The Implications of a Changing Climate

John Roome

 

Abstract: A changing climate and its damaging effects present challenges to the world that must meet them with coordinated efforts and funding. World Bank research has shown that in the face of climate challenge, without rapid, inclusive and climate informed development, 100 million more people will be pushed into poverty by 2030. The transition to a low carbon economy and increasing the world’s resilience to climate shocks will not be cheap by any measure. It will require trillions, not billions, of dollars in new investments. Public funds simply cannot do it. The private sector will be essential.

 

The Mekong Delta in southern Vietnam is a region described as a maze of rivers, swamps and islands. Home to more than 20 million people, it is one of the most intensively cultivated areas in Asia, producing 25 percent of the rice sold on the export market.

Over the past 20 years, the region has been able to significantly boost its rice production, with the benefit of fertilizer intensive farming. But it is a region facing significant challenges in the future, with climate change expected to take a toll. Rainfall patterns are expected to change, sea levels rise and the region also is expected to face an increasing number of typhoons, amid global forecasts of a rising number of natural disasters.

As Vietnam’s Deputy Prime Minister, Hoang Trung Hai described it earlier this year, the Mekong Delta is “rich but vulnerable land.”

It is a region where development has traditionally taken place in an un-coordinated way, with roads, irrigation and agriculture all planned by different entities. The delta a region already feeling the impacts of climate change and development, with coastal lands already being degraded and agricultural yields impacted from saline intrusion and flooding.

And to adapt to a future changing climate, the region recognizes the need for coordination.

 

[1] John Roome is Senior Director for Climate Change at the World Bank Group where he leads a team of specialists and works across the institution to advance the Bank’s climate change agenda. John was educated at Oxford University, where he obtained Masters Degrees in Econometrics and in Management Studies, and the University of Cape Town where he obtained a Bachelors degree in Economics, Statistics and Actuarial Science.