Viet Nam is among the countries most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, with rising sea levels, saltwater intrusion, typhoons, floods, and landslides posing serious risks to its long coastline, low-lying deltas—particularly the Mekong Delta—and mountainous regions. These climate hazards are already exacting a heavy toll. In 2025 alone, the country recorded 415 deaths or missing persons, 728 injuries, and damage or destruction to more than 330,000 homes. The estimated economic loss exceeded VND 91 trillion, or approximately USD 3.4 billion, threatening up to 70 percent of the population and placing between 1 and 1.5 percent of national GDP at risk.
In response, Viet Nam has placed climate change adaptation at the center of its national development agenda. The National Adaptation Plan for the period 2021–2030, with a vision extending to 2050, serves as the country’s primary framework for strengthening systemic resilience and integrating adaptation into national strategies and sectoral plans. As the first phase of the plan concluded in 2024, a mandatory mid-term evaluation was carried out to reassess priorities, improve implementation, and enhance the effectiveness and equity of adaptation efforts for the years ahead.
The mid-term evaluation served several critical purposes. It reviewed progress and tangible adaptation outcomes achieved between 2021 and 2025, identified implementation gaps and underlying causes, and proposed evidence-based corrective measures to strengthen delivery through 2030. The evaluation also generated important inputs for Viet Nam’s process of reviewing and updating its nationally determined contribution, helping ensure alignment between domestic adaptation priorities and international climate commitments.
The assessment yielded five key lessons that are central to improving the execution of the National Adaptation Plan. One of the most important findings was the role of high-level political and managerial commitment. Sustained government leadership, combined with strong awareness among senior officials, the private sector, and the public, was found to be directly linked to successful adaptation outcomes. This commitment has enabled adaptation goals to be mainstreamed into sectoral plans and subnational strategies, reinforcing long-term resilience objectives across development planning.
At the same time, the evaluation identified persistent weaknesses in intersectoral governance and coordination. Climate adaptation cuts across multiple sectors and administrative levels, yet limited policy harmonization and weak coordination mechanisms have reduced implementation efficiency. In particular, coordination among subnational departments responsible for monitoring and evaluation was found to be insufficient, undermining coherence and effectiveness across the system.
A third major lesson underscored the importance of a functioning monitoring and evaluation system. Reliable data, consistent reporting, and timely analysis are essential for tracking progress and adjusting policies in response to emerging risks. The evaluation highlighted significant gaps in information collection and reporting, limiting the government’s ability to assess the effectiveness of adaptation measures and make timely course corrections.
The evaluation also revealed an institutional gap in gender equality and social inclusion. While GESI is recognized as a guiding principle of the National Adaptation Plan, it has not yet been consistently translated into enforceable mechanisms or standardized practices. Many national programs and strategies introduced since 2020 have failed to meaningfully integrate both climate adaptation and GESI considerations, pointing to the need to move from stated commitments to clear institutional mandates and accountability frameworks.
Finally, the evaluation emphasized the need for dedicated and systematic financial resources. Although Viet Nam has allocated significant domestic funding to climate adaptation, the accelerating scale and intensity of climate impacts have created a growing financing gap. Closing this gap will require greater access to international climate finance, including mechanisms such as the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage.
A strong focus on gender equality and social inclusion ran throughout the evaluation process, which assessed the National Adaptation Plan using criteria of relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, sustainability, and GESI. While the government has demonstrated policy intent, including the introduction of gender-related indicators in the national monitoring system, implementation remains uneven and under-resourced. This is particularly concerning given that climate impacts often exacerbate existing inequalities, leaving women, ethnic minorities, and low-income communities more exposed to risk and with fewer resources to adapt.
The evaluation found that many vulnerable groups lack sufficient information and access to adaptation resources in their communities, undermining the principle of leaving no one behind. Effective adaptation, the evaluation concluded, must directly address these structural drivers of vulnerability to ensure equitable outcomes.
The assessment was conducted through a structured methodology that combined primary and secondary data collection, analysis of national and subnational reports, stakeholder interviews, and consultation workshops. Progress was reviewed against all priority adaptation tasks and national indicators, enabling the identification of systemic gaps and the formulation of practical recommendations aligned with Viet Nam’s governance structures and international obligations.
Looking ahead, the evaluation proposes three priority actions for strengthening the National Adaptation Plan during the 2025–2030 period. These include formally institutionalizing GESI through binding indicators and policies, updating the monitoring and evaluation system to improve effectiveness and alignment with global adaptation frameworks, and reinforcing coordination mechanisms across ministries and provinces. Together, these steps aim to ensure that Viet Nam’s adaptation efforts are more coherent, inclusive, and resilient in the face of escalating climate risks.






