As a country-driven process, the TNA should take national sustainable development priorities into consideration. TNA is also a participatory process and the involvement of all relevant stakeholders is therefore crucial. The value of involving a wide range of relevant stakeholders in the process is that the country will progress and become stronger in terms of tackling climate change, especially because the TNA provides an ideal setting for stakeholders that play crucial roles in a country’s innovation and technology ecosystem, to become engaged on climate change issues. Templates for each of the reports have been developed and are distributed to participating countries well in advance of reporting. For each of the steps, this Guide Note presents specific guidelines and methodologies.
Identification and Engagement of Stakeholders in the TNA Process: A Guide for National TNA Teams
Scale
National
Sub-national
Expertise Level
Practitioner
Specialist
Resource Type
Guidance and Frameworks
Language
English
Developer or Source
Global Environment Facility (GEF)
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)