23
Indigenous Peoples Resilience to Climate Change

Indigenous Peoples Resilience to Climate Changeclimate.gov.ph/images/CCCWeek2017/DAY2LCCAP/Coga-ay.pdfRisk Vulnerability Area Assessment •Indigenous communities are already experiencing

  • Upload
    dotuong

  • View
    221

  • Download
    3

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Indigenous Peoples Resilience to Climate Change

…good practices and lessons learned

Consultative meetings with the IP

elders & leaders

Consultative meetings with the IP

elders & leaders

Advocacy on the CCC CORE Program

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

A migratory bird serves as a weather forecaster/early warning device that when it sounds “kiling” it denotes the end of typhoon/rain and it’s the time of blooming of flowers.

When it sounds “kiwit” it denotes coming of another typhoon/rain that signal also the preparation of the IP

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment

Risk Vulnerability Area Assessment• Indigenous communities are already

experiencing the dreadful impact of climate

change. Most of the Indigenous Peoples

(IPs) lives in remote areas and their means

of living is anchored on nature and weather

making them vulnerable to unpredictable

weather pattern being experience at

present. Examples: The traditional food

survivals of IPs such as native sweet potato,

native plants, native fish and shells in the

river, are already extinct.

…and so what• It is now recognized by the world that

Indigenous communities play an important role in the solution. Their influence in preserving ecosystems and mitigating climate change through forest carbon storage is vital. That strengthening indigenous communities’ forest rights is a low-cost strategy to safely store carbon that could contribute to minimize global warming (acknowledge by the International Indigenous Peoples' Forum on Climate Change (IIPFCC).

The indigenous communities look at climate change as a problem of the past, at present, the future and not just a future concern

Reference Materials

• Climate Change Act of 2009

• DILG MC 135-2014

• RA 7160

• LGA Guidebook in the formulation of LCCAP

• IPRA

• ADSDPP

• Paris Agreement

Climate and Disaster Risk and Vulnerability Assessment

Introduction to Vulnerability and Risk Assessment Frameworks

Thank you…