World - Climate Services Operational Pathways : Pathways for Transforming Weather, Water, and Climate Services in Mozambique

This study was commissioned by climate investment funds (CIF’s) E and L initiative to distill lessons from CIF’s pilot program on climate resilience (PPCR) support in identifying, designing, and implementing hydrometeorological and climate services...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099640101292225933/P1652050223f720c0b8bc0fd2fcaf2c420
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37580
id okr-10986-37580
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-375802022-06-22T05:10:37Z World - Climate Services Operational Pathways : Pathways for Transforming Weather, Water, and Climate Services in Mozambique World Bank CLIMATE RESILIENCE CLIMATE INVESTMENT FUNDS (CIF'S) HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL SERVICES CASE STUDY MODERNIZING HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL SYSTEMS CLIMATE SERVICES DELIVERY WEATHER SERVICES CLIMATE SERVICES CLIMATE SERVICE DESIGN This study was commissioned by climate investment funds (CIF’s) E and L initiative to distill lessons from CIF’s pilot program on climate resilience (PPCR) support in identifying, designing, and implementing hydrometeorological and climate services investments. It seeks to generate learning and strategic insight into the different operational pathways that can be taken by national hydrological and meteorological services to develop, deliver, and strengthen hydrometeorological and climate services. The outputs from the study comprise of one synthesis report and three country studies for Jamaica, Mozambique, and Nepal. These three countries have been selected for the study due to their different institutional frameworks, hydrometeorological systems, and socio-economic context. They provide diverse in-depth insights in hydrometeorological and climate service development, delivery and use. In this respect, the PPCR-supported Climate Resilience: Transforming Hydrometeorological Services Project was selected as a case study project for Mozambique. It elucidates lessons learned on the process for modernizing hydrometeorological systems and delivering climate services to users. Furthermore, it offers insight into challenges and opportunities for climate services development, delivery, and use in Southern African developing countries. Qualitative methods, including structured interviews and literature review, were used to identify promising pathways to continue to transform weather, water, and climate services in the three case study countries. In Mozambique, the analysis of the data collected revealed six themes regarding critical pathways to transform weather, water, and climate services in the country. These are: harmonizing and integrating data resources; improving hydrometeorological and climate service design and delivery; fostering hydrometeorological and climate services impact through user feedback; building appropriate human capacity; strengthening national coordination; and promoting regional collaboration. The report summarizes key findings. 2022-06-21T21:03:19Z 2022-06-21T21:03:19Z 2022-01-28 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099640101292225933/P1652050223f720c0b8bc0fd2fcaf2c420 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37580 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC Working Paper Publications & Research Mozambique
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CLIMATE RESILIENCE
CLIMATE INVESTMENT FUNDS (CIF'S)
HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL SERVICES CASE STUDY
MODERNIZING HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL SYSTEMS
CLIMATE SERVICES DELIVERY
WEATHER SERVICES
CLIMATE SERVICES
CLIMATE SERVICE DESIGN
spellingShingle CLIMATE RESILIENCE
CLIMATE INVESTMENT FUNDS (CIF'S)
HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL SERVICES CASE STUDY
MODERNIZING HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL SYSTEMS
CLIMATE SERVICES DELIVERY
WEATHER SERVICES
CLIMATE SERVICES
CLIMATE SERVICE DESIGN
World Bank
World - Climate Services Operational Pathways : Pathways for Transforming Weather, Water, and Climate Services in Mozambique
geographic_facet Mozambique
description This study was commissioned by climate investment funds (CIF’s) E and L initiative to distill lessons from CIF’s pilot program on climate resilience (PPCR) support in identifying, designing, and implementing hydrometeorological and climate services investments. It seeks to generate learning and strategic insight into the different operational pathways that can be taken by national hydrological and meteorological services to develop, deliver, and strengthen hydrometeorological and climate services. The outputs from the study comprise of one synthesis report and three country studies for Jamaica, Mozambique, and Nepal. These three countries have been selected for the study due to their different institutional frameworks, hydrometeorological systems, and socio-economic context. They provide diverse in-depth insights in hydrometeorological and climate service development, delivery and use. In this respect, the PPCR-supported Climate Resilience: Transforming Hydrometeorological Services Project was selected as a case study project for Mozambique. It elucidates lessons learned on the process for modernizing hydrometeorological systems and delivering climate services to users. Furthermore, it offers insight into challenges and opportunities for climate services development, delivery, and use in Southern African developing countries. Qualitative methods, including structured interviews and literature review, were used to identify promising pathways to continue to transform weather, water, and climate services in the three case study countries. In Mozambique, the analysis of the data collected revealed six themes regarding critical pathways to transform weather, water, and climate services in the country. These are: harmonizing and integrating data resources; improving hydrometeorological and climate service design and delivery; fostering hydrometeorological and climate services impact through user feedback; building appropriate human capacity; strengthening national coordination; and promoting regional collaboration. The report summarizes key findings.
format Working Paper
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title World - Climate Services Operational Pathways : Pathways for Transforming Weather, Water, and Climate Services in Mozambique
title_short World - Climate Services Operational Pathways : Pathways for Transforming Weather, Water, and Climate Services in Mozambique
title_full World - Climate Services Operational Pathways : Pathways for Transforming Weather, Water, and Climate Services in Mozambique
title_fullStr World - Climate Services Operational Pathways : Pathways for Transforming Weather, Water, and Climate Services in Mozambique
title_full_unstemmed World - Climate Services Operational Pathways : Pathways for Transforming Weather, Water, and Climate Services in Mozambique
title_sort world - climate services operational pathways : pathways for transforming weather, water, and climate services in mozambique
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099640101292225933/P1652050223f720c0b8bc0fd2fcaf2c420
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37580
_version_ 1764487255287660544