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aim to reduce the inflow of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the
atmosphere. If a sufficient number of these activities take place, it should be
possible to stabilizeor even reduce the concentrationofgreenhousegasmolecules
in the air, which is currently about 400 particles per million. While individual
activitiesmaybequite successful in reducing emissions, the overall concentration
of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere continues to increase. There are thus two
kinds of impacts that the public is concerned about: do individual interventions
work and lower the emissions, and is climate change stopped? The first question
may be answered through counterfactual experimentation, modelling or through
before/after measurements of greenhouse gas emissions. Nothing about this is as
simpleas it sounds.Thecalculationandmeasurementofgreenhousegasemissions
is not yet based on full understanding, agreement on principles and validation
through international norms and standards. For an overview of the issues and
what the current state of the art is, seeSTAP (2013).
All thesuccessesofachievingimpactatproject levelhavesofarnotbeenable to
change the overall trend in climate change,which is that the globalmean temper-
ature continues to rise.Whenasking for evidenceof impact, donors and thepublic
want toknowwhetherprojectshavean impact,whether theprojectdeliversand the
causalmechanism that it embodiesworks. But donors and the public alsowant to
knowwhether this leads to changes at higher levels, beyond thedirect influenceof
the project, and ultimately theywould like to see climate change stopped or even
reversed.Thedemand for impact evidence is legitimate at all levels andcannot be
met by referring to impact evidence only at project level or in the context of one
intervention or one causal mechanism. Understanding the range of questions on
impactevidencewillenableevaluators tofocusonthekeyquestions thatneedtobe
asked in evaluations andwill enable them to identify the tools andmethods that
need to beused.
3.3 Theories ofChange forClimateChangeMitigation
The standard approach to identify keyquestions in an evaluation is to look for the
“theory of change” that identifies how the intervention is expected to achieve
impact. In traditional impactevaluations this leads toan identificationof thecausal
mechanism that is supposed to “work”. In climate change, this is usually a combi-
nationofa technicalmechanismandabehaviourmechanism:“if thisnewtechnol-
ogy is adopted by people/institutions/countries it will lead to reduced greenhouse
gas emissions and thus to a lower rate of global warming”. Traditional impact
evaluations tend to focus on what works to effectuate behaviour change. If the
behaviour change occurs, the intervention “works” and should be promoted. If it
does notwork, it shouldbe stopped.
Organisations like3ie, devoted topromoting traditional impact evaluations, are
verymuch aware that this simple versionmay lead to all kinds of perverse effects
thatneedtobetakenintoaccountor lookedat,andfor thisreasontheyadvocatethat
40 R.D. vandenBerg
Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Titel
- Evaluating Climate Change Action for Sustainable Development
- Autoren
- Juha I. Uitto
- Jyotsna Puri
- Rob D. van den Berg
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 3.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-43702-6
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 365
- Schlagwörter
- Climate Change, Sustainable Development, Climate Change/ Climate Change Impacts, Environmental Management
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima