Abstract

Many lower-income countries are highly vulnerable to the impacts of natural disasters and climate change, due to their geographical location and high levels of poverty. In response, they are developing climate action plans that also support their sustainable development goals, but conventional adaptation approaches such as hard flood defenses can be expensive and unsustainable. Nature-based solutions (NbS) could provide cost-effective options to address these challenges but policymakers lack evidence on their effectiveness. To address this knowledge gap, we focused on Bangladesh, which is exceptionally vulnerable to cyclones, relative sea-level rise, saline intrusion, floods, landslides, heat waves and droughts, exacerbated by environmental degradation. NbS have been implemented in Bangladesh, but there is no synthesis of the outcomes in a form accessible to policymakers. We therefore conducted a systematic review on the effectiveness of NbS for addressing climate and natural hazards, and the outcomes for other sustainable development goals. Research encompasses protection, restoration and participatory management of mangroves, terrestrial forests and wetlands, as well as conservation agriculture and agro-forestry, but there is an evidence gap for urban green infrastructure. There is robust evidence that, if well-designed, these NbS can be effective in reducing exposure to natural disasters, adapting to climate change and reducing greenhouse gas emissions while empowering marginalized groups, reducing poverty, supporting local economies and enhancing biodiversity. However, we found short-term trade-offs with local needs, e.g. through over-harvesting and conversion of ecosystems to aquaculture or agriculture. To maximize NbS benefits while managing trade-offs, we identified four enabling factors: support for NbS in government policies; participatory delivery involving all stakeholders; strong and transparent governance; and provision of secure finance and land tenure, in line with international guidelines. More systematic monitoring of NbS project outcomes is also needed. Bangladesh has an opportunity to lead the way in showing how high quality NbS can be deployed at landscape scale to tackle sustainable development challenges in low to middle income countries, supporting a Green Economic Recovery. Our evidence base highlights the value of protecting irreplaceable natural assets such as mangroves, terrestrial forests and wetlands, and the non-market benefits they deliver, in national planning policies.

Highlights

  • Many lower-income countries are highly vulnerable to natural disasters and climate change (Chen et al, 2015; Eckstein et al, 2019)

  • Many are developing National Adaptation Plans and Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions that seek to adapt to climate change, reduce disaster risk and cut greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions whilst supporting the delivery of other sustainable development goals (SDGs)

  • This review aims to 1) identify robust evidence on the effectiveness of Nature-based solutions (NbS) in Bangladesh for addressing climate change, natural hazards and other sustainable development goals; and 2) assess the enabling factors that can accelerate and expand the uptake of good quality NbS

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Summary

Introduction

Many lower-income countries are highly vulnerable to natural disasters and climate change (Chen et al, 2015; Eckstein et al, 2019). Commonly adopted adaptation and development approaches such as hard flood defenses (Narayan et al, 2016; Reguero et al, 2018; Ware et al, 2020) and intensive agriculture (Rasul and Thapa, 2004; Prabhakar, 2021) can be expensive and unsustainable These interventions are static, so that they can become obsolete as climate threats intensify, and often tackle one problem whilst making others worse, for example by increasing GHG emissions and polluting water supplies (Rasul and Thapa, 2004; Prabhakar, 2021). This presents a barrier to policymakers with limited time and resources

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