Terms of Reference
Consultant to do baseline study on climate change and urban development in The South East Asia
(Thailand, Vietnam and Philippines) for the 5-year period of 2018 - 2022
1. Background
Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung (RLS) is one of six major political foundations in the Federal Republic of Germany. Affiliated with the German Left party, Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung nurtures and promotes democratic socialism. We are striving to develop alternative approaches for transforming society toward a more united and just one. With this approach, we are facilitating political analysis, education, and dialogues, both in Germany and worldwide.
RLS currently has 26 offices worldwide. In over 80 countries, we are working with partners, including state agencies, academic institutions, and civil society organizations. From RLS Southeast Asia (RLS SEA) – Hanoi Office, we aim to contributing to ensure social, ecological and political rights for all as well as overcoming unequal power structures by promoting participatory decision making processes, political exchange and dialogue, leading to a fair distribution of wealth and resources and a healthy environment. To materialize this goal, we focus on three components including Social Justice, Social and Ecological Transformation, and Raising progressive Mekong voices in the ASEAN region. RLS SEA - Hanoi Office is geographically working in five countries - Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar and Thailand with a broader view into the Southeast Asia region.
2. Rationale
Climate change has been a growing problem in almost all countries across the world. It has an impact on the way businesses and value chains function, how developing countries attempt to obtain resources, and how local communities recover after suffering the horrible effects of extreme events due to global warming. Greenhouse gas emissions have made climate change a dominant problem in our society.
The Southeast Asian region is considered as one of the most threatened and vulnerable regions to climate change. According to the 2018 climate risk index, countries in Southeast Asia rank highest. In the Annual State of Southeast Asia survey in 2019 and 2020 conducted by ASEAN the ASEAN Studies Centre at the ISEAS - Yusof Ishak institute, Climate change ranked among Southeast Asia’s top three security concerns. In addition, ASEAN citizens considered climate change a greater threat than terrorism, historically perceived as a more important issue in the region.
Urban populations are growing rapidly all over the world. By 2050, it is expected that more than two-third of the world’s population will be living in urban areas[1]. The effects of urbanization and climate change have been combining in dangerous ways that seriously threaten the world’s environmental, economic and social stability. In the decades to come, climate change could make hundreds of millions of urban residents, especially those poorest and most marginalized, increasingly vulnerable to floods, landslides, more frequent and stronger cyclones and storms, and periods of more extreme heat and cold and other extreme events. This is because marginalized communities are forced to settle in areas particularly exposed to climate-induced extreme events, such as along river-banks and floodplains, on hillsides and slopes prone to landslides, near polluted grounds and decertified land, in heavily built-up areas causing heat-stress, and along waterfronts in coastal areas. City dwellers may also face reduced access to fresh water led by drought or the encroachment of saltwater on drinking water supplies. Nowadays, the city temperature is higher which is already leading to excessive heat stress. Additionally, climate change may have negative impacts on infrastructure and limit access to basic urban services and quality of life in cities, particularly in coastal areas where climate change impacts are most pronounced and numerous major cities are located. .
Nowadays, governments have increasingly issued urban development plans and policies to harmonize the urban development and climate change response. However, their effect is limited. The reasons include a lack of relevant urban action plans; existence of regulations on urban planning and environment which have not been adequately adjusted to respond to climate change; slow response to climate disasters due to lack of capacity and resources; and lack of public awareness on climate variability and climate change-induced hazard mitigation.
The baseline study on climate change and urban development is planned to be conducted in Thailand, Vietnam and Philippines, contributing to the RLS global work for climate change. It aims to provide the overall climate change impact in the city, how it is connected with the urban development and relevant policies. RLS SEA – Hanoi Office is recruiting one consultant/ a group of consultants to conduct the baseline studies on climate change and urban development in Bangkok (Thailand), Ho Chi Minh city (Vietnam) and Manila (the Philippines) with detail analysis for the 5-year period from 2018 – 2022.
3. Objectives of the study
The main objective of the baseline study is to track the development of climate change over recent years in the city; what are the impacts, how are they connected to urban development, and what are policies/regulations of the governments to respond. These are several sub-objectives as follow:
4. Target groups of beneficiaries/ readers
5. Methodology, deliverables and guiding questions for the “case-study chapters”
5.1 Methodology
5.2 Deliverables – Case countries
Where applicable: Photographs that illustrate the main findings of the research and a few information regarding the specific photographs such as: where was it taken, who or what is visible and name of the copyright holder
Please note: the final case studies for the publication will be written by Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung
Proposed guiding questions
Please note: it is crucial that the consultant provides answers to these questions/topics!
6. Requirements
Necessary qualification:
7. Languages
The report shall be written in English, and then it will be translated to German for publications.
8. Publishers: Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung
9. Tentative Timeline
10. Application
RLS SEA – Hanoi Office would like to invite interested consultant team/ organization to submit their application in English language including:
Application deadline: 20 July 2023
Please submit your application to Mr. Nghiem Tuan Anh, Project Manager RLS SEA via the email address: [email protected] and Ms. Duong Huong Giang, Chief Finance Manager via the email address: [email protected] are only accepted before the application deadline. Only short-listed applicants will be contacted.
[1] Hannah Ritchie and Max Roser (2018) - "Urbanization". Published online at OurWorldInData.org. Retrieved from: 'https://ourworldindata.org/urbanization' [Online Resource]