Driving
Meaningful Adaptation Action through an Adaptation Market
Mechanism
By Sonja Butzengeiger-Geyer, Michel
Köhler and Axel Michaelowa FNI Climate Policy Perspectives
3 November 2011
 Approaches and criteria for
allocating adaptation funds vary significantly among current sources -
UN-backed funds and bilateral cooperation - and to some extent lack
transparency and consistency. Such funding risks being spent in a haphazard way
that repeats many of the mistakes made in development assistance over the past
decades.
An Adaptation Market Mechanism (AMM) could contribute to
efficient allocation of adaptation funds, promote adaptation activities by
private and public actors through additional financial incentives, and raise
additional and reliable adaptation money. This would help to avoid future
public criticism of the effectiveness and efficiency of spending adaptation
funding.
The proposed AMM would specify mandatory adaptation targets, on
international, regional or domestic level. Participants who achieve their
targets either by generating adaptation units or by buying them in the market
would incentivize private, commercial and institutional actors to develop
adaptation projects that create verified adaptation units.
A universally
accepted and verifiable trading unit applicable to all types of adaptation
activities would help to maximize the cost reduction potential for the AMM. We
suggest applying net present value (NPV) for property saved; Disability
Adjusted Life Years Saved (DALYS) for health benefits; and potentially a
separate unit to consider the environmental benefits of an adaptation activity.
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