Building Resilience for South Asia's Future - SAR-CLIMATE

Building Resilience for South Asia’s Future

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Building resilience thus requires action across five critical areas. Many engineers quickly focus on infrastructure – and indeed, there is a need for more investment in drainage infrastructure, canal management, dikes, retaining walls, and better-designed and located houses.

At the same time, there will need to be increased investment in natural capital – mangroves to protect against cyclones; wetlands and natural channels to absorb excess flooding and drainage congestion; trees and landscape development to protect against floods, erosion, landslide, and hill torrents; and new crops resistant to drought and heat.

Sometimes, investments in physical and natural capital will be complementary – but sometimes there will be trade-offs that need to be increasingly factored in. Investing in human capital will make communities more resilient –– better health to withstand shocks, better education to find alternative jobs less dependent on risky natural resources, and social protection that allows people to migrate in an orderly manner where that is a sensible alternative and shields those unable to move.

Economies will also need to be made more resilient – from households having more diversified sources of jobs and livelihoods, contingency finance for governments to manage macro shocks and insurance for the private sector, to more resilient food systems and value chains that build in redundancy.

And finally, institutions will need to be strengthened with a focus on resilience, for example by improving the collection and sharing of data for early warning, factoring in new sources of risk in spatial planning, environmental regulation and financial supervision, and enhancing crisis management capabilities through a multi-sectoral approach.

 While South Asia must focus on building resilience for its own benefit, it’s equally vital for the global community to work together to reduce carbon emissions

John Roome is Director, South Asia at the World Bank.

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