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158 E.Calliari et al.
The chapter is organised as follows.We first provide an overview of the L&D
process within the UNFCCC fromAOSIS’s first proposals to the PA, looking at
the historic developments and actions bydifferent actors that led to the emergence
ofL&Das a pillar of theUNFCCCarchitecture.We then consider the negotiating
process through the lenses of IR theories to understand howL&Doutcomes have
been produced. By analysing the actors involved, their positions, the negotiation
process and related outcomes, we finally identify opportunities, both for research
andpolicy, tomove this contesteddiscourse forward.
6.2 PositioningofL&DintheUNFCCCNegotiations
Asdiscussed in the introductory chapter (Mechler et al. 2018), thedebate onL&D
has been spearheadedbyAOSIS since the early 1990s, by calling for an insurance
pool to compensate vulnerable small islandand low-lyingdevelopingcountries for
the impactsof sea level rise (INC1991) (Fig.6.1).
It took more than 20 years to institutionalise the debate within the UNFCCC
architecture through thecreationof theWIMin2013andeventually the stipulation
ofthestand-alonearticle8intheParisAgreement.Figure6.2showsthepositioningof
theExecutiveCommitteeof theWIM(ExCom),whichtheCOPestablishedtoguide
the implementationof functionsof theWIMthroughan initial 2-yearworkplan, in
theUNFCCCarchitecture.ExComisabodyconstitutedunder theConvention, and
isguidedbyandaccountable to theCOP.
COP20finalised thegovernanceof theExCombybestowing10members each
toAnnex I andnon-Annex IParties.2 However, disagreement around regional rep-
resentationwithinAnnex I parties caused substantial delays innominatingExCom
members,conveningof theExComfirstmeeting(September2015),andimplement-
ing the activities of theWIM. The balanced representation among Parties is also
reflected in theChairmanship,with the twoCo-chairs being elected fromAnnex1
andnon-Annex1respectively toservefor1year.3TheExCommayestablishexpert
groups, subcommittees, panels, thematic advisory groups or task-focused ad hoc
workinggroups tohelpexecute its advisory role.
The initial 2-yearwork plan of theWIMcomprises 9 action areas focusing on:
(1)Particularlyvulnerabledevelopingcountries, population, ecosystems; (2)Com-
prehensive riskmanagement approaches; (3)Slowonset events; (4)Non-economic
losses; (5)Resilience, recoveryand rehabilitation; (6)Migration, displacement and
humanmobility; (7)Financial instruments and tools; (8) complementinganddraw-
ing upon thework of and involvement other bodies; and (9) development of a 5-
2Membersfromnon-AnnexIParties include2membersfromeachoftheAfrican, theAsia-Pacific,
and the Latin American andCaribbean States, 1member fromSIDS, 1member from the LDC
Parties, and2additionalmembers fromnon-Annex IParties.
3During thefirstmeetingof theExComin2017, co-chairmanshipwent fromTuvalu andUSA to
JamaicaandEuropeanUnion.
Loss and Damage from Climate Change
Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
- Titel
- Loss and Damage from Climate Change
- Untertitel
- Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
- Autoren
- Reinhard Mechler
- Laurens M. Bouwer
- Thomas Schinko
- Swenja Surminski
- JoAnne Linnerooth-Bayer
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-72026-5
- Abmessungen
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 580
- Schlagwörter
- Environment, Climate change, Environmental law, Environmental policy, Risk management
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima