group 6: mekong delta location: main room 1. dr. andrew wyatt 2. dr. dao huy giap 3. mr. do duc dung...

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Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6. Dr. Le Anh Tuan 7. Dr. Nguyen Hoang Tri 8. Ms. Nguyen Thu Huong 9. Dr. Pham Trong Thinh 10. Mr. Tran Thai Ngoc Thanh 11. Mr. Viet Hoang 12. Dr. Vo Le Phu 13. Ms. Trang Dang Thuy Facilitators: 1. Ms. Ruth Mathews 2. Ms. Trine Glue Doan

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Page 1: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Group 6: Mekong DeltaLocation: Main Room

• 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt• 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap• 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung• 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun• 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt• 6. Dr. Le Anh Tuan• 7. Dr. Nguyen Hoang Tri• 8. Ms. Nguyen Thu Huong• 9. Dr. Pham Trong Thinh• 10. Mr. Tran Thai Ngoc Thanh• 11. Mr. Viet Hoang• 12. Dr. Vo Le Phu• 13. Ms. Trang Dang Thuy

Facilitators:

• 1. Ms. Ruth Mathews• 2. Ms. Trine Glue Doan

Page 2: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Climate Change Adaptation Strategiesand Gaps

The Mekong Delta Region

Page 3: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Adaptation Strategies

Structural MeasuresNon-structural MeasuresPolicy Options

Page 4: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Structural Measures

Dikes construction (coastal areas);Infrastructure upgrading/climate

proofingTransportation systemHousing design systemUrban infrastructure systems

(water/wastewater/solid waste facilities)

Page 5: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Non-Structural Measures

Researches on coping strategies (FW protected areas, structure of mangroves for coastal protection, etc)

Reforestation/plantation schemesCrop adjustment/re-arrangementsNew aquacultural technologies application

(species with more resilience or salinity tolerance)

Forecast system capacity;Public education (awareness raising)

Page 6: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Policy OptionsIntegrated Water Resources Management

(IWRM);IZCM/ICAM (Integrated Coastal Area

Management)Land-use planning

Wetland restoration;Mangrove conservation;Swamp/marsh/melaleuca

Test new approaches to CC resilience (mangrove rehabilitation)

Page 7: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Gaps and Future Actions

Gaps in KnowledgeUnderstanding of resilience of natural

systems to CCMangroves resilience

Lack of synthesis practical study on ecosystem functions/services/values

Understanding of costs of socio-economic to CC

Full understanding of costs and benefits of adaptations

Page 8: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Gaps and Future Actions

Gaps in KnowledgeHow temperature/rainfall patterns change

will impact on species?Predator – prey relationships/food chain/food

sources;Pilot projects to test and evaluate

adaptation and mitigation measuresTraining and educating for capacity

improvement for managers and local people on CC

Page 9: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Gaps and Future Actions

Gaps in KnowledgeHow SLR will impact on seagrass?Interaction between SLR and increases of

runoff (from upstream to downstream)?Understanding of increase of flood

frequency and flood arrival (earlier arrival)?;What are economic costs to maintain the

status quo in infrastructure systems?

Page 10: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Gaps and Future ActionsDevelopment of Methodology & Tools Lack of practical methodology informing

public on CC impacts, which currently focuses on academy

Realistic scenarios on global/regional/national scales

Details of topographic maps and DTMApplicable management practices of

wetland conservation areas

Page 11: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Gaps and Future Actions

SystemsMonitoring systems (regional extreme

climate events, ect);Monitoring of land habitats, land cover

change;Monitoring CC impacts on vulnerable

communitiesNatural disaster warning systems

Page 12: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Gaps and Future Actions

Cooperation and PartnershipsPromote dialogues between policy-

makers and researchers/academic scholars

Promote partnerships between different stakeholders and society bodies at different levels

(Mekong) Regional cooperation to share data/information on CC

Page 13: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Next Steps

Maintaining the Working Groups from this Workshop;

Spending reasonable time to digest, modify and prioritize adaptation options;

Setting up network of CC experts to share knowledge and information;

Forming IPCC for Mekong Delta Region (MPCC- Mekong Panel on Climate Change);

Build on Mekong Delta Forum platform (WWF);

Page 14: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Identify core values (critical habitat, species, ecosystem services) pertaining to biodiversity conservation in each

priority area

• UpperMiddleCoastal Water

Freshwater Bracksish Saline

Critical habitats-Swamp forest-Melaleuca -Grassland -Limestone-Rice field-Swamp forest-Grassland-Rice field-Swamp forest-Mud flats-Grassland-Mangroves-Seagrasses-Coral reefs

SpeciesEndangered species-Red Crane-Monkey-Migratory and non-migratory birds- Reptiles-Migratory and non-migratory birds-Migratory and non-migratory birds-Monkey

Page 15: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Ecosystem servicesRegulatory -water purification- flood prevention- pest control- aquifer recharge- carbon storage-

• wastewater treatment- nutrient cycling- • storm protection- coastal erosion prevention-

supporting fisheries, breeding and nursery habitat for fisheries- carbon storage

Page 16: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Provisioning- food - water- medicinal plants- food- water- medicinal plants- food- water- medical plants

• Cultural- tourism- future benefits and existence value- tourism- future benefits and existence value- tourism- future benefits and existence value

Page 17: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Identify major changes from development that are likely to occur in each area over the next decades. Describe how these changes will affect the area.

• Drivers of changes and Effect on ecosystems

• Physical Development DikesRiver dikes - Ministry plans to build dykes upriver to

prevent saline inundation.Coastal zone dikes (sea dikes)

• Changes in hydrological regimes, though it should be noted that the impact of dikes is highly variable depending on the location. By blocking development of mangrove in response to the SLR.Port and water transportationChanged water flow and hydrological regimes. Impacts of high-speed boats on soil erosion.

Page 18: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Tourism and supporting infrastructureLand reclamation for industrial activity, related to river dredging and extract of sand Losing wetland areas and fragmentation of ecosystems.

• Urbanisation in coastal zoneLosing wetland areas and fragmentation of ecosystems. Coastal tourism development

• Exportation of sand and gravelRiver bank erosion, and increase in invasive species. Industrial development (saw mill, thermal energy plants)Water quality.

Page 19: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Expansion road networksHabitat fragmentationGas pipeline development

• River channel alteration (river channel networks, dredging etc) for navigation

• Changed flow regimes and river bank erosion• Continuing crop changes and diversification • Abandoned shrimp farms being converted to rice fields• Expansion of irrigation systems for agriculture

Page 20: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Land use change – conversion of natural ecosystems for aquaculture and food production (rice)

• Habitat fragmentationAgricultural practices and overuse of pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizer.

• Water quality

Page 21: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Socio-Economic • ‘Natural’ migration from rural areas to urban areas for

employment, including migration both from within the Delta, and to the industrial zone

• Food including rice export policy• Forest policy and fire management policy• Industrialization through ‘industrial zones’• Water quality • Population growth• Increased pressure on resources and demand for

housing development and construction materials (cement from limestone, river sand),

Page 22: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Poor, disjointed, sectorial land use planning and policy – will Vietnam proceed to more integrated planning? Uncertain, but hopeful that it will.

• Poor conservation area planning, degrading conservation areas • Ineffective, inadequate management of wetlands• Changing value sets e.g. regarding wetlands as ‘wasted lands’• Improved capacity in policy arena due to next generation leaders

taking a more progressive, sustainable approach to development and conservation

• Changing preferences and increased standards of living placing increased pressure on resources

Page 23: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Political Improved empowerment of people and safeguarding of rights to own, use, and manage natural resources

• Change in structure of agriculture -transition from smallholders to more corporate, large scale agriculture

• Sectoral shift • Labour force changes• Human health

Page 24: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

NaturalPhysical impacts influenced by• River erosion• River dredging and changing channels for navigation, transportation• Mining of sand and gravel for export and housing construction• Impacts of high-speed boats on soil erosion• Coastal erosion• Loss of mangroves• Loss of wetlands• land reclamation for industrial development• Loss of biodiversity and habitat fragmentation• Expansion of road networks

Page 25: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Increase in invasive species• River alteration• Declining water quality of rivers• Industrial development (saw mill, thermal energy plants)• Increased sedimentation from upstream developments

(road networks, other..?)• Industrial pollutions from expanding ‘industrial zones’• Declining water quality in estuary?• Decreased water availability - from decreased water

flows due to altering rivers and flow regimes• Change in hydrological cycle

Page 26: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

Identify species, harbitats and ecosystem services likely to be most sensitive to the combined effects

of CC• Freshwater

• BrackishThere will be habitat shifts along this continuum, for example freshwater will become increasingly brackish .

• Freshwater food source relationship between predator/prey, including freshwater birds, reptiles and amphibians .- increased invasives- increased insect pests that will affect agriculture - - flowering triggers for pollination- increased invasive species displacing endemic species (e.g. reduced Dissolved Oxygen (DO_ that will favour some introduced pest species like sucker fish)- increased incidence of fire- fish migration cues- distribution and density of bird species- impact on fisheries?- protected areas e.g . bird sanctuaries as U Minh Thuong and U Minh Ha, . - Grasses Kim Giang, Ha Tien

• Saline- impact on coral reefs- seagrasses

Page 27: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Precipitation- altered precipitation- Flooding changes (duration and frequency) - food source relationship between predator/prey, including freshwater birds, reptiles and amphibians. - rainfall distribution patterns will change, and this is most serious in the start and end of the year. - fish migration cues- acid soils increase – drying- distribution and density of bird species

Page 28: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Sea level rise- increased salinity- prolonged inundation and flooding (even during the dry season)- becomes more saline- disturbance of ecological relationships- impact on high biodiversity - wetlands will be lost- inundation- seagrasses

• Storms - Mangroves Rhizaphora species in particular– will be affected as the stems are susceptible to breakage.- Severe erosion leading to loss of plants- Saline intrusion- seagrasses

• Glacial melt- increased river flow and flooding

Page 29: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Knowledge Gaps• - Impact of sea level rise on sea grasses. • - What is the ecosystem resilience? Need to do further modeling to assess

the ability for species to adapt, for example what are the possible species shifts into different ecological niches?

• - How will CC impact on coral reefs

• Uncertainties • Impact of climate change on mudflats? The extent of mudflat retreat

depends upon what development occurs to restrict mudflat shifting in response to climate change. Communities living on mudflats are well-adapted to living in coast, and will be able to adapt quite easily to sea level rise.

• Dialogue between scientists and policy-makers: What will the policy on dike construction around HCMC be? There are currently plans to construct dikes to protect the city, but there is also a growing awareness of the importance of preserving mangroves for natural storm protection.

Page 30: Group 6: Mekong Delta Location: Main Room 1. Dr. Andrew Wyatt 2. Dr. Dao Huy Giap 3. Mr. Do Duc Dung 4. Ms. Kasina Limsamarnphun 5. Dr. Klaus Schmitt 6

• Impacts of climate change on Ecosystem Services• Food production (rice) • - temperature changes and saline intrusion• Water availability • - dry season rain water• - saline intrusion • Carbon Storage• - loss of mangroves• Storm protection • - loss of mangroves• Erosion prevention

• Melaleuca forests will be affected by more fire• Aquifer storage• Water purification• Flood prevention• Nutrient Cycles• - sea level rise causing less nutrients for phytoplants • Fish/aquatic food