Rwanda Parliamentary commission on Population and
Transcription
Rwanda Parliamentary commission on Population and
Rwanda Parliamentary commission on Population and Development Linkages between Population Growth, Environment, Resource consumption and Climate Change Prepared and presented by ALEX MULISA HUYE, 19/03/2011 OUTLINE • General context – Sustainable Development • Population growth • Climate Change, Environment and Natural Resources management • The interactions and linkages: Challenges and opportunities • What will it take for Rwanda to succeed???? CONTEXT • More than 80% of the population derive their livelihoods directly from natural capital; • Environmental degradation and climate change have been recognized as some of the main barriers to realizing Rwanda’s EDPRS, MDGs and VISION 2020 goals; – 2010 national leadership retreat concluded: population – poverty – environment nexus • Improved management of environmental resources is increasingly regarded essential for national sustainable development; Sustainable Development: The context of Rwanda Vision 2020 MDGs EDPRS Decentralization Socio‐Economic development Integral to Sustainable development 4 Population issues in Rwanda • Population pressures • Pop. estimated at 9.3 million projected at 10.8 million in 2012 (UNFPA/ Rwanda, 2007). • population growth has been and remains high – estimated at 3.1% annually in 2002 and only declined to 2.6% in 2006 (UNFPA (2007) estimates. • The high total fertility rate of 6.1 children per woman (according to the DHS 2005) • Two thirds of the population is under 25, of whom 60 per cent are out of school. 5 Population issues in Rwanda 80 + 75-79 Male 70-74 Female 65-69 60-64 55-59 50-54 45-49 40-44 35-39 30-34 25-29 20-24 15-19 10-14 5-9 <5 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 6 Impacts of Population on Environment • Pressure on the physical environment • Poverty ‐ population ‐ environmental resources dynamics (Clay, 1996). • Environmental disease burden: Malaria incidence rate rose from 3.5% in 1982 to 48.16% in 2003. • population density movements. and population • Poor sanitation, hygiene related diseases, encroachment on forests and wetlands, inadequate access to infrastructure and social services etc 7 Environment/MDG linkage Millennium Development Goals Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger Examples of Links to the Environment Livelihood strategies and food security of the poor often depend directly on healthy ecosystems and the diversity of goods and ecological services they provide. Achieve universal primary education Time spent collecting water and fuel-wood by children, especially girls, can reduce time at school. Poor women are especially exposed to indoor air pollution and the burden of collecting water and fuelwood, and have unequal access to land and other natural resources. Water-related diseases such as diarrhea and cholera kill an estimated 3 million people a year in developing countries, the majority of which are children under the age of five. Indoor air pollution and carrying heavy loads of water and fuel-wood adversely affect women’s health and can make women less fit for childbirth and at greater risk of complications during pregnancy. Promote gender equality and empower women Reduce child mortality Improve maternal health Combat major diseases Up to one-fifth of the total burden of diseases in developing may be associated with environmental risk factors – and preventive environmental health measures are as important and at times more costeffective that health treatments Ensure environmental sustainability Current trends in environmental degradation must be reversed in order to sustain the health and productivity 8 of the world’s ecosystem Climate Change Human activities are responsible for the rapidly changing conditions globally; Presently green house gases are on the increase in the earth’s atmosphere particularly from the industrial countries; Higher temperatures that lead to climate change; • • • Rising sea levels Changes in precipitation patterns that lead to – – • • Floods, droughts and vector borne diseases Climate change is predicted to become the dominant driver of Biodiversity loss by the end of the century 9 Trends: Annual Mean Temperature Between 1971 and -2007) in °C based on the Meteorological Station At Kigali Airport (increase of 0.9 ° C in 27 years) 22.0 21.0 20.5 20.0 19.5 19.0 2007 2005 2003 2001 1999 1997 1995 1993 1991 1989 1987 1985 1983 1981 1979 1977 1975 1973 18.5 1971 Température (°C) 21.5 Années 10 Trends: During the year 2006, the mean monthly temperature is higher than the long-term (32 years) Mean monthly temperatures at Kigali-Aero in 2006 Long-term (32 years) mean temperatures T°C 22,5 22 21,5 21 20,5 20 19,5 19 18,5 18 JAN FEb MAR APR MAY JUNE JUL AUGUST SEPT OCT NOV DEC Months 11 Floods and landslide risk zones Rainfall deficit zone 12 Interactions of Climate change and Biodiversity ‐ pressures Collecting fuel wood inside Akagera National Park Savannah in the Akagera National Park (SoER, 2009) Climate change and pressure on Biodiversity Deforestation for charcoal leaves whole swathes of land bare (SoER, 2009) Climate change and food security Crop failure in eastern province due to the 2005 drought (SoER, 2009) Pop. Growth a drivers of Climate change in Rwanda Constructions at the shores of Lake Kivu in the Western Province (SoER, 2009) Challenges of Climate Change • Various studies including Comprehensive Food Security and Vulnerability Analysis (CFSVA). March – April 2006 have established linkages: • water for production, the proportion of arable land under irrigation (still very low) • Rwanda’s agriculture is generally rain‐fed. • seasonal failures due to drought continue to be a key threat to food security • income, ill health, exposure or vulnerability to shock and demographic factors. ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT Natural resource management and biodiversity conservation face challenges of high population growth, low levels of literacy and poverty. The effects of these are characterised by high rates of soil erosion and loss of soil fertility, flooding, deforestation and loss of biodiversity as a result of habitat destruction. Population, climate change, environment and natural resources interactions and challenges for Rwanda Need for research on Natural disaster preparedness to address challenges 20 Challenges of Climate Change in Africa including Rwanda •The lack of observational climate data, particularly in Africa, is recognized as a constraint to understanding current and future climate variability (DFID, 2004). •To address this evident gap, coordinated effort of capacity building, training, research and development should be emphasized to provide for continent‐wide monitoring ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT Challenges & Opportunities • Majority of population deriving livelihoods from natural resources • Limited appreciation by other sectors of their roles in environmental management • Environment increasingly recognised as a pillar for sustainable development in Rwanda (Vision 2020, EDPRS), • Regional integration (EAC, COMESA) is an opportunity for sound management of shared ecosystems • Existence of a wide range of stakeholders involved in environmental management ( Donor community, NGOs, Private Sector, decentralised government, public and private institutions…) How will Rwanda make it? • Population, Environment and Natural resources and climate change considered cross cutting issues in national planning (EDPRS) and therefore development dialogue; • The Environment Sector Strategic plan will contribute to achievement of EDPRS, MDGs (especially MDGs 1 & 7) and VISION 2020 goals. • It therefore calls for integrated approaches with ENR‐ dependant sectors as key advocates of the sustainability agenda. Effective approaches will be ensured through….. • Responses: Planning and investment in Population growth control and management measures ‐ reproductive health services and family planning, resettlement planning, access to information and education • Practical & continuous stakeholder engagement at different levels ; • Tailored & demand‐driven capacity building support; develop incentives for capacity deployment & retention’; • Emphasis on tangible results & evidence‐based reporting. By implication, developing local & national ENV. data infrastructure will be a key priority. Immediate next steps • Education for skills and technology development; • Intensify stakeholder collaboration – We have to work together! – Focused financing ‐ FONERWA • Focused vision – Refine measurement tools Policy response – EDPRS targets and investments • • • Key of the EDPRS targets that have implications on PHE issues in Rwanda include: Accelerating growth and poverty reduction – Real GDP rise from 6.5% to 8.1%; export growth 10% to 15%; Raising agricultural productivity and ensuring food security. The specific targets in this respect include: • • • • • • • • • • Increasing area protected from soil erosion from 40% to 100%; Increasing arable land under irrigation from 15,000 Ha to 24,000 Ha; Increasing use of mineral fertilizers from 11% to 40%; Increasing number of rural households with livestock from 71% to 85%. This is critical not only for income generation but to increase access to organic manure. Develop skills for a knowledge‐based society through ICT; Promoting science, technology and innovation for economic growth; manufacturing and services sectors for sustainable growth; Managing the environment and climate change and ensuring optimal utilisation of natural resources, water resources to support irrigation projects; Building economic infrastructure including rural markets and feeder roads; Improving health and slowing down population growth. Unsustainable population growth has been recognised as a key limitation of economic growth and poverty reduction. Can we in Rwanda cope with Climate change? Potential areas of research Rainwater harvesting in Rubavu District. Such technologies help increase access to potable water (SoER, 2009) CHALLENGES & OPPORTUNITES: SUSTAINABLE LAND MANAGEMENT Achievements: INNOVATIVE SOLUTIONS Potential for Socio‐Economic growth