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Mainstreaming climate adaptation into development assistance: Rationale, institutional barriers and opportunities in Mozambique

Richard J. T. Klein / Published on 1 June 2011

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Citation

Sietza, D.; Boschütz, M., and Klein, R.J.T. (2011). Mainstreaming climate adaptation into development assistance: Rationale, institutional barriers and opportunities in Mozambique. Environmental Science & Policy 14:4, 493-502.

Wind in palm trees

Wind in palm trees

In Mozambique, weather extremes threaten development progress, while pronounced poverty aggravates the climate vulnerability of the population. With the country being a major recipient of official development assistance, Mozambique’s development strongly depends on donor investments. Against this background, the authors aim to encourage the mainstreaming of climate adaptation into development assistance.

An analysis of donor investments at a sub-national level showed that a significant proportion of development assistance was invested in climate-sensitive sectors in regions highly exposed to extreme weather conditions. Major damage caused by weather extremes motivates a stronger integration of climate policies into development assistance.

Although Mozambique has a supportive legislative environment and climate awareness among donors was found to be high, the limited institutional capacity restricted mainstreaming initiatives. Given major barriers at the national level, bilateral and multilateral donors are able to play a key role in fostering mainstreaming in Mozambique.

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SEI author

Richard J.T. Klein
Richard J. T. Klein

Team Leader: International Climate Risk and Adaptation; Senior Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters

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10.1016/j.envsci.2011.01.001 Closed access
Topics and subtopics
Climate : Adaptation
Regions
Mozambique

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