Posts in Examples from INDCs
Uganda

Uganda is one of the few Parties to include water in their first NDC mitigation plan, with a particular focus on wetland protection, restoration, and management. These activities include a national inventory and assessment of all wetlands found within the country, the development of Ramsar-designated “Wetlands of International Importance” for the purposes of wetland research, conservation, education, and eco-tourism; the design and implementation of local wetland action plans; the identification and protection of 20 “critical and vital” wetland systems; achieving a net increase in total wetland land cover by 2030; and the strengthening of wetland management institutions and governance at both the national and local levels.

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Solomon Islands

In their 2016 NDC, the Solomon Islands included adaptation activities around community-based adaptation planning and risk-reduction. These bottom-up approaches to risk-management, linked to top-down national plans, are a systematic way to address the climate adaptation challenges that many small island developing nations face: extreme floods, drought, sea-level rise, and increasingly strong and frequent tropical cyclones. These countries have, in many cases, been facing these challenges for decades, if not centuries, and have some of the best developed coping strategies across the globe. They are a great example of how local knowledge can drive local solutions that can be piloted and scaled up where appropriate. Given that many of their climate risks are directly water-related, the national government of the Solomon Islands is also working on implementing a national IWRM plan.

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Mexico

The adaptation component of Mexico’s 2015 INDC is one of the few to highlight both the critical role of ecosystems in buffering communities from the worst effects of climate change and the role ecosystems play in providing essential services for adaptation, including additional water storage and coastal protection against storms and sea level rise. Green infrastructure, ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA), and integrated water resources management (IWRM) are prioritized in Mexico’s NDC. Finally, Mexico also prioritizes the integration of climate change criteria into the design, construction, financing, and maintenance of critical water infrastructure, thus ensuring that plans to retrofit, relocate, or build new infrastructure are climate-resilient.

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Egypt

Egypt is currently one of the few Parties to include transboundary water considerations in their INDC. Why might transboundary waters be important for climate change adaptation? There are over 300 river basins shared by two or more countries worldwide, which means that managing shared water resources and joint planning for future uncertainty around regional climate and precipitation patterns are essential to sound adaptation planning. Activities such as data sharing, joint monitoring of river basins, and flexible water sharing agreements can be implemented to improve transboundary adaptation outcomes.

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