Uncertainty reduction in Models For Understanding deveLopment Applications (UMFULA)

Lead Research Organisation: Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
Department Name: Natural Resources and the Env

Abstract

Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.

Planned Impact

Who might benefit from our research? Case study participants: Rufiji river basin: the government River Basin Water Office and the public-private partnership Southern Agricultural Growth Corridor of Tanzania; southern Malawi: Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation and Water Resources, Chikwawa, Nsanje and Thoyolo District Assemblies. Case study outputs will benefit multilateral development banks and the southern African Climate Resilient Infrastructure Facility-CRIDF, who advise on infrastructural development. National and regional decision-makers in C&SA and sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) including Southern African Development Community, WATERNET, CRIDF. Programmes concerned with climate services, e.g. Global Framework for Climate Services, CCAFS, IRI, CLIVAR, ESPA, CARIAA ASSAR. Met Services in Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa and Tanzania. Universities of Zambia and Yaounde. African citizens vulnerable to climate related risks, or reliant on infrastructure/resources that may be affected by climate change (now-40 years on).
How might they benefit from our research? Through deep engagement, national and local government and private sector stakeholders in both Malawi and Tanzania will be enabled to drive a process of improved use of climate services in decision-making processes. This is critical in both case study contexts which have been selected based on the climate risk to water and agriculture infrastructure and the implications it has for economic development. The process will be supported by the Met Services whose capacity will be built to produce country-specific contextualized projections based on the outputs of climate models given their responsibility in country to do so. Active engagement of Met Services within the case study co-production will also build partnerships that extend beyond the project lifetime and can inform on-going country policy processes: for example the development of the National Adaptation Plans. The ultimate aim is that improved use of climate services in decision-making benefits African citizens, not only in Malawi and Tanzania but also further afield, through the proactive communication of robust theoretical and applied findings to decision-makers across C&SA and further disseminated for use throughout SSA. By engaging with major initiatives such as GFCS (which is piloting programmes in both case study countries) we will have outreach and potential impact well beyond the two case studies. Univ Zambia & Yaounde and African Met Services will participate in a 'big science' project involving state-of-the-art high resolution models.
As a team we have a strong track record of applied research and proven impact in climate science and adaptation across Africa. Our approach includes
Co-production of knowledge and stakeholder-driven deliberative processes as the key methodology in the case studies; in which case study participants are engaged throughout the process and have co-ownership of the process and, by definition, the findings will be targeted to be of direct applicability and achieve maximum development impact.
Embedding impact in our management structures to maximize impact over the lifetime of the project and ensure post-project sustainability
1) Impact sub-group led by KULIMA
2) Advisory Panel, high level strategic guidance, through bi-annual TCs with representation from key regional organisations, public and private sector, donors and multi-laterals (eg agreed participation of World Bank staff)
A proactive approach to collaboration with other RPCs and the CCKE, eg invitation to sit on panels to maximise synergistic findings and outreach opportunities
Seizing opportunities for development of African capacity through providing bursaries to students in C&SA countries, making it a policy for senior team members and PDRAs to give guest lectures/research training sessions during C&SA visits (at university and other organisations eg Government) and offer some remote research co-supervision.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Updates from our draft report on Climate Information in the SADC Region (Lotter et al 2017) have been used in the development of the SADC Science, Technology and Innovation Framework for Climate Change Response 2020 (received ministerial approval in June 2016). In addition, as reported, findings have been used in the Africa Assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) due for approval in late March 2018.
First Year Of Impact 2015
Sector Agriculture, Food and Drink,Environment
Impact Types Policy & public services

 
Description Collaboration with UCT Climate System Analysis Group - 2 publications pending 
Organisation University of Cape Town
Department Climate Systems Analysis Group
Country South Africa 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I have led two publications that are in progress with Dr Mark Tadross of the Climate System Analysis Group at the University of Cape Town. The one book chapter (partly funded by the SASSCAL programme) was published in mid 2018. The other is an article focusing specifically on the winter rainfall drought in southern Africa of the past 24 months; which is currently in revision for Climate Risk management. Dr Tadross is also a member of the NERC project FRACTAL.
Collaborator Contribution Dr Mark Tadross has been the research collaborator and co author on two publications (one a book chapter published in 2018, where SASSCAL provided co funding).
Impact Outputs (1 book chapter and 1 article) still in progress. Book chapter was published in 2018.Collaboration is multidisciplinary (geography, meteorology and climatology).
Start Year 2015
 
Description UKZN collaboration 
Organisation University of KwaZulu-Natal
Department The Centre for Global Change and Water Resources Research
Country South Africa 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As of January 2017, regular collaboration with fellow team member University of Kwazulu Natal - Pietermaritzburg, including sugar and climate change work (Simphiwe Ngcobo), and trade-offs (Simphiwe Ngcobo and Dr Rebecka Malinga). Regular meetings, plus visits by Dr Archer to UKZN every 6 weeks. Outputs (selected): - Publication: Regional sugar and climate change - December 2017 - Trade-offs - December 2018
Collaborator Contribution Collaboration around research tasks and writing.
Impact No outcomes as yet - ongoing. Publication on sugar and climate change at the regional scale due December 2017, and on trade-offs December 2018.
Start Year 2016