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Climate Adaptation

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Title: Climate Adaptation


1
Climate Adaptation Adaptation Mainstreaming
Lessons from Variability
  • Eileen L. Shea
  • East-West Center
  • Pacific Islands Training Institute on Climate and
    Extreme Events
  • June 2004

2
Mainstreaming Climate Information for Adaptation
Sources of Lessons
  • 2002 Snowmass Institute on Integrated
    Assessments Special Session on Adaptation
  • Symposium on Climate and Extreme Events in
    Asia-Pacific Enhancing Resilience Improving
    Decision Making (Bangkok, March 2003)
  • Mobilizing Solutions for Adaptation Enhancing
    Resilience (New Orleans, October 2003)
  • Insights and Tools for Adaptation Learning from
    Climate Variability (Washington, D.C., November
    2003)

3
Some Definitions
  • Vulnerability a combination of sensitivity,
    exposure and resilience (adaptive capacity)
    focus on
  • Reducing exposure and/or sensitivity or
  • Enhancing resilience
  • Adaptation those activities that people,
    individually or in groups such as households,
    villages, companies and various forms of
    government, carry out in order to accommodate,
    cope with or reduce the adverse effects of
    climate variability and change (SPREP, 2000)
    generally two types
  • Anticipatory (proactive)
  • Reactive

4
Lessons Learned from Variability
  • Recall some of the Guiding Principles from
    Forecast to Applications session
  • Focus on integrated climate-society system
  • Interactive, collaborative process with
    stakeholders (science-policy partnerships)
  • Problem-focused approach
  • Understand place, context, history and decision
    making process
  • Useful and usable information
  • Near-term decisions and long-term planning
  • Learn-by-doing
  • Address todays problems and plan for the future
  • Facilitate proactive decision making and
    iterative, reflective, flexible and adaptive
    approaches

5
Pacific Regional Climate Information System
  • Identification of information needs
  • Product design and evaluation
  • Future needs and opportunities

Continuous Interaction and Information Flow
Providers of Climate Information
Users of Climate Information
  • Product development and distribution
  • Information interpretation/translation
  • Communication/outreach/education

Continuing Process of Shared Learning and Joint
Problem Solving
6
A General Approach to Adaptation Mainstreaming
(New Orleans, 2003)
  • Adaptation entails the consideration of climatic
    variability and change in ongoing decision-making
    processes, development plans, projects
    initiatives
  • Improving societys ability to cope with changes
    in climate across timescales
  • Allows for adaptation to both natural and
    anthropogenic changes in climate
  • Adaptation requires being proactive regarding the
    full range of future stresses
  • Recognize interconnections between socioeconomic,
    environmental and climatic stresses
  • Comprehensive risk management where climate is
    one factor in a multi-stress environment

7
A General Approach to Adaptation Mainstreaming
(New Orleans, 2003)
  • The goal of adaptation is to enhance resilience
    and develop flexible management approaches that
    facilitate adjustments in response to changing
    climate conditions
  • Address both climate-related challenges and
    opportunities
  • Evolutionary process of minimizing risk, reducing
    vulnerability and enhancing resilience
  • Opportunities exist for integrating greenhouse
    gas reduction (mitigation) and adaptation
    concerns, e.g.
  • Efficiencies in agriculture and water sectors
  • Mangroves as carbon sink and coastal protection

8
Methods Mechanisms for Adaptation(New
Orleans, 2003)
  • Consider the context in which adaptation must
    take place
  • Work with stakeholders to develop
    problem-specific solutions mainstreaming
    climate information to support adaptation a
    demand-driven enterprise
  • Understand the decision making processes
  • Identify appropriate intervention points
  • Emphasize adaptive management
  • Support and integrate indigenous adaptations

9
Methods Mechanisms for Adaptation(New
Orleans, 2003)
  • In the context of natural resources, effective
    adaptation a balance between bottoms-up
    (multiple, individual projects) and top-down
    (imposition of a management structure)
  • Use a wide range of networks and partnerships
    (government, social, scientific, private sector
    networks)
  • Foster cross-sectoral integration
  • Work at multiple levels of governance

10
Some Barriers to Adaptation(New Orleans, 2003)
  • Systemic and perceptual barriers including
  • Difficulties communicating information across
    sectors and among levels of government
  • Short-term planning horizons on the part of some
    policy officials and decision makers
  • Mechanisms for using market forces to facilitate
    adaptation not well established
  • Vulnerable countries have limited capacity and
    in-house expertise
  • Approaches for integrating climate information
    into decision making and long-term planning
    efforts not well established
  • Reliance on historical data and patterns
  • No well-established framework for priorities

11
Methods Mechanisms for Adaptation(New
Orleans, 2003)
  • Work end-to-end from planning through
    implementation, monitoring, evaluation and
    adjustment
  • Start with existing planning efforts
  • Set priorities to maximize use of limited
    resources
  • Monitor and assess progress often continuously
  • Develop indicators of outcomes
  • Work in multiple timescales
  • Decision makers interested in continuum of
    information from extreme events through seasonal
    outlooks to long-term projections
  • Exploring linkages important

12
Enhancing ResilienceWater Resources as Example
  • Central importance of water resources to survival
    and development make this sector a natural target
    of opportunity
  • Water is Gold cascading effects
  • Limited (natural) storage capacity
  • Dependence on rainfall subject to seasonal and
    year-to-year variations
  • Increasing demand population growth and
    economic development
  • Infrastructure constraints
  • Institutional challenges

13
Providing Access to Fresh WaterEnhancing
Resilience
  • Improve Infrastructure/Enhance Capacity
  • Evaluate Existing Assets and Develop
    Unused/Alternative Sources
  • Incentives for Water Conservation and Wastewater
    Recovery and Reuse

14
Providing Access to Fresh WaterEnhancing
Resilience
  • Encourage Public-Private Partnerships Among
    Large-Scale Users (tourism, agriculture,
    military)
  • Pursue Watershed Protection and Restoration
  • Emphasize Integrated Water and Land Use
    Management Explore Traditional Practices (e.g.,
    Ahupuaa in Hawaii)

15
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16
Providing Access to Fresh WaterEnhancing
Resilience
  • Plan for Extremes (particularly droughts)
  • Integrate Climate Forecasts into decision making
  • Emphasize Self-Sufficiency in Long-Term Planning
  • Promote Public Awareness, Education, Dialogue
    Capacity-Building

17
Some Closing Thoughts on Adaptation
  • Government leadershipat all levels
  • Risk management a useful framework for building
    partnerships and guiding climate information
    systems
  • Proactive planningclimate risk management in a
    sustainable development context
  • Responding to todays variability
  • Adaptation to long-term change
  • Economic planning community development

18
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