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Danish support for Vietnam's climate battle
Danish support for Vietnam's climate battle With a DKK 200 million grant (EUR 26.86 million) Denmark has become the first country to support Vietnam in its fight against climate change. A new national plan will help the Vietnamese adjust to future climatic shifts.
By Anna Mogensen
Without fanfare, Denmark has quietly become Vietnam's strongest ally in the fight against climate change.
In late 2008 the Danish Ambassador to Vietnam, Peter Lysholt Hansen, and Vietnam's Minister for Natural Resources and the Environment, Pham Khoi Nguyen, signed a comprehensive agreement that provides DKK 200 million in funding to help Vietnam prevent and adapt to climate change. The financial support covers the period 2009-2013, and makes Denmark the first donor to Vietnam's national climate programme, which is designed to tackle the alarming shifts in climate.
Vietnam is among the five countries most severely affected by climate change, according to data from the UN's International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). It is forecast that sea levels along Vietnam'/NR/rdonlyres/8EF231A0-C29C-4A3C-9CB4-10E28736B640/0/vietnam_focus.jpg's political agenda. To help limit the consequences of climate change, the Vietnamese government produced a road map for climate change adaptation in late 2008, The National Target Program.
This plan is principally focused on how Vietnam can best adapt to climate change. It may involve building dykes, establishing warning systems or developing new methods of purifying waste water – in brief, whatever initiatives will protect the population in the best possible way.
Climate activities nationally and locally
Denmark's support of climate adaptation in Vietnam is targeted partly at national level, and partly at specific activities in the coastal provinces of Ben Tre and Quang Nam, which are especially vulnerable to the effects of climate change.
“Vietnam's CO2 emissions are still limited, so the pressing challenge right now is adaptation to climate change. The first step is to identify the consequences of climate change in order to map out the initiatives needed in the action plan. Not least, research and pilot projects need to be launched because this is a whole new field where, if you want my honest opinion, nobody knows how to manage climate change in the most effective way,” says ambassador Peter Lysholt Hansen, who adds: “On the one hand you need to act quickly. But on the other hand you need to advance cautiously, because nobody wants to start a project which turns out to be irrelevant and a waste of time.”
The Danish Embassy in Hanoi has established a group to coordinate aid given by donors to fight climate change, and together with the chief UN representative in Vietnam, the Danish ambassador is chairing the group.
The double challenge
Vietnam's transition from planned economy to market economy, assisted by the strong work ethic of the Vietnamese people, has led to a surge in economic growth since the mid 1990s. And as the growth curve has climbed, so the number of poor has declined very significantly. Compared with 1993, when 58 per cent of the Vietnamese population lived below the official poverty line, the 2006 figure was down to 19 per cent.
But Vietnam risks losing momentum in its war on poverty – one of the six 2015 goals the country has already reached – if consideration for the poorest is not woven into the plans for how the Vietnamese people can best adapt to climate change.
“The poor are the most vulnerable to climate change. It is their homes which are lost, their fields which are flooded. This double challenge – climate adaptation and fighting poverty – is in this respect not a top-down process, but has been placed in the provinces,” says Trang Thuy Nguyen, who coordinates climate-related activities at the Danish Embassy in Hanoi. She explains: “For example, it is a key feature of the Danish programme to support women in the provinces, since it is often the women who are most vulnerable. So we recommend building up the efforts around the people's own experience and place climate-related initiatives out with local people and decision makers in the provinces.”
This article is from Focus Denmark Magazine, Zooming In (October, 2009)
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