The
PACC Project is designed to promote climate change adaptation
as a key pre-requisite to sustainable development in Pacific Island
Countries. The PACC project objective therefore is to enhance
the capacity of the participating countries to adapt to climate
change, including climate variability, in key development sectors.
The
Pacific Adaptation to Climate Change (PACC) project is funded
by the Global Environment Facility (GEF) with the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP) as its implementing agency and the
Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP)
as implementing partner. The project is scheduled to be conducted
from 2008 to 2012.
The
PACC project will cover 13 Pacific islands countries and help
develop three key areas that will build resilience to climate
change in Pacific countries: food production and food security,
coastal management and water resource management. Adaptation projects
will be implemented nationally, and were selected after an intensive
consultative process with the implementing agencies.
Under
the project, Fiji, Palau, Papua
New Guinea and the Solomon Islands will focus on food production
and food security. The Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia,
Samoa and Vanuatu are developing Coastal Management capacity and
Nauru, Niue, Republic of Marshall Islands,
Tonga and Tuvalu are looking to strengthen their water resource
management.
More
specifically, the project will deliver outcomes and outputs that
include improved technical capacity to formulate and implement
national and sub-national policies, legislation, and costing/assessment
exercises. Climate
change risks will be incorporated into relevant governance policies
and strategies for achieving food security, water management,
and coastal development.
At
the sub-national level, pilot demonstration activities will deliver
adaptation benefits in the form of practical experiences in the
planning and implementation of response measures that reduce vulnerability.
These benefits will be integral for future replication and up-scaling,
and also to identify larger-scale investment opportunities from
multilateral banks supporting countries with climate change adaptation.
The project will also foster regional collaboration on adaptation.