Climate change adaptation planning in Latin American and Caribbean cities: El Progreso, Honduras
The Climate Change Adaptation Planning in Latin American and Caribbean Cities project is designed to inform policy making and climate change adaptation planning in small and medium-sized cities. The focus is on floods and landslides, which are two of the most common climate-related risks in cities across the Latin America and Caribbean region. This report focuses on the city of El Progreso, Honduras.
The potential planning themes that create the foundation for a climate change adaptation strategy to help El Progreso build its resilience against floods and landslides, both now and in the future, are as follows (pp. 81-82):
- consideration of the environmental and socio-economic conditions of rural and peri-urban regions surrounding El Progreso in risk assessment and long-term risk management planning for the city;
- capacity building in city level government institutions engaged in climate change planning and risk management;
- mechanisms for data collection, storage and dissemination to be created and/or improved for better climate monitoring, risk planning, and information sharing;
- improved budgetary resources and climate financing for long-term recovery and building resilience against climate change hazards;
- cross-scale integration of risk management practices;
- a shift from disaster management to long-term risk reduction and climate change adaptation to ensure a proactive and forward-looking system of risk governance.