industrial enterprises and estates is critical with respect to lost production, property, and revenue, as well as toxic contamination. There are many seriously polluted areas, including land areas, lakes, ponds, and river beds and banks, where concentrations have accumulated over many years. The implications for fisheries, water quality, and public health of having contaminated sites inundated due to sea-level rise and storm surges have not been analyzed but are likely to lead to substantial economic and social impacts (International Center for Environmental Management 2007a). 34. Urbanization. Climate change and environmental degradation will impact urban development. The ADB Ho Chi Minh City Adaptation to Climate Change study analyzed climate impacts on Ho Chi Minh City, where half of the land area is less than 1 m above sea level (ADB 2010). The rapid urbanization of low-lying areas will increase the amount of assets at risk from extreme events. This is of national concern as Ho Chi Minh City accounts for 23% of Viet Nams total GDP. Urbanization and infrastructure projects will be increasingly disrupted by inundation in low-lying areas as hard surfaces proliferate, reducing infiltration. Effective management of runoff during higher intensity inundation events will become a more pressing issue. The urban poor will be increasingly vulnerable to extreme events because they live in areas most at risk typically along canals and riverbanks, and in swampy coastal lands. 35. Forest and biodiversity loss. The impacts of predicted temperature increases are likely to have significant effects on land, forest, and biodiversity. The relationships are complex but, with other development pressures, many areas and natural systems will be negatively affected due to a lack of adaptive capacity. The degradation of mangrove systems, for example, is likely to increase due to more frequent forest fires and the lack of undeveloped areas that would allow the ecosystem to shift inland. Mangrove loss will make coastal fishing communities more vulnerable to extreme events. Sea-level rise, combined with other climate change and development influences, will increase saltwater intrusion and degrade freshwater resources, reducing the viability of agricultural land. A 1 m mean sea-level rise in the southern region could permanently inundate 300km2 of mangrove forest, corresponding to 15.8% of the total national mangrove forest area (MONRE 2010). 36. Plant species composition is likely to alter due to changing climate conditions, causing shifts in ecoclimatic zones, and increasing prevalence and influence of invasive exotic species. Higher demand for timber products and the conversion of forests to cropland will impact forest sustainability and biodiversity. The degradation of the quality of forestry resources and of biodiversity will disproportionately affect the poor, women, and minority groups who are most dependent on subsistence forestry practices. Perhaps the most serious losses of biodiversity will occur in aquatic systems both freshwater and marine; but so little is
4
Information on the manufacturing sector of Viet Nam is available through the World Bank/International Center for Environmental Management country environmental analysis, which uses provincial level information from the General Statistics Office enterprise survey of 2004 (International Center for Environmental Management 2007a).
known about them that current losses due to hydropower and other development and future losses due to climate change will largely go unnoticed except by local communities dependent on them.
The MRCs full procedure for notification, prior consultation and agreement was triggered for the first time on 22September 2010 with the official notification from the Lao PDR of the proposed Xayaburi mainstream project. The mainstream hydropower project proposals are an important test for the procedure and regional cooperation in implementing the 1995 Mekong Agreement. To support informed decision making, the MRC commissioned a strategic environmental assessment (SEA) of the 12proposalsthe first SEA to be conducted by the MRC. It recommended a 10-year moratorium on mainstream development while effective mechanisms and capacities for management and regulation of transboundary issues were put in place, in addition to building and more complete understanding of its environmental implications. ADB is about to conduct a second SEA, this one on the GMS energy and transmission plan, which provides another important opportunity for enhancing regional collaboration on the management of shared resources.
Table 3 Key Government Strategies and Plans on Environment and Climate Change
Strategy/Plan Socio-Economic Development Plan (SEDP) for 20112015 Priorities Emphasize actions to cope with climate change, increase forest coverage, improve water supply coverage, improve treatment of industry waste, improve treatment of solid waste, and prosecute pollutionviolators. Emphasize response to sea-level rise and vulnerability of low-lying coastalregions. Responsible Agency Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI) Implementing Legislation
Strategic Orientation for Sustainable Development in Vietnam (2004) (National Agenda 21)
Vietnam Agenda 21 Office Develop an institutional system supporting sustainable development MPI (e.g., National Sustainable Development Council) Develop and implement local and sector Agenda 21 6 pilot provinces: Son La, Thai Nguyen, Ninh Binh, Quang Nam, Lam Dong, Ben Tre 4 pilot sectors: agriculture, fishery, construction, industry Mobilize and allocate resources for implementation of Vietnam Agenda21 Promote environmental protection, pollution prevention, area-specific environmental management, and biodiversity conservation Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE) Revised Land Law (2003) Amended Law on Environment Protection (2005) Law on Water Resources Forest Protection and Development Law (2004) implemented through MARD Biodiversity Law (2009) Law on Water Resources Benefits of a Climate Change Act being considered by the National Assembly Law on Electricity 2004 Amended Lawon Environment Protection (2005) continued on next page
National Strategy for Environmental Protection until2010 and Vision to 2020 and 5-year actionplans National Biodiversity Action Plan to 2010 and Orientations towards 2020
Conserve terrestrial biodiversity Conserve biodiversity in wetlands andmarine areas Conserve and develop agricultural biodiversity Use biological natural resources sustainably Strengthen state management capacity on biodiversity and biosafety
MONRE
National Strategy On Climate Change for 2050 and the Vision to2100 National Target Program to Respond to ClimateChange (2008)
MONRE Focus on construction of coastal breakwaters and irrigation works to combat seawater intrusion and hightides Require all sectors and local governments to prepare and implement climate change actionplans in their areas of responsibility, as wellas report onprogress
Table 3 Continued
Strategy/Plan Second National Strategy and Action Plan for Disaster Mitigation and Management 20012020 Priorities Stress importance of coexistence with floods in situations that demand it Establish disaster forecast centers in the north, center, and south of thecountry Construct flood corridors and flood retention areas in southern Viet Nam Design principally to address short-term climate extremes Responsible Agency Central Committee of Storm and Flood Control Department of Dike Management and Flood Control of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) Implementing Legislation Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Law under consideration by the National Assembly
MARD Ensure stable agricultural production and food security and the maintenance of dike and infrastructure systems Focus on the Cuu Long and Red river deltas and the central and mountainous areas Reduce emissions from deforestation and forest degradation Undertake greenhouse gas mitigationactions Improve energy efficiency in major industries, with objective achieving 8% reduction in energy consumption by2015, with emphasis on renewablesources Ministry of Investment andTrade
Transport Climate Change Action Plan 20112015 (2010) Provincial climate change action plans
Ministry of Transport Assess impacts of climate change on transport infrastructure and activities Identify suitable mitigationand adaptation options for transport projects There are a growing number of climate change actions plans at the provincial level as required under the National TargetProgram to Respond to ClimateChange Improve capacity for the review of Strategic Environmental Assessment, Environmental Impact Assessment, and Environmental Protection Commitments for master plans (socioeconomic development plans), and large and complex projects in VietNam Develop capacity of line ministries to review plans and projects for environmental issues Decentralize responsibility for smaller projects to provincial authorities Mandate the creation of provincial and other subnational disaster risk management strategies and plans and establish subordinate provincial and district committees for flood and stormcontrol Provincial peoples committees and departments of natural resources and environment MONRE, departments of natural resources and environment, MPI, various line ministries 2011 Environment Decree (29/2011/ N-CP)
The National Strategy on Disaster Risk Management to 2020 and the Ordinance on Flood and StormControl
Source:ADB.
associated land degradation, as wellas inefficient intensive rice irrigation, fertilization, and processing are two of the largest contributors to GHG emissions in Viet Nam. MARD therefore has a lead role in policy and planning for the United Nations Collaborative Programme on Reducing Emissions from Deforestationand Forest Degradation in Developing Countries (UN-REDD). MARD is responsible for implementing Viet Nams national Payment for Forest Environmental Services Decree: 99/2010/ND-CP which requires collection of payments from forest ecosystem services users and disburses the funds to forest managers to support sustainable resource management and livelihoods. 44. MARDs fisheries functions include marine protected areas. Its forest management cover special-use forests (or terrestrial protected areas), protection forests (for watershed and coastal protection), and production forests (including both plantations and natural forests designated for production purposes). In most cases, day-to-day forest management responsibility is devolved to state entities at provincial, district, and commune levels. Only a small proportion of forest land has been allocated to the community and household level. 45. The MPI is responsible for state management of planning and investment, including national socioeconomic development plans, and official development assistance throughout the country. It is responsible for mainstreaming sustainable development and climate change into Viet Nams strategies and development plans. The MPI facilitates implementation of the National Sustainable Development Strategy (Agenda 21) in sectors and local government areas, although the specific role and influence of the Agenda 21 on government development policy and action is not clear. The MPI, with international support, has undertaken a study into low-carbon, climate-resilient development in Viet Nam as the first step in designing a low-carbon growth strategy as identified in the NTP-RCC. 46. The Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT) is also a key stakeholder in addressing climate and environmental issues. MOIT leads the development and management of key industrial sectors including iron, steel, cement, machinery, metallurgy, power generation, renewable energy, oil and gas, mining, fertilizers and chemicals, and explosive materials, which are some of the most GHG-intensive industries. MOIT owns over 2,000 industries, including 51 large general companies and enterprises and numerous enterprises concerned with steel, petroleum, chemicals, textiles, paper manufacturing, and coal mining. By June 2005, only 300 of the MOIT state-owned enterprises (15%) had been equitized. MOIT prepares inventories of GHG emissions from industry and is responsible for managing national target programs on energy efficiency and conservation. In line with several government directives, MOIT and the Ministry of Transport (MOT) have established environment departments to help improve sector environmental management and performance. 47. The MOT governs rail, road, and water transport in Viet Nam. The transport sector, as the main user of petroleum fuels, contributes to the production of GHGs, mainly carbon dioxide. Key strategic decisions on the technologies and mix in transport modes will have far-reaching impacts on national GHG emissions and on the capacity of the country to adapt to climate change. The MOT plans and implements national infrastructure development, such as major roads and rail and port facilities. Poorly planned and located road development is a significant factor in biodiversity and forest loss in Viet Nam. 48. The provincial, municipal, and district authorities have the responsibility for implementing the central governments environmental policy. At each of these levels, departments of natural resources and environment (DONREs) are responsible for facilitating and enforcing regulations of natural resources and the environmental. Enforcement of forestry and fisheries regulations is the responsibility of departments of agriculture and rural development and linked departments and divisions. Viet Nam has introduced a special environment police force, which now operates in most provinces with increasing effect across the environment and natural resource fields, for example, in enforcement of pollution control and wildlife trade regulations.
49. The Ministry of Construction is responsible for urban and regional infrastructure planning and development control. It administers the national building code and, through its urban planning institutes, prepares plans for most cities, towns, and other settlements in the countryin addition to supporting MONRE and the DONREs in preparing their land use plans. The Ministry of Construction has extensive responsibilities for promoting and implementing climate change adaptation and mitigation measures in the built and urban environment. 50. Viet Nam has had a long-running weakness in the institutional arrangements for protected area management. All but three national parks have now devolved to provincial management. Although covering close to 10% of the nations land territory, management boards have little status, authority, or resources, so other sectors such as transport, energy, mining, and irrigation tend to dominate when they have competing development plans for the areas. In practice, the Forest and Fisheries Laws under MARD are the key statutes defining how protected areas are managed, but the evolving role of the Biodiversity Law6 reflects the ongoing fluid situation concerning the roles and authority of MARD and MONRE. 51. The Viet Nam National Mekong Committee under MONRE is responsible for oversight of MRC activities through the 1995 Agreement on Cooperation for the Sustainable Development of the Mekong River Basin, between Cambodia, the Lao PDR, Thailand, and Viet Nam. The committee is participating in the implementation of the MRC Climate Change Adaptation Initiative, which includes the establishment of a Mekong panel on climate change and a network of demonstration projects throughout the Lower Mekong Basin.
MONRE is drafting a protected areas decree to fall under the Biodiversity Law. At the same time, MARD is revising its decrees and circulars on protected areas.
57. The National Target Program on Energy Efficiency and Conservation for 20062015 is the responsibility of MOIT. It includes the formulation and implementation of GHG mitigation options, and primarily provides financial and technical support for energy efficiency improvements in major industries with objectives of achieving reductions in energy consumption of 8% by 2015 and deriving 2,500megawatts of energy usage from renewable sources by 2015. To encourage this, a supporting policy framework has been established that requires Vietnam Electricity to purchase electricity from renewable suppliers. Progress in implementing the program has been limited. Despite the goals of increasing energy efficiency and renewal energy usage, per capita energy intensity has risen by approximately 4% per year since 1990, with the amount sourced from renewable sources still small and the majority of increased capacity met by coal-fired power generation. 58. The MARD Action Plan on Climate Change seeks to mobilize development assistance for climate change mitigation and adaptation. The main objectives of the plan are to enhance the governments capacity for climate change adaptation and mitigation to minimize its adverse impacts and then ensure sustainable development of the agriculture and rural development sector; ensure the stability and safety of residents in cities and different zones and regions, especially the Cuu Long and Red River deltas and the central and mountainous areas; ensure stable agricultural production and food security in an agricultural area of 3.8millionha with two seasonal rice crops; ensure the maintenance of dike and infrastructure systems to meet disaster prevention and mitigation requirements; strengthen international cooperation by promoting the link with international and regional programs, and receive technical and financial assistance from international communities in climate change adaptation and mitigation; and ensure financial support for the plans implementation from the government budget and by mobilizing official development assistance, international cooperation support programs, and other sources of national and international assistance. 59. MARD has established a standing committee on mainstreaming climate change considerations within natural resources and rural development sectors. 60. The MOT enacted a framework for the Transport Action Plan of the NTP-RCC in early 2011. The action plan focuses on assessing the impacts of climate change on transport infrastructure and activities based on MONRE scenarios; identifying suitable mitigation and adaptation options for transport projects; and collaborating with ministries, institutes, and international agencies to raise awareness and build the MOTs management capacity to respond to climate change. 61. Within MOIT, the Office of the General Director of the Industrial Safety Techniques and Environment Agency has developed the MOIT Climate Change Action Plan, approved in August 2010 (Decision 4103/QD-BCT). MOIT has established its own climate change steering committee to coordinate activities with other departments, corporations, groups, institutes, and enterprises. Theplan identifies the need to develop a robust approach to adaptation and mitigation planning with appropriate decision support tools. In addition, it stresses the need for capacity strengthening within the ministry andits constituent industries, and support for the development of enabling regulations and implementing rules.
Climate change adaptation decision-making supporting positive development outcomes, whether or not specific climate change impacts actually materialize (definition from http://www.adb.org/sites/default/files/pub/2009/Under-Weather-Rising-Tide.pdf).
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65. ADB provided support for energy efficiency, mini-hydro, and forest protection for reducing GHGs through the Forest Livelihood Improvement in the Central Highlands Project and the Core Environment Program Biodiversity Corridors Initiative project. ADB is also supporting MARDs standing committee on climate change to (i) assess sector and provincial climate change options, (ii) develop the planning cycle from 20112015, and (iii) build capacity in climate change adaptation. 66. A TA grant of $2.5 million from the Nordic Development Fund, administered by ADB, will be used to help Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang City, the MOT, MOIT, and Thanh Hoa Province plan and implement effective climate change response measures. The project will also support the Government of Viet Nams NTP-RCC for building a more climate-resilient economy with lower GHG emissions. MOIT is the executing agency for the project, which began in late 2011 and will run to the end of 2013. 67. The Nordic Development Fund is also providing support to integrate climate change concerns into an ADB initiative to improve road connectivity in the northern mountainous provinces. Another planned project with the MOT is linked to the rural roads program and includes a Global Environment Facility grant to enhance the climate change resilience of rural road infrastructure in several northern highland provinces. Another effort to enhance sector resilience is a study cofinanced by ADB and Agence Franaise de Dveloppement (AFD) on irrigation efficiency and agriculture in the Red River Delta. 68. ADB is also making a concerted effort to address the human impacts of climate change, particularly gender issues. In 2011, ADB approved the TA project Harnessing Climate Change Mitigation Initiatives to Benefit Women in Viet Nam, the Lao PDR, and Cambodia to improve womens livelihoods through the application of clean technologies. Similarly, the Quality and Safety Enhancement of Agricultural Products and Biogas Development Project will improve womens livelihoods while promoting clean energy and sustainable agriculture. ADB will continue to engage with development partners in Viet Nam through Oxfam, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and the United NationsViet Nam Programme Coordination Group on Gender to increase awareness of potential hazards resulting from climate change impacts. This will include financing a multimedia campaign with the Asia Pacific Media Alliance for Social Awareness. Appendix4 identifies opportunities for financing climate change and environment initiatives through ADB and reflects ongoing investments that will be implemented during the country partnership strategy period. 69. Regional support: GMS Core Environment Program. In 2006, ADB and partners set up the GMS Core Environment Program and Environment Operations Center (EOC) to provide technical support to the GMS Environment Working Group, one of several sector and thematic working groups that make up the larger GMS Economic Cooperation Program, which promotes sustainable economic development through regional integration. The GMS EOC is a technical support and coordination body that promotes and demonstrates good environmental practices for sustainable development. Demonstration projects strengthened landscape management approaches to reduce the fragmentation of forests that have high conservation value across 2.29 million ha of forest in six biodiversity conservation corridor sites in Cambodia, the Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand, and Viet Nam. 70. From 20122016, ADBs Viet Nam country program will have the opportunity to expand cooperation with the program and coordinate mainstreaming better environmental assessment and natural resource management approaches at the national level. The GMS EOC can also provide a platform to connect the ADB Viet Nam program to (i) regional climate change response programs, (ii) transboundary agreements to sustain access to resources and markets, and (iii) transboundary biodiversity conservation efforts to increase the efficiency of environment and climate investments and support the Government of Viet Nam in achieving its own national targets. 71. Greater Mekong Subregion Flood and Drought Risk Program. In 2012, ADB approved a loan to improve the capacity of over 1 million people in Cambodia, the Lao PDR, and Viet Nam to respond
to the negative impact of floods and droughts across 130,000 ha of land in the tributaries and along the main stream of the Mekong River. The project will strengthen regional cooperation and integration on water resources management in general and flood drought management in particular, and support in-country structural and nonstructural investments to manage and mitigate the potential impacts of climatic extremes. The Flood Management and Mitigation Program of Mekong River Commission is mandated to deal with regional and transboundary flood issues. The project, which will become effective in 2013 will develop greater capacity to link the national and regional flood and drought forecasting systems to improve the effectiveness of the national response to these events. 72. Furthermore, ADB promotes, through the GMS framework, regional connectivity and linked investment. A key strategy in this regional policy is the development of economic corridors, mainly for transport infrastructure but with extensive multiplier development implications. To date, there has been inadequate strategy planning and assessment of options for transport routes linking countries and transport mode options to minimize environmental damage, including biodiversity loss and GHG emissions. Often, the planning and assessment process is broken down into smaller units that prevent the kind of regional strategic overview that can optimize good environmental and climate change performance. The second phase of the GMS EOC will provide SEA support to national and regional sector masterplans.
VI Development Cooperation
73. Activities of other development partners and major funding initiatives. Bilateral and multilateral donors are implementing projects with a direct environment or climate change focus in Viet Nam. Projects have tended to have distinct climate change or environment focuses. Ongoing and upcoming initiatives increasingly recognize the inextricable links between the two and tend to integrate environment and climate change aspects. 74. A number of funding pools are available for climate change and biodiversity projects. ADB is working with other development partners to implement projects and to blend funding pools, minimize overlap, and leverage comparative advantages. One of the pivotal climate financing cooperation efforts, the Climate Investment Funds (CIFs) are a pair of funds to help developing countries pilot low-emissions and climate-resilient development. With CIF support, 45 developing countries, including Viet Nam, are piloting transformations in clean technology, sustainable forest management, increased energy access through renewable energy, and climate-resilient development. ADB is one of five multilateral development bank delivery partners for the CIF. During 20102014, ADB will process loans with grant support from the Clean Technology Fund in the energy and transport sector. A newer initiative, the Partnership for Market Readiness (PMR) is a World Bank Trust Fund that provides developing country governments with grant financing to promote market mechanisms that encourage low-carbon growth. In 2011, Viet Nam submitted an expression of interest, which was accepted by the PMR secretariat. ADB has been selected by the Government of Viet Nam to serve as the principal delivery partner for the trust fund activities in the country and will work closely with the World Bank to implement PMR activities. 75. Donor harmonization in Viet Nam. The International Support Groups of MARD and MONRE help coordinate international support to the sectors and include members from line ministries. There are a number of key partnerships that address environmental issues directly, including the Technical Working Group on Environmental Impact Assessment and Strategic Environmental Assessment under the multi-donor Aid Effectiveness Forum, the Natural Disaster Mitigation Partnership, the Forest Sector Support Program and Partnership, and the Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Partnership. The Support Program to Respond to Climate Change is another increasingly important partnership that has led to the establishment of a multidonor climate change fund. It is a joint Agence Franaise de Dveloppement (AFD), the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID), the Japan International Cooperation Agency, and World Bank effort to help support implementation of policies and strategies relevant to the NTP-RCC and also to serve as a coordination platform for further technical and financial assistance. 76. ADB has increased involvement in knowledge partnerships, funding partnerships, and technical working groups to deliver a more coordinated response to challenges related to the environment and climate change in Viet Nam and the region. ADB knowledge partnerships are networks of organizations with a shared goal, where members contribute and exchange knowledge on a continuous basis. They include the GMS EOC, which supports the GMS Environment Working Group under the GMS Economic Cooperation Program, among other objectives, as well as other emerging partnerships on regional power transmission, and carbon capture and sequestration modeling. Partnerships with the United States National Center for Atmospheric Research, the United Kingdom Met Office, and the Rockefeller Foundation have also been established. Funding partnerships include cofinancing with the AFD and AusAID on capacity building and TA. ADB technical working group
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Development Cooperation 23
involvement includes participation in the Aid Effectiveness Forum, the GMS Economic Cooperation Program, the Six Banks Initiative, and the climate policy activities of the Support Program to Respond to Climate Change. 77. A number of globally available funds and facilities are also available for carbon finance, adaptation, and environmental initiatives, as summarized in Appendix 5. 78. Civil society and environment. Civil society increasingly influences the debate on environmental issues in Viet Nam through environmental nongovernment organizations (NGOs) and the media. Contrary to their role in the 1980s and 1990s, in Viet Nam, NGOs now tend to respond to issues rather than lead and set environmental agendas. In part, this is due to the governments more proactive and systematic approach to environment and climate change concerns. NGOs have had some concrete successes and some local NGOs have formed partnerships with larger international NGOs and donors, for instance, on issues such as the illegal trade in timber and wildlife (Vietnam Institute of Development Studies, United Nations Development Programme, and SNV Netherlands Development Organization 2006). In addition, the Vietnam Union of Friendship Organisations NGO Resource Centre, an umbrella group of NGOs, has successfully consolidated NGO feedback on relevant issues such as providing inputs to the draft Socio-Economic Development Plan and various national target programs, and to the annual Viet Nam development reports. Growing links between NGOs, research groups, and the media have also led to increased coverage in the mainstream media on environmental degradation and the national impacts of climate change. 79. The Climate Change Working Group (CCWG) of the NGO Resource Centre is a forum for Vietnamese and international NGOs to participate in climate change debates. The CCWG recognizes that NGOs are often effective at encouraging grassroots responses to climate change. Its key objectives are to coordinate NGO initiatives to maximize impact and minimize overlap, to provide a structure for NGOs to develop a common advocacy agenda, and to ensure that NGOs have equal access to information, training, and funding opportunities in Viet Nam. The CCWG contributed to the development of the NTP-RCC, the Viet Nam National Strategy on Responding to Climate Change and the National Green Growth Strategy. It has also participated in recent initiatives to prepare guidelines on community-based adaptation responses. 80. Regional cooperation: Mekong River Commission. The 1995 Mekong River Commission (MRC) Agreement on Cooperation for the Sustainable Development of the Mekong River Basin makes provisions for the maintenance of flows and territorial integrity. Under the agreement, Viet Nam makes policy and planning decisions to promote improved environmental management of Mekong water supply; however, effectiveness relies on upstream water supply. The Climate Change Adaptation Initiative of the MRC and the Mekong Panel on Climate Change (World Bank 2011c) aims to provide scientific advice on adaptation in the Lower Mekong Basin and improve decision making. For example, the MRC Climate Change Adaptation Initiative and Environment Program is conducting a study on wetlands and climate change using local case studies in the Mekong Delta. The objective is to determine climate change effects and appropriate adaptation responses for this critical ecosystem, which covers 42% of the lower basin.
http://www.adb.org/documents/addressing-climate-change-asia-and-pacific-priorities-action
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84. Promoting transitions to sustainable infrastructure: expanding the use of clean energy. Viet Nams energy sector is the single largest source of emissions in Viet Nam. There is a close and strengthening relationship between GDP and emissions in Viet Nam, as energy intensive sectors become increasingly important drivers of growth.9 A growing dependency on fossil fuels, whose share in total primary energy supply is expected to account for 63% by 2030, will increase emissions further (Asia Pacific Energy Research Center 2006). A shift to clean and efficient energy production and consumption will be needed to decouple GDP and GHG emissions. 85. In line with its 2009 Energy Policy, ADB will support clean energy in three key areas: (i)demandand supply-side energy efficiency improvements, (ii) renewable energy development, and (iii) the introduction of new clean energy technologies. Demand-side interventions, such as the introduction of lighting, cooling, heating, appliances, and production systems with lower energy intensities, and policy measures to promote their use, will continue to be supported. Supply-side efficiency improvements include the rapid expansion of renewable energy and support for more efficient, smart, and clean technologies in power generation, transmission, and distribution, especially focusing on increasing access to energy by the poor. ADB will work with governments, venture funds, and other partners to mobilize adequate financing and will continue to extend incentives for the public and private sectors to invest in clean technologies. 86. Promoting transitions to sustainable infrastructure: sustainable transport and urban development. GHG emissions from Viet Nams transport sector are expected to triple between 2010 and 2030 (MONRE 2010). In line with ADBs Sustainable Transport Initiative, the Viet Nam program will promote: development of mass transit; more efficient vehicles, use of biofuels, and the introduction of other low-carbon technologies coupled with sound urban planning to facilitate mobility. ADB will promote efficient, low-carbon intercity transport. ADB will devise more systematic responses to the growing demands for greener cities and the integration of mitigation and adaptation actions to make urban infrastructure more climate-resilient and climate-friendly. 87. Improving natural resource management and managing ecosystem integrity: managing land use and forests for carbon sequestration. Sustainable forest management and land use improvements to promote biodiversity conservation, rural development, and carbon sequestration will be a focus of ADBs work in Viet Nam. ADB will focus on improving the implementation of existing payment for forest ecosystem services schemes. This will help the country prepare for and gain access to REDD+ financing for improved environmental management and economic development.10 Efforts will be programmed in coordination with other multilateral and bilateral programssuch as the World Banks Forest Carbon Partnership Facility, the United Nations Collaborative Programme on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries (REDD), and the Climate Investment Funds Forest Investment Program. 88. Building climate resilience. Viet Nam is extremely vulnerable to climate change impacts and achieving climate-resilient development will be a focus of ADBs work. ADB will support the integration of climate change adaptation measures into economic development through training, awareness raising, and education measures. ADB will help ensure that poverty reduction strategies and targets, including social development objectives, take better account of climatic conditions and disaster risks, and include measures to enhance the resilience of vulnerable groups. Special attention will be given to improving capacities for climate-resilient water management through investments and TA. ADB will
Carbon dioxide intensity has increased from 1.3 kilograms of carbon dioxide per unit of GDP in 1995 to 2.3 kilograms of carbon dioxide per unit of GDP in 2005. The REDD+ approach combines efforts to reduce emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, conserve biodiversity, and enhance forest carbon stocks through sustainable forest management.
10
join with partners to analyze and respond to long-term food security risks from climate change threats. Innovative financing and risk-sharing approaches promoting the integration of adaptation and disaster risk reduction will be developed, and ADB will encourage greater involvement of the disaster risk management community in a strategic expansion of existing frameworks and plans to address climate risk preparedness and response. 89. Strengthening governance. In response to the Copenhagen Accord, Viet Nam has pledged to reduce GHG emissions in anticipation of nationally appropriate mitigation actions that are expected to become part of the post-2012 climate change regime. The Government of Viet Nam has requested ADBs assistance in refining its policies, building associated capacities, and identifying the substance and financing for project and program interventions needed to implement them. ADB will use its development policy and poverty reduction dialoguesas well as targeted policy and institutional interventionsto support the integration of climate change considerations into development plans and actions, including ADBs own regional and country partnership strategies. Through regional cooperation activities, ADB will work with countries to address transboundary issues and share experiences in tackling common challenges brought about by climate change. The private sectors role will be assessed, developed, and better integrated into ADBs actions. 90. In Viet Nam, ADB has further organized the five approaches outlined to strategically address both climate change and environmental issues, into a three-pronged approach (Figure 3), which represents increasingly concentrated support for climate and environmental priorities. The three prongs are analytics and awareness, mainstreaming environment and climate considerations, and financing green growth and sustainable infrastructure. The approach has been adopted by ADB as an effective framework for responding to the challenges of climate change. The three strategic activity prongs are executed simultaneously, in support of government climate change and environment priorities.
Land use change and forestry Clean energy expansion Sustainable transport development Sustainable urban development
Good governance
91. ADBs Viet Nam country partnership strategy, 20122015 proposes to continue operations in the following sectors: agriculture and natural resources (ANR), education, energy, finance, health, transport, public sector management, and water supply and other municipal services with a varying level of engagement, scope, and subsector selectivity based on specific needs and expected impact. Of the eight sectors indicated for continued engagement, analysis of environmental challenges and climate change threats indicates that ADBs mainstreaming efforts should focus on ANR, energy, health, transport, and water and urban development; implementation experience in these fields enables lessons to be drawn that inform ADBs operations in Viet Nam. This section describes upcoming opportunities in ADBs main sectors of operations. It also outlines means to measure the success of environment and climate interventions that are reflected in the sector strategies of both the Government of Viet Nam andADB. Table 4 provides a detailed list of lessons, opportunities, projects, and indicators by priority sector and ADB division.
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2.Energy
94. Environmental and climate change opportunities. Key features in the upcoming ADB project portfolio will be (i) adopting cleaner fuel technologies, (ii) focusing on energy efficiency and conservation, and (iii) increasing the uptake of renewable energy technologies. In addition, the ADB Safeguard Policy is applied to all power generation projects to ensure minimal environmental impacts. 95. Priority actions. Under Prong I, ADB is planning a number of projects in the energy sector to mitigate environmental impact, such as a TA for Environmental Management Plan Improvement and Implementation and Downstream Impacts Management for Son La Hydro Power Project, which will build the capacity of Vietnam Electricity in best practices in relation to developing hydropower. Strategic support is also provided under a TA for Capacity Building for the Implementation of the New Environment Decree and the GMS Core Environment Program. This will enable Viet Nam to better assess the ecological and social trade-offs involved in full implementation of the national Power Development Plan and linked provincial power development plans and find a more balanced approach to the pace and scale of hydropower development. The recent SEA of the Viet Nam Power Development Master Plan by the GMS Core Environment Program has been accepted by the Government of VietNam. ADB will continue to build on this initiative to increase the sustainability of the power sector, and will seek opportunities to apply SEAs to future master plans. Furthermore, ADB is planning investments to raise consumer and industry awareness about the direct economic benefits of energy savings, in particular in the cement and water sectors. ADB also plans to carry out its strategic plan to finance green growth by leveraging carbon market financing for renewable and energy efficiency projects. 96. Under Prong II, ADB will assist the Ministry of Investment and Trade (MOIT) to set up a renewable energy development office, and through TA projects and project preparatory TA will help establish the organization and provide capacity-building support to translate renewable energy targets into specific opportunities. ADB recognizes that coal is a part of the energy mix, but it plans to only support projects utilizing cleaner-burning and more efficient supercritical and ultra-supercritical technologies for coal-fired power generation. All projects will continue to apply the ADB Safeguard Policy to minimize social and environmental impacts. Under Prong III, several projects will be financed to increase the efficiency and minimize the environmental impact of the conventional power supply, including the Northern Power Transmission and Expansion Project. Other projects will increase the share of renewable energy in Viet Nam, including the Sector Quality and Safety Enhancement of Agricultural Products and Biogas Development Project, and the Strengthening Project Management and Developing Strategies and Options for Biogas Development Program Expansion Project implemented by MARD.
3.Health
97. Environmental and climate change opportunities. Building human resilience to the impacts of environment and climate change will be increasingly mainstreamed into ADB sector operations. ADBs investments in environmentally sustainable growth, in particular clean technologies, will be planned to achieve maximum co-benefits for the health sector. 98. Priority actions. Under Prong I, ADB will conduct studies that guide investments in climateresilient infrastructure, in particular providing water and sanitation systems that can withstand more extreme weather events in order to minimize the spread of water- and vector-borne illnesses in Viet Nam. Furthermore, ADB will cooperate with development partners to support analysis of the impact of climate change and environmental degradation on human migration, and plan appropriate responses. ADB may also use its multimedia campaigns to develop and implement community education plans to raise knowledge and awareness on environmental hygiene and health under the impacts of climate change, in collaboration with the International Committee of the Red Cross and other development
partners. Under Prong II, ADB will support the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Construction, and other ministries and provincial and city governments to develop programs to adapt to climate change and natural disasters and minimize health impacts. In the context of ADBs support to the GMS Economic Cooperation Program, and under Prong III, ADB will support regional efforts to control diseases and prevent infection; and promote technological solutions, equipment, and control systems that will limit illnesses related to climate change, particularly in response to natural disasters.
4.Transport
99. Environmental and climate change opportunities. Opportunities for ADB to assist in reducing the impact of the transport sector in Viet Nam include offset measures to reduce the risk of impacts from main arterial routes and rural transport on biodiversity, especially where the building of roadways cuts through fragile ecosystems. In line with ADBs Sustainable Transport Initiative, there are significant opportunities to increase the utilization of safe, affordable, and environment-friendly public transport that reduce GHG emissions and air quality impacts. These opportunities will be pursued in major urban areas. 100. Priority actions. Under prongs I and II, in order to improve adaptation in the transport sector and better prepare for changing physical conditions, especially more extreme weather events, new ADB projects will continue to focus on integrating climate change adaptation in infrastructure planning, including engineering and structural adjustments, such as altering drainage and materials, and enhancing structural protection. For example, two upcoming capacity development TA projects financed by ADBClimate Change Adaptation in the Mekong Delta and Support for the National Target Program on Climate Change with a Focus on Energy and Transportwill help develop road and rail transport infrastructure, evaluate climate risks on current and planned infrastructure, and identify adaptation measures. The TA project Improvement of Road Safety and Climate Resilience on National Highways (TA7900-VIE) and upcoming loan will assess the safety of the national highway between Nha Trang and Ninh Thuan and its ability to incorporate and withstand climate change effects. Under ProngIII, in order to improve the quality of urban living and reduce reliance on private modes of travel, ADB is supporting Ho Chi Minh City and Ha Noi in implementing mass rapid transit and reducing transport sector emissions.
management sectors. These actions are expected to yield multiple economic, environmental, social, and climate benefits. Afocus on improving water sector operational efficiencies will assist in climate mainstreaming due to the direct correlation between reduced GHG emissions and reducing energy use from pumping and water losses. ADB has provided inputs into the draft Amended Water Resources Law that will place limits on surface and groundwater abstraction, a precondition for sustainable water use. 103. Under Prong III, ADB will support pilot attempts to provide financing for adaptation and mitigation in cities. For adaptation, disaster risk financing needs will be assessed in pilot cities, and products will be designed to respond to both natural disasters and climate change risks. To reduce GHG emissions through improved wastewater treatment, ADB will support the leveraging of global green finance schemes and will subsequently facilitate the scaling up of such initiatives. ADB will seek to do this, in particular, under the Multitranche Financing Facility for Viet Nam Water Sector Investment Program. Upcoming project preparatory TA for industrial wastewater management will prepare sovereign loans for centralized wastewater treatment in industrial areas, include a sector industrial pollution control action plan, and help industrial users perform the necessary pretreatment so that centralized processes are more effective and are not overwhelmed with untreated waste. For infrastructure and basic municipal service planning, both rural and urban, there is a need for integrated urban planning and better development coordination.
IX Guiding Principles
104. This thematic paper provides a review of environment and climate change issues in Viet Nam and their impact on socioeconomic development. ADB can expand its contribution to addressing these issues. ADBs ongoing and planned environment and climate change responses reflect a practical approach to improving natural resource management, adopting clean technology, improving environmental governance, and in particular improving SEA and EIA for investment projects to ensure long-term sustainability. With billions of dollars invested in infrastructure improvements, climate change responses will focus on adapting critical infrastructure and building resilience in coastal and low-lying areas in order to safeguard productive sectors of the Vietnamese economy. Combining guidance from ADBs overall strategies with an informed country-based approach to addressing strategic environmental and climate change priorities provides a useful framework for guiding ADBs Viet Nam program in partnership with the government. The following principles should guide the development of that program so that it has the maximum impact on achieving ecological sustainability and environmental quality while enhancing climate change resilience: 1. Recognize the role of natural systems. Recognize that healthy natural systems are a foundation for the development and well-being of socioeconomic systems and are essential for building resilience and sustaining economic growth. Maximize co-benefits. Mitigation and adaptation actions should always contribute to sustainable ecological and social development as well as reducing climate change vulnerability and/or GHG emissions. The corollary to this principle is to ensure that adaptation actions donot contribute to environmental and biodiversity degradation. Pursue synergies. Seek out opportunities to integrate adaptation and mitigation and to incentivize environmentally sustainable growth. Address the adaptation deficit. What some refer to as no regrets options;11 that is, addressing many day-to-day environmental and development challenges will enhance resilience to future climate change. Utilize a spatial planning approach. Look at adaptation and mitigation options and their environmental implications from an integrated, area-wide perspective. Integrate with development planning. Recognize that environmental safeguards and strategic assessments as well as adaptation and mitigation actions are part of development planning cycles. This means that priorities must be set early and some less urgent things left until later. Adapt in linked stages. Seek to implement climate adaptation on a phased basis so that lessons can be learned, adjustments made, and each step prepares the ground for the next if required. Support mainstreaming. Work with those most affected by environmental degradation and climate impacts and those whose actions can most enhance resilience of natural systems.
2.
3. 4.
5. 6.
7.
8.
11
Climate change adaptation decision-making supporting positive development outcomes, whether or not specific climate change impacts actually materialize (definition from http://www.adb.org/sites/default/files/pub/2009/Under-Weather-Rising-Tide.pdf).
31
Table 4 ADB Approach to Climate and Environment Activities in Viet Nam (by Sector)
Sector and Division Lessons Learned in VietNam Opportunities/Options for Investment Biomass-to-energy projects, and biogas digesters for livestock waste Control of methane emissionsfrom rice paddies (e.g., system of rice intensification) and livestock farms; conservation tillage and pest management GHG mitigation through development of biogas and mini-hydro projects Avoided deforestation through REDD pilot testing (Biodiversity Conservation Corridors Project) Reducing carbon footprint oftransport corridors throughafforestation Community-based power generation activities in rural areas (all countries) Coral reef and mangrove rehabilitation and adaptive capacity of coastal communities Coastal zone vulnerability mapping and erosion control Adaptation of water resources (including improvement of smallscale aquaculture ponds and enhancement of rural waterinfrastructure) Ongoing and Planned Investments in VietNam Capacity Development for National Roll Out of Benefit Sharing Mechanism and Paymentfor Forest Ecosystem Services Biodiversity Conservation Corridors Project Forest for Livelihood Improvement in the Central Highlands The Quality and Safety Enhancement of Agricultural Products and Biogas DevelopmentProject GMS Floodand Drought RiskManagement Strengthening Project Management and Developing Strategies and Options for Biogas Development Program Expansion Geo-Information Technology for Hazard Risk Assessment Climate Change Impact and Adaptation Study in the Mekong Delta Strengthening and Use of Country Safeguards Strengthening Water Resources Management and Irrigation Systems Rehabilitation Hai Phong Water Supply Outcome 1: Improved urban environmental infrastructure and services (leading to reducedGHGemissions) Viet Nam CPS Outcomes and Indicators (numbering consistent with CPS)a Outcomes: Better management, protection and use of land and forests. Indicators: (i) Total land area forested (from 40% to 42.5%), forest area/ hectares of forest (natural, protected, production), and hectares of forest under improved management (ii) Pattern of sustainable exploitation of forest resources (iii) Avoided GHG emissions due to community energy generation, afforestation, avoided deforestation (iv) Improved food security and increased child nutrition (v) Reduction in GHGs from farming practices (e.g., increased use of no-till agriculture, energy savings from irrigation improvements, or reduction in chemical inputs to agriculture)
SEER: (i) Limited capacity of agriculture, provincial and local land use institutions to incorporate management social and environmental and aspects in project design conservation, and implementation land use (ii) Need for greater emphasis change and on establishing data forestry sharing agreements and baselines before project implementation as a partofan extended inception phase (iii) Need to recognize agricultural biodiversity as a critical ingredient in building resilience in that sector and in rural livelihoods (iv) Need to view effective management of protected areas as an essential development strategy for climate change resilience and adaptive capacity (v) Weak institutional enforcement capacity for biodiversity conservation within and outside protectedareas; need to establish corridors linking protected areas in landscapes for the rehabilitation and expansion of biodiversity assets and integration in provincial and sectorplans
SEER and (i) Need to initiate integrated Water conservation SEUW: management plans at basin (includingenergy efficiency water level to efficiently allocate inwater pumping systems) management, and distribute water source Water conservation water supply to different sectors and climate proofing of and (ii) Improvement needed water infrastructure and sanitation for plans to control community-based flood water quality and water management systems pollution control plans at and strategies in MFF basin level, covering all on floodmanagement in pollutionsources selected riverbasins Community water reservoirs and irrigation systems
Indicators: (i) Drainage, sewerage, and Integrated Rural sanitation: Collection and Development Project in treatment of domestic waste Central Province water to increase from 10% in 2010 to 20% in 2015 in Emergency Rehabilitation ClassIII towns and larger. of Calamity Damage Trackreduction in GHG (Supplementary) emissions from water and wastewater treatment (WWT) inthree projects
Guiding Principles 33
Table 4 Continued
Sector and Division Lessons Learned in VietNam (iii) Further analysis and responses required to respond to the effects of upstream development of hydropower affecting downstream sectors suchas agriculture and fisheries, industrial areas, and urban settlements (iv) Need to apply integrated spatial planning of urban areas covering all sectors inan area Opportunities/Options for Investment Restoration of coastal water infrastructure and development of early warning systems in the above MFF project; improvedmanagement of surface waters to reduce pressure on groundwater, especially in periods of drought Integration of adaptation anddisaster risk reduction and assessment of prospectsfor catastrophic risk insurance facility Assessment of Clean Development Mechanism opportunities in wastemanagement Solid waste management including methane recovery from landfills Wastewater treatment and wastewater sludge management to capture methane and use it as fuelfor households Energy efficiency through existing building retrofits Integration of climate and pollution concerns in urban land use planning, including urban green spaces, landfill siting, and landfill management Ongoing and Planned Investments in VietNam Strengthening Water Management and Irrigation Systems Rehabilitation Project MFF Water Sector Investment Program GMS Flood and Drought Risk Management GMS Border Towns Development Project Thanh Hoa City Comprehensive Socioeconomic Development Coastal Cities Environmentand ClimateChange Phuoc Hoa Water Resources Supporting Viet Nam Water Sector Climate Change Impact and Adaptation Study in the MekongDelta Viet Nam CPS Outcomes and Indicators (numbering consistent with CPS)a (ii) Solid waste management: Domestic solid waste collected and disposed of in improved landfills (80% of urban solid waste collected in 2010 to 90% in 2015; 19 of 91 landfills classified as sanitary in 2010 to increase to 50% of landfills). Track reduction in GHG emissions from WWT in threeprojects. Outcome 2: Stronger subnational agencies responsible for provision of basic urban services improve resilience to climate change Indicators: (i) Improved delivery by subnational agencies in provision of water and sanitation services, including increased resilience to climatechange (ii) Technical procedures on disaster and climate risk and pilot case studies demonstrating sector leverage of climate finance Outcome 3: Increased treatment of industrial wastewater leads to reduction in GHG emissions Indicator: Number of industrial zones with a functioning centralized WWT facility, to increase from below 40% in 2010 to 80% by 2015. GHGemissions reductions tracked in all ADB industrial WWT projects Capacity Development on Environmental Management to the PowerSector Strengthen the Institutional, Legal and Regulatory Environment for Renewable Energy in Viet Nam Regional: Building Resilience in Energy Sector Projects Outcome 2: Improved energy efficiency Indicators: (i) Decrease in energy and emissions intensity of production (ii) Decrease in percentage loss in newly built transmissions systems relative to baseline (iii) Tons of sulfur oxides and nitrogen oxides, and particulates per megawatt-hour emitted from new plants relative to baseline
(i) Progress is hampered by consistently low energy prices that have restricted the pursuit and adoption of clean technology (ii) Limited political will to reexamine tariffs and bring them closer to cost recovery levels, which has complicated efforts to incorporate demand management
Safeguards successfully applied to all upcoming power generation projects to ensure minimal environmental impacts Energy efficiency in power transmission and distribution Capturing and recycling of excess heat and steam in coal-fired power plants through cogeneration and recovery of coal mine methane and coal bed methane for energy
Table 4 Continued
Sector and Division Lessons Learned in VietNam (iii) Minimal coordination andlack of linkages between environment sector specialists and the energy sector need to be overcome to ensure energy considerations are betterreflected in VietNams environment andclimate agenda (iv) Few inclusive efforts have been made to scale up renewable energy usage in an inclusive manner (v) Minimal coordination of environmental efforts, with the Electricity Regulatory Authority of Vietnam and Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development developing competing payment for environmental services schemes, where developers might face overlapping requests (vi) Quantifiable targets for mitigation are lacking in environment and climate change strategies Opportunities/Options for Investment High efficiency electric arc furnace in iron and steel plants, and gradual fuel switch from coal to gas in power plants Energy efficiency improvement in power plants,cement, pulp and paper (e.g.,use of waste energy from industrial processes such as cement, steel, and combined heat andpower plants) Demand-side management; energy efficiency improvement in the residential sector Transmission and distributionof district heating Assessment of Clean Development Mechanism andother market mechanisms including energyservice companies and electric cooperatives for energy efficiency improvement Guaranteed carbon audits of all thermal power plants supported by ADB Support to develop regulatoryframeworks for energy efficiency Assessment of impacts of climate change on hydropower production andmeasures to overcome such impacts Reduction of carbon footprint in road construction, GMS north provincial road development, by looking at prospects utilizing biofuels, and in railway rehabilitation Integration of GHG mitigation concerns in road asset management and regional roads development Ongoing and Planned Investments in VietNam Climate Change Risk Assessment for O Mon IV Capacity Building of National Power Transmission Corporation in a Competitive PowerMarket Improvement and Implementation and Downstream Impacts Management for Son La Hydro Power Project Supporting the Energy Efficiency Program Implementation Project Northern Power Transmission/ Expansion Sector Song Bung 4 HydropowerProject Viet Nam CPS Outcomes and Indicators (numbering consistent with CPS)a Outcome 3: Promotion of renewable energy development Indicator: Proportion of renewable energy produced to total energy production Outcome 4: Climate-proofing of keyenergy infrastructure Indicator: (i) Reduction in greenhouse effects and carbon footprints from relevant energy sources (ii) Energy infrastructure with increased resilience to climate threats (e.g., improved institutional capacity for responding to natural disasters, technical guidelines for upgrading and constructing energy infrastructure).
(i) Review and increase of the flexibility of design standards against environmental and climate change imperatives (ii) Reexamination of transport modalities and the strategic planning processes leading to their definition nationally and in areas of the country
Improvement of RoadSafety and ClimateResilience on National Highways of Roads Support Central and Local Governments to Implement Urban Environmental Improvement Program
Outcome 1: Increased efficiency in the transport of goods and people Indicator: All district and commune roads are accessible all year and maintained properly by 2020 (2004baseline: 83.5% of rural population accessible), including resilience to natural disasters and climate impacts
Guiding Principles 35
Table 4 Continued
Sector and Division Lessons Learned in VietNam (iii) More careful assessment of transport routing options and modalities for the GMS economic corridors affecting Viet Nam to minimize environmental quality and biodiversity impacts and GHG emission (iv) Promotion of integrated urban transport planning and modalities that minimize fossil fuel and natural resource consumption and enhance resilience Opportunities/Options for Investment Assistance to develop a transport regulatory framework introducing fuel economy standards, biofuel mandates and fuel switch (e.g., diesel to compressed natural gas) Assessment of prospects forgrowing biofuels along theroad projects Diffusion of bioethanol and biodiesel (all countries) Electric vehicles for privatetransport Climate proofing of roads northern GMS road network Integration of vulnerability concerns and potential adaptation costs in road asset management Ongoing and Planned Investments in VietNam National Target Program Action Plan for Transport and Industrial Sectors andThree Provinces and Cities (HoChi Minh, ThanhHoa, and Da Nang) Viet Nam CPS Outcomes and Indicators (numbering consistent with CPS)a Outcome 2: Sustainable urban transport
Indicators: (i) Adequate reliable public transport in Ha Noi and HoChiMinh City with 35%45% coverage by bus Ha Noi MRT3 Sustainable lines and elevated railways Urban Transport andsubways Ho Chi Minh City MRT2 (ii) Change in percentage of Sustainable Urban people using public transport Transport and patterns of use (iii) Reduced GHG emissions from Sustainable Rural transport sector Infrastructure Development in Northern Mountainous Provinces
SEHS: health (i) Weak institutional capacity Assessment of (ii) Need for improved climate-change-induced management of health data disease outbreaks and coordination between (malaria, dengue) national and regional health Inclusion of preventive organizations measures in health plans by local and national agencies (including strengthened disease surveillance) Assessment of health improvement benefits of GHGmitigation Investment in nutritional supplementation or other food security measures in areas at a high risk for natural disasters caused by environmental degradation and climate change
GMS Communicable Diseases Control Project Air Pollution, Poverty andHealth Effects in HoChi Minh City
Outcome 3: Universal coverage and access to health services Indicators: Under-5 child malnutrition reduced from 18%b to 15.0% by 2015 Malaria reduced from 0.65b to 0.5 cases per 1,000 people by 2015
CPS = country partnership strategy, GHG = greenhouse gas, GMS = Greater Mekong Subregion, MFF = multitranche nancing facility, MRT = metro rail transit, REDD= United Nations Collaborative Programme on Reducing Emissions from Deforestationand Forest Degradation in Developing Countries, SEEN = Southeast Asia Energy Division, SEER = Southeast Asia Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture Division, SEHS = Southeast Asia Human and Social Development Division, SETC = Southeast Asia Transport and Communications Division, SEUW = Southeast Asia Urban Development and Water Division, WWT = wastewater treatment.
a
Outcome and Indicator numbers refer to the numbers given in the draft Viet Nam Country Partnership Strategy 20122015. Additional components have been added to these proposed indicators to capture environment and climate benets. Figures taken from SEDP 20112015.
Note: In 2009, A. Srinivasan put forward a policy paper suggesting Southeast Asia Department-wide priorities, many of which have been adopted in current programming, including closer alignment of department activities with national climate change action plans, joint programming of climate change investments with other donors, the establishment of country-specic climate change funds to tap into the private sector resources, and scaling up the current subregional initiatives. These opportunities are discussed in the table.
Appendix 1
1. Viet Nams Initial National Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment 2003). The Government of Viet Nam has designated the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE) as the national focal point to coordinate the implementation of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and its Kyoto Protocol in Viet Nam. Viet Nam submitted its Initial National Communication to the UNFCCC Secretariat in December 2003, which contained a comprehensive synthesis of climate change impact assessments of Viet Nam and options for adaptation to climate change and the mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions. This work has now been updated and the Second National Communication to the UNFCCC was submitted in December 2010. 2. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2007). The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report (IPCC AR4) summarizes the latest information relating to observed changes in climate and their effects, projected future changes to climate and their effects under various greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions scenarios, and the adaptation and mitigation options with which to respond to climate change. However, because the IPCC AR4 concentrates on the sub-continental to global scale (in the IPCC AR4 the Asian continent is split into six regionsSouth Asia, Southeast Asia, North Asia, East Asia, Central Asia, and Tibet), the information contained in the report does not reflect the intraregional nuances of climate change in Viet Nam, and is therefore not helpful for planning purposes. 3. Rapid Assessment of the Extent and Impact of Sea Level Rise in Viet Nam (Carew-Reid 2007). Given the evolving nature of climate science, and large amounts of uncertainty, associated with projecting the impacts of climate change on sea level, Carew-Reid (2007) avoids the debate of the timing, magnitude, and regional variability of sea-level rise and adopts a scenario of a 1-meter sea-level rise by 2100 for all coastal areas of Viet Nam. The digital surface model provided by the Shuttle Radar Topographic Mission is then used to estimate coastal inundation. This type of rapid assessment is useful for national (as opposed to local or province-level) studies whose purpose is to help define priorities for more detailed analysis and actions; however, it does not allow for regional-specific analysis or for the assessment of impacts of sea-level rise that is less than, or fractions of, a meter. The rapid assessment also does not consider future actions by the government, future demographic trends, or adaptations by development sectors, but instead aims to assist the government in fine-tuning and focusing its priorities for adaptive policies and actions and to provide some simple methods and guidance in the more detailed assessments that are needed to prepare actions plans. The scope and intent of the rapid assessment is therefore to provide material to trigger a discussion that would guide more detailed and accurate scientific assessments. These more detailed scientific assessments relating to climate change impacts on sea-level rise in Viet Nam have now been, or are being, undertaken (e.g., Southern Institute for Water Resources Planning [SIWRP] 2008, MONRE 2009, Institute of Meteorology, Hydrology and Environment [IMHEN] 2010b, MONRE 2012) and are discussed in paras. 4, 6, and 12.
36
4. Southern Institute for Water Resources Planning Study on Climate Change Scenarios for Ca Mau Province (2008). The objective of the study was to assist authorities and people in Ca Mau Province in revising and achieving the best development plan, which is sustainable and resilient to future climate change. This study identified sea-level rise, and cyclones (and subsequent flooding), together with subsidiary effects of water shortages (both domestic and for farm use) and waterborne diseases as the most significant risks affecting the Ca Mau community. In addition, these major risks can be further divided by their expected probability of occurrence. Cyclones and extreme weather events, although the most severe single risks, occur sporadically, while sea-level rise and water shortages are expected to have continuous effects on the community. 5. Mekong River Basin Water Resources Assessment: Impacts of Climate Change (Eastham etal. 2008). This report, funded by the Australian Agency for International Development, was prepared by the Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Research Organization (CSIRO) and assessed the impacts of climate change on water resources for the entire Mekong River Basin. While the study area is the entire Mekong River Basin, data are presented for smaller areas including the Mekong Delta. Results indicate an increase (by 2030) in mean annual temperatures (averaged across the basin) of between 0.68C and 0.81C (with most of the increase occurring in the northern parts of the basin) and an increase in mean annual precipitation (averaged across the basin) of between 2% and 24% (mostly as a result of an increase in wet season precipitation that is common across all catchments of the basin). For catchments in the south of the basin (including Cambodia, central and southern Lao Peoples Democratic Republic, eastern Thailand, and Viet Nam), dry season rainfall is projected to decrease by about 8%. As a result, relative to historical conditions, surface water availability in the Mekong Delta region is expected to reduce during dry season months but there is also a high probability of increased flooding during the wet season. This study also provides useful information on the impacts of climate change on saline intrusion and agriculture in the Mekong River Basin. However, as with the results already discussed, the information is only available for 2030 and only under the A1B scenario (i.e., mid-range).1 6. Climate Change, Sea Level Rise Scenarios for Viet Nam (MONRE 2009). In June 2009, MONRE released official climate change and sea-level rise scenarios for Viet Nam. These scenarios were developed for the 21st century (every 10 years from 2020 to 2100) using IPCC AR4 global circulation model outputs (obtained from MAGICC/SCENGEN model) using both statistical and dynamical downscaling approaches. Projected changes, relative to the 19801999 baseline period (consistent with the IPCC AR4), were obtained for annual mean temperature and precipitation under B1, B2, and A2 emission scenarios for the seven Viet Nam climate zones and for mean sea-level change under B1, B2, and A1FI. 7. MONRE (2009) appears to be the main source of climate change impact information for Viet Nam with subsequent studies (e.g., IMHEN 2010a, 2010b; MONRE 2010, 2012) relying on the information produced in MONRE (2009). However, there are significant limitations and knowledge gaps within the MONRE (2009) scenarios are the focus of ongoing studies by the government and
In order to obtain information about future climate conditions, several GHG emission scenarios have been developed that explore alternative development pathways, covering a wide range of demographic, economic, and technological driving forces and resulting GHG emissions. The GHG emission scenarios are further described in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (IPCC 2000). In summary, the A1 storyline assumes a world of very rapid economic growth, a global population that peaks in mid-century and rapid introduction of new and more efficient technologies. A1 is divided into three groups that describe alternative directions of technological change: fossil energy intensive (A1FI), nonfossil energy resources (A1T), and a balance across all sources (A1B). B1 describes a convergent world, with the same global population as A1, but with more rapid changes in economic structures toward a service and information economy. B2 describes a world with intermediate population and economic growth, emphasizing local solutions to economic, social, and environmental sustainability. A2 describes a very heterogeneous world with high population growth, slow economic development, and slow technological change. In summary, predicted global temperature increase is lowest in the B1 scenario and increases through B2 to A2 and is highest in the case of A1FI.
38 Appendix 1
donors, including ADBs technical assistance Support for the National Target Program on Climate Change with a Focus on Energy and Transport. They include the following: SRES A1FI is not considered for temperature or precipitation (particularly relevant as this appears to be the emission scenario that observed global carbon dioxide levels are tracking at, however, various GHG emission scenarios do not diverge significantly until after about 2030). Climate scenario information is restricted to precipitation, average temperature, and sea-level rise (with evaporation inferred from temperature). No scenarios exist for other important variables (e.g., maximum temperature, minimum temperature, wind speed, typhoon activity, humidity, and extreme rainfall) other than those that can be inferred by assuming all variables change in the same way as, or in relation to, temperature. Climate scenario information is restricted to annual or seasonal time scales. No scenarios exist at the daily scale (e.g., change in number of rain days, change in rainfall intensity, and change to daily temperature extremes). No baseline (i.e., historical) or future scenario information is included relating to the climate change impacts on secondary variables (e.g., streamflow, flood risk, drought risk, saline intrusion, and coastal inundation). No information is provided on the historical or future role of natural climate variability (e.g., El Nio/Southern Oscillation). 8. Some of these points have been addressedmaximum and minimum temperature projections, for examplein recent projects by IMHEN (2010a, 2010b, 2012), but significant issues and knowledge gaps still remain. 9. Viet Nam Assessment Report on Climate Change (Institute of Strategy and Policy on Natural Resources and Environment 2009). This report is produced by the Institute of Strategy and Policy on Natural Resources and Environment (ISPONRE), under MONRE, in collaboration with national and international experts. The report provides a comprehensive overview of Viet Nams baseline climate information, climate change scenarios, and sector impacts under various future scenarios. The report concentrates on the seven climatic zones of Viet Nam. 10. Impacts of Climate Change on Water Resources and Adaptation Measures (IMHEN 2010a). This study analyzed the impact that projected changes to rainfall and temperature would have on VietNams seven largest river basins, including the Mekong Delta. Changes to annual flows, wet season (flood) flows, and dry season (drought) flows were inferred by using the temperature and precipitation scenarios developed in MONRE (2009) as inputs to rainfallrunoff models. Only scenarios A2 and B2 were assessed (i.e., no A1FI information) and the time-slices for which information is available are 19801999 (baseline), 20202039, 20402059, and 20802099 (i.e., 2030 scenario is available but not 2070). For some of the river basins analyzed, information is also provided on the impact of climate change on flood inundation, saline concentration, salinity intrusion, water required for irrigation, and hydropower capacity (but only for the A2 and B2 scenarios and time-slices differ for some of the variables). Possible or proposed adaptation measures are also discussed for some sectors. This study is useful in providing an overall picture of the impact of climate change on water resources in the Mekong Delta as a whole. 11. Sea Level RiseScenarios and Possible Risk Reduction in Viet Nam (IMHEN 2010b): This study is a companion study to IMHEN (2010a). Sea levels for coastal Viet Nam were calculated based on nominal increases of 0.50 m, 0.75 m, and 1.00 m, independent of emissions scenarios or global climate modeling. However, IPCC AR4 emissions scenarios (A1FI, B1, A2) were used to determine the year in which a sea-level rise scenario would be reached. Importantly, it was assumed that the changes to sea
levels, and resulting coastal inundation, were as a result of changes to mean sea levels only. This is unlikely to be the case, as precipitation, river flooding, and storm surges will also play a role. 12. Viet Nams Second National Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (MONRE 2010). This report is the follow-up to Viet Nams Initial Communication to the UNFCCC. As with MONRE (2003), this national report, which draws on all the studies previously mentioned, provides an overview of the national approach taken to assessing the impacts of climate change and presents a useful summary of available information and existing knowledge gaps. The report summarizes historical variability and trends for the seven Viet Nam climate zones for temperature; precipitation; cold fronts; typhoons (frequency, intensity, location, and path); and sea level. This information is very useful for ADB to establish an understanding of current (i.e., not impacted by anthropogenic climate change) conditions for the variables mentioned. 13. MONRE (2010) utilizes the climate scenarios that were the most up to date and available for VietNam at the time (i.e., those discussed in Section 24, MONRE, 2009). MONRE (2010) also summarizes what is known about the impacts of climate change on Viet Nams water resources. The annual mean temperature and precipitation scenarios discussed in MONRE (2009) were used in conjunction with rainfallrunoff models to obtain information on the impacts of climate change on annual flows, wet season (flood) flows, dry season (low) flows, and potential evapotranspiration (calculated using the temperature scenarios) (see IMHEN [2010a] for details). As discussed in Section28, only scenarios A2 and B2 were assessed (i.e., no A1FI information) and the time-slices forwhich information is available are 19801999 (baseline), 20202039, 20402059, and 20802099 (i.e., the 2030 scenario is available but not the 2070 scenario). MONRE (2010) also summarizes what was known at the time about the impacts of climate change on coastal zones, agriculture, forestry, aquaculture, energy and transport, and human health. Apart from coastal impacts, much of the analysis is focused at the national level or on a few specific locations. 14. An important part of MONRE (2010) is the final section, which focuses on limitations, constraints, and capacity-building needs that Viet Nam currently faces in assessing and adapting to the impacts of climate change (and GHG mitigation). These include the following:2 The application of the MAGICC/SCENGEN 5.3 model in the development of climate change scenarios, which produces low-resolution grid maps (300 km by 300 km) and makes it difficult to accurately reflect the local specificities of climate change in Viet Nam. The database for impact assessments and adaptation costbenefit analyses is incomplete. There is currently a lack of in-depth analysis to distinguish and assess impacts induced by climate change from other natural phenomena (e.g., El Nio/Southern Oscillation). Impact assessment and adaptation-response development models and tools are insufficient, in particular for cross-sector or interregional assessments. There is a shortage of technical experts capable of running studies focused on climate change impact assessment and adaptation strategies. The current hydrometeorological observation network is insufficient and inadequately distributed across climate zones, and therefore it is unable to meet the demands for climate monitoring and/or early disaster warning.
It is important to note that in the time between the drafting of the report and publication, CSIRO initiated a major climate modeling initiative in partnership with the Government of Viet Nam to fill many of the capacity building needs. Furthermore, a small regional consortium of universities with modeling capacity in strategic environmental assessment began a partnership on downscaled modeling (contact the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia for more information). Any future technical assistance should review the results of CSIRO and planned regional work to identify remaining gaps.
40 Appendix 1
Broad national and/or multisector studies that assess climate change impacts and develop adaptation measures for the most vulnerable sectors and ecosystems have not been conducted. Climate change education, training, and awareness-raising plans and programs are unavailable at the national level. 15. It is necessary to assess the level of climate-changerelated technological and analytical needs at the ministerial, agency, and provincial levels. Technical experts and professionals within Viet Nam need to be trained in order to facilitate the prompt and successful adoption of new climate-change related technologies. More importantly, at the provincial and district levels, officials must understand the implications of applying or not applying climate-changerelated technologies in their work. To date, the Ministry of Construction, for example, has more than 1,000 safe building codes; however, they are not widely implemented to reduce risks from climate change and natural disaster.
Appendix 2
ADB Country and Regional Assistance for Environment and Climate Change in Viet Nam
Project Code 2513 TA/ Loan Loan Strategic Priority Expanding theuse of clean energy
Name of Project Quality and Safety Enhancement of Agricultural Products and Biogas Development Project Strengthening Project Management and Developing Strategies and Options for Biogas Development
Location
Da Nang, HaNoi, One of the projects components deals with and HoChi MinhCity biogas development. It is estimated that the proposed biogas operation will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by the equivalent of about 40,00060,000tons per annum, while providing power to small farmers. Bac Giang, BenTre, Binh Thuan, DaNang, Ha Noi, Hai Duong, Hai Phong, Ho Chi Minh City, Lam Dong, Ninh Thuan, Phu Tho, SonLa, Thai Nguyen, Tien Giang, Vinh Phuc, and Yen Bai Northern mountainregion The TA will be working to design an investment program for the expansion of biogas development in Viet Nam thatresponds to clients needs and fulfills ADBsrequirements and safeguard policies.
7251
TA
7215
Sustainable RuralInfrastructure Development Project in Northern Mountain Provinces Integrated RuralDevelopment Sector Project in CentralProvinces
TA
The TA will (i) identify and develop appropriate climate-proofing measures adapted to the rural areas ofVietNam, particularly for steep terrain; (ii)demonstrate a range of appropriate and effective methods to increase the climate resilience of rural infrastructure. Loan aims to improve rural infrastructure in the Central Region through the construction and rehabilitation of transport, irrigation and water infrastructure schemes, aswellasmarkets.
2357
Loan
Coastal Central Provinces: Thanh Hoa, Nghe An, Ha Tinh, Quang Binh, Quang Tri, Thua Thien-Hue, Quang Nam, Quang Ngai, Kon Tum, Binh Dinh, Phu Yen, Ninh Thuan, and BinhThuan
41
42 Appendix 2
2996
TA
The project will develop the water resources of the Song Be River and transfer them to the Saigon and Vam Co Dong rivers for irrigation to increase agricultural production, provide bulk water for Ho Chi Minh City and control saline intrusion thereby providing social, economic, and environmental benefits. Cambodia, Lao PDR, and Viet Nam The project aims to reduce the vulnerability of flood-affected communities to the negative impacts of floods and emphasize risk reduction strategies aimed at preventing major floods from becoming disasters. The TA facilitates (i) the mainstreaming of climate risk reduction into policy and planning; (ii) increased understanding about climate risks and promotion of climate resilience at central and local planning levels; and (iii) a meaningful demonstration of low cost measures to reduce the vulnerability of rural infrastructure to extreme climate events. Improve irrigation and drainage infrastructure on approximately 10 water resources control schemes. The project will also promote economic development through associated rural development support activities; promote the sustainability of improved systems through participatory irrigation management (PIM) and the training of personnel of irrigation and drainage management companies (IDMC); and strengthen the cadre of personnel engaged in water resources infrastructure improvement and management. The project is consistent with governments priorities for modernizing the agriculture, natural resources and environment (ANRE) sector, and promoting economic growth and sustainable use of the countrys naturalresources. The TA will support increased disaster preparedness to mitigate the worst impacts of climate change through the provision of staff training for the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Developments Disaster Management Center and the Water Resources University on the use of advanced technology. continued on next page
2970
Greater Mekong Subregion Flood and Drought Risk Management and Mitigation Promoting ClimateResilient Rural Infrastructure in the Northern Mountain Provinces
Loan
8102
TA
Bac Giang, Hoa Binh, Vinh Phuc, Thai Nguyen, Ha Giang, Cao Bang, andBacCan
7926
Modernizing Irrigation Systems in the Mid- and Northeast Red River Delta (Water Resources Development in the Mid- and Northeast Red River Delta)
TA
Northeast portion of the Red River Delta (Bac Ninh, Bac Giang, Vinh Phuc, and PhuTho)
7220
TA
Strengthening Training in countrywide with a pilot in policies, Yen Bai governance, and capacities
ADB Country and Regional Assistance for Environment and Climate Change in Viet Nam 43
Energy
4689
Develop Benefit Sharing Mechanisms for People Affected by Power Generation Projects Capacity Building of Renewable Energy Development
TA
Energy
7262
TA
Lai Chau and Dien Bien, Quang Nam andHue Tra Vinh, andSoc Trang QuangTri
The TA will (i) develop a policy framework for renewable energy development in VietNam by supporting the government in developing a new renewable energy law andimplementing decrees and guidelines, and (ii)building capacity for sustainable small-scale hydropower plants. The small-scale TA will support government efforts to introduce a competitive electricity market in VietNam by providing capacity building to the newly incorporated transmissionentity, the National Power Transmission Corporation. The TA will focus on strengthening Vietnam Electricity staff capacity in environmental management and adopting best environmental practices to ensure sustainable development of thermal power projects in Viet Nam. Provided comprehensive vulnerability in CaMau and Kien Giang, combining bottom up evaluation of key socioeconomic trends, poverty indicators, and sector development plans for the agriculture, energy and transport sectors and climate projections for Viet Nam including statistically downscaled data for temperature and rainfall, together with the regionally downscaled scenarios for sea level rise and regions latest hydrological river flow scenarios. The TA focuses on achieving sustainable and environmentally sound development of the energy sector in Viet Nam. The TA aims at building the capacity of Vietnam Electricity in environmental management best practices in relation to developing its hydropower. continued on next page
Energy
7222
Capacity Building of the National Power Transmission Corporation in a Competitive Power Market Environment Capacity Building on Environmental Management to the Power Sector Climate Change Impact and Adaptation Study in Mekong Delta
TA
Ha Noi
Energy
4966
TA
Quang Ninh
Energy
7377
TA
Mekong Delta region in southern Viet Nam: An Giang, Bac Lieu, Ben Tre, Ca Mau, Can Tho, Dong Thap, Kien Giang, Long An, Soc Trang, Tien Giang, Tra Vinh, and Vinh Long Viet Nam
Energy
4711
Implementation of the Environmental Management Plan for the Son La Hydropower Project
TA
44 Appendix 2
Energy
2128/ 2225
Loan
Northern VietNam
Energy
2517
Renewable Energy Development and Network Expansion and Rehabilitation for Remote Communes Sector Song Bung 4 Hydropower Project
Loan
Lai Chau, Dien Bien, Quang Nam, Hue, TraVinh, and Soc Trang Quang Tri province Quang Nam
Energy
2429
Loan
Energy
7024
Supporting the Implementation ofthe National Energy Efficiency Program Project Wind Power Development Energy Efficiency in the Industry of Vietnam
TA
VietNam
Energy
43302
Loan
N/A
Energy
41436
Loan
VietNam
Upgraded and commissioned production lines in 5 cement and 2 steel plants. Strengthened capacity of personnel on environmental monitoring, to operate and maintain new commissioned equipment and structure energy contracting investments in five cement and two steelplants. The proposed project will refurbish and upgrade the production lines of five cement and two steel plants that were identified as high priority under ADB ADTA 7024 based on energy audit and investment grade audit. continued on next page
Energy
7942
TA
VietNam
ADB Country and Regional Assistance for Environment and Climate Change in Viet Nam 45
Energy
7575
TA
The TA will implement the carbon capture and storage demonstration roadmap in at least one country in Southeast Asia. The outcome will be greater capacity to plan and manage carbon capture and storage demonstration projects in the focuscountries. The TA will estimate the current and futurecontribution of the industry, trade, and transport sectors to GHG emissions and determine mitigation opportunities. TheTA will also review and strengthen related policies and implementing rules; build institutional capacity to implementing the plans. Reduces emissions from private vehicle travel by providing a safer, cleaner, and more efficient urban transport system.
Energy
7779
Support for the National Target Program on ClimateChange with a Focus on Energy and Transport Ha Noi Metro RailSystem
TA
Industrial and transport sectors, HoChi MinhCity, DaNang cities, and Tanh Hoa provinces
Transport
2741
Loan
Encouraging sustainable transport and urban development Encouraging sustainable transport and urban development Encouraging sustainable transport and urban development
Ha Noi
Transport
39500
Loan
HoChi MinhCity
The first stage of a mass transit transport system, that will improve urban livability by addressing the constant urban degradation and traffic congestion, reduce traffic accidents, and improve the citys air quality. Support effective utilization of HCMC MRT 2. Facilitate connectivity and greatly enhance access to transport services in five districts of HCMC. Support the HCMC Urban Transport Master Plan (HUTMP) objective of increasing public transport usage to over 40% of demand and reducing dependency on private vehicles. Support HoChi MinhCitys CC mitigation efforts in adopting a low carbon transport growth path, which is more energy efficient and lowers GHG emissions. Develop a new double track metro rail line in Ha Noi, Metro line 3 will (i)facilitate public transport connectivity, (ii)greatly enhance access in five districts of Ha Noi, and (iii) be an important integral part of an improved public transport system, which aims to achieve increased public modal share through lowcarbon transport that reduces GHG emissions. continued on next page
Transport
7892
TA
HoChi MinhCity
Transport
2741
Loan
Ha Noi
46 Appendix 2
2511/ 0147
Loan
Encouraging sustainable transport and urban development Encouraging sustainable transport and urban development
414562961
Loan
Binh Duong Province, Dak Lak Province, DaNang City, Hai Phong City, Thua Thien Hue Province, and Quang Tri Province Viet Nam
41068
TA
Encouraging sustainable transport and urban development Encouraging sustainable transport and urban development
Include sovereign loans for central wastewater treatment and nonsovereign loans to improve pre-treatment, aswellas funding for improvement of environmental regulations. High consideration was provided to the protection of communities from floods and natural disaster risks, therefore completion of flood control and drainage works from the Central Regions Urban Environment Improvement Project (CRUEIP) where there were gaps in essential flood protection work in Ha Tinh and Tam Ky was given highest priority. Help prepare, support, and advise central and local government agencies in the implementation of large-scale programmes and projects that are to bring environmental improvements to urban areas, by planning and implementing appropriate interventions in the collection, treatment, and disposal of wastewater. Climate change will be at the core of the urban environment planningprocess. continued on next page
7856
Comprehensive Urban Development of Ha Tinh, TamKy, and Buon Ma Thuot Secondary Cities Development Project
TA
7885
Support Central and Local Governments to Implement Urban Environmental Improvement Programs
TA
Viet Nam
ADB Country and Regional Assistance for Environment and Climate Change in Viet Nam 47
N/A
TA
N/A
7151
TA
Hai Phong
The project will (i) improve the living conditions and health of residents, (ii)redress watersupply inadequacy asa factor limiting economic growth and development, and (iii) help to improve institutional constraints affecting thesector. This pilot will provide an overall assessment of climate change impact and adaptation of major Asian coastal cities, and will collectively, along with other initiatives supported by the JapanBank for International Cooperation and the World Bank, improve climate resilience in selected Asian cities. N/A
N/A
Study on Climate Impact Adaptation and Mitigation in Asian Coastal Mega CitiesHo Chi Minh City PhaseII: Impacts and Options Strengthen the Institutional, Legal and Regulatory Environment for Renewable Energy in Viet Nam
TA
HoChi MinhCity
N/A
TA
ADB = Asian Development Bank, GHG = greenhouse gas, HCMC = HoChi MinhCity, MW = megawatt, TA = technical assistance. Source: ADB database.
Appendix 3
48
(vii) Germany provides a range of support in the forest sector for plantation development, sustainable forest management, biodiversity conservation, and integrated water resources management. It also supports the Megacity Research Project that is developing spatial planning and adaptation approaches for Ho Chi Minh City and is implementing the delta climate change program with Australia. (viii) The Japan International Cooperation Agency has provided a broad range of support for environmental management, especially forestry management, and is now incorporating a climate change approach. New initiatives include capacity building for reforestation utilizing the Clean Development Mechanism and the joint Support Program to Respond to Climate Change with France. (ix) The Netherlands provides support for forests and biodiversity conservation, and coastal zone management. (x) Norway provides support through UNDP for REDD capacity building as well as carbon capture and sequestration technology for coal-fired power generation. (xi) The Department for International Development of the United Kingdom (DFID) is an important partner in climate change economics and low-carbon growth planning in strategic environmental assessments with ADB. (xii) The United States Agency for International Development is setting up two regional programs on climate change mitigation and adaptation. One is Low-Emissions Asian Development, which will focus on building capacity for monitoring and verification of activities and emissions reduction activities. The other focuses on strengthening capacity in the Mekong Basin to implement climate change adaptation plans and strategies. Snapshot of other bilateral and multilateral climate change activities include the following:
Donor Asian Development Bank Key Projects RETA 6438: Implementation of the Technical Support Facility under Carbon Market Initiative, 20092011 TA 7024-VIE: Supporting Implementation of the National Energy Efficiency Program Project TA 41013: Preparing the Thanh Hoa City Comprehensive Socioeconomic Development Project TA Climate Change Impact Assessment and Adaptation in Ho Chi Minh City, 20082009 TA Mekong Delta Climate Change Impact and Adaptation Assessment TA regarding the implementation of the support program to respond to climate change in VietNam, 20102012 Internal study on urban planning and climate change in Viet Nam Establishment of an Energy Savings Scheme In the Steel Sector in Viet Nam (20112012) Supporting Implementation of the National Energy Efficiency Program, 20082013 TA for development of the Government of Viet Nam official climate change scenarios Ongoing support for the implementation of climate change activities under the NTP-RCC Asian Coastal Cities Climate Resilience Network Program, 20082012 Climate Change Adaptation Initiative, 20102015 Climate Change Vulnerability and Adaptation Assessment for Wetlands in the Mekong Basin (Tram Chim and Ca Mau) (2011) Media Net Programme (Journalists training in communicating environmental and climate change issues), 20082011
Danish International Development Agency Rockefeller Foundation Mekong River Commission UK Official Development Assistance/Department for International Development Australian Agency for International Development
Mekong Delta Climate Change Forum 2009 Mekong Delta Climate Change Impact and Adaptation Assessment continued on next page
50 Appendix 3
United Nations Industrial Development Organization United States Agency for International Development World Bank
Appendix 4
Clean energy investments Consists of three funds: Multi-donor Clean Energy Fund supported by Australia, Norway, Spain, and Sweden Single-donor Asian Clean Energy Fund supported by Japan Newly established Carbon Capture and Storage Fund supported by Australia Target of leveraging $2 billion per year by2013 Provides grants up to $250,000 To strengthen regulatory frameworks, conduct institutional strengthening, and improve environmental management systems To fund clean energy projects in the Greater Mekong Subregion and SouthAsia Invests in renewable energy, energy efficiency, water conservation, and waste recyclingprojects For natural resource conservation, disasterrisk reduction, and pollution control initiatives For urban environmental infrastructure that benefits the poor Climate change mitigation and adaptation initiatives by localgovernment and cities are a strategic priority For rural water services, urban water services, and river basin water management
Regional technical assistance on the Strengthening and Useof Country Safeguard Systems Mekong Brahmaputra Clean Development Fund
Managed privately by Dragon Capital $45 million in commitments including a $15million contribution from ADB Multi-donor trust fund administered by ADB provides grants of up to $250,000 Provides investment cofinancing and technical assistance Commitment of $14 million from Sweden, with a guarantee facility of $70 million Has $48 million in commitments, with an original target of $100 million
51
Appendix 5
Globally Available Funds and Facilities for Carbon Finance, Adaptation, and Environmental Initiatives
Fund Adaptation Fund ($300million by 2012) Character Purpose Secretariat The Global Environment Facility serves as the secretariat In Viet Nam,the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment is the national implementation entity The World Bank Supports adaptation programs Established under the United Nations Framework Convention in developing countries on Climate Change (UNFCCC) KyotoProtocol Financed by a 2% levy on Certified Emission Reductions issued for Clean Development Mechanism projects
Aims to scale up carbon finance by integrating carbon into investment decisions from an early stage for energy, transport, or urban development that reduce greenhouse gases A UNFCCC financial mechanism Focused on energy efficiency, renewable energy, new clean energy technology, and sustainable transport Specific funding for climate change and biodiversity initiatives inViet Nam Fund low-carbon and climate-resilient projects Finances the scaled-up demonstration, deployment, and transfer of clean technologies Includes programs in the power sectors, transportsector, and energy efficiency
United Nations Development Programme, United Nations Environment Programme, and the WorldBank Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment is the focal point
Private sector and multilateral development bank financing In Viet Nam, a $250 million plan for concessional lending was accepted for Clean Technology Fund support, conditional on the approval of relevant multilateral projects in energy and transport
Multilateral developmentbanks
52
Globally Available Funds and Facilities for Carbon Finance, Adaptation, and Environmental Initiatives 53
World Bank as trustee Managed by a board of 24 members from both developed and developing countries UNFCCC secretariat
Under the UNFCCC A Technology Executive Committee and Climate Technology Centre will facilitate implementation of enhanced technology development and transfer
United Nations Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) program
To generate economic value from carbon stored in forestry offering incentives for developing countries to reduce forestry emissions The REDD+ scheme incorporates conservation, sustainable management of forests and enhancement of forest carbon stocks A joint partnership between Denmark, Iceland, Finland, Norway, and Sweden Grants sizes vary between 500,000 and 4 million Provides grant financing for climate change mitigation and adaptation initiatives in developing countries Nordic Development Fund secretariat Projects are typically identified through multilateral development banks likethe Asian Development Bank
Note: Other sources of funding from bilateral partners include Japans Cool Earth Partnership ($10 billion), and the joint funding of Norways Climate and Forest Initiative and Australias International Forest Carbon Initiative ($580 million). Source: ADB database.
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ADB 8102 (29 Jun 2012). Promoting Climate Resilient Rural Infrastructure in the Northern Mountain Provinces, http://www.adb.org/projects/documents/sustainable-rural-infrastructuredevelopment-project-northern-mountain-provinc-10 ADB study: Ho Chi Minh City Adaptation to Climate Change, http://www.adb.org/publications/ho-chiminh-city-adaptation-climate-change-summary-report
Viet Nam: Environment and Climate Change Assessment The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is preparing sector assessments, thematic papers, strategies, and road maps to help align future ADB support with the needs and strategies of developing member countries and other development partners. A thematic paper is a working document that addresses a crosscutting theme to help inform the development of country partnership strategies (CPSs). This environment and climate change thematic paper highlights development issues, needs, and strategic assistance priorities of VietNam and ADB, focusing on environmentally sustainable growth during the 20122015 CPSperiod. It analyzes priority development constraints, the governments strategy and plans, other development partner support, lessons learned from past ADB support, and possible future ADB assistance. The product serves as a basis for further dialogue on how ADB and the government can work together to tackle the challenges of climate change and environmental sustainability in the coming years.
About the Asian Development Bank ADBs vision is an Asia and Pacific region free of poverty. Its mission is to help its developing member countries reduce poverty and improve the quality of life of their people. Despite the regions many successes, it remains home to two-thirds of the worlds poor: 1.7 billion people who live on less than $2 a day, with 828 million struggling on less than $1.25 a day. ADB is committed to reducing poverty through inclusive economic growth, environmentally sustainable growth, and regional integration. Based in Manila, ADB is owned by 67 members, including 48 from the region. Itsmain instruments for helping its developing member countries are policy dialogue, loans, equity investments, guarantees, grants, and technical assistance.
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