Title: Regional%20Approaches%20to%20Risk%20Management
1Regional Approaches to Risk Management
Living with our Changing Climate IOCI Seminar and
Workshop 16 August 2005
2Moving from the tactical to strategic management
of climate
3Linking climate to adaptation over time
4Risk is a measure of the changing ability to cope
- Assess current climate risks
- Climate variability
- How have people learnt to cope?
- Assess future climate risks
- Changing climate hazards
- Response between climate change and
socio-economic change - Estimating exposure to risks within relevant
planning horizons - Building on historical capacity and developing
new capacities
5Scoping phase
- If not already established, work with
stakeholders to develop conceptual model of
system - What is the relationship between the hazard, the
impact and vulnerability? - Is there a point (linked to climate) where the
the system ceases to operate in the way you would
like? critical threshold
6Selecting a method
7Characterisation of hazards
Sector
Climate H
azards
Water
Rainfall amount and variability, flood, drought
Agriculture
Flood, drought, cool/hot extremes,
Storms, hail, humidity
Health
Hot/wet conditions, temperature
extremes, violent storms, floods, crop
and water shortages
Coasts
Storm surges,
wind/wave climates,
pressure extremes, tidal extremes
Biodiversity
Fire, flood, drought, storms
8Whats my baseline water resources
9Abrupt shifts in Australian rainfall18901990
10Future climate - no adaptation
11Future climate with adaptation
12Planning horizons
13Average uncertainty
14P and Ep change over Australia(per degree global
warming)
15P and Ep changes for north-western Australia
Change per degree global warming
16P and Ep changes for south-western Australia
Change per degree global warming
17Hydrological sensitivity and runoff co-efficient
18Simple model of mean flow changes in 2030
preliminary results
19System vulnerability (supply demand)
- Sensitivity to supply changes (climate, land-use,
fire) - Level of utilisation
- Demand projections
Current management
Marginal planned change
Substantial change
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21Natural hazard-driven approach
Approach Method Outcome Scenarios Criteria
- What risks may we face under this projected
scenario(s)? - Analyse possible outcomes from a given climate
hazard(s) other drivers of change - An understanding of current/future
climate-related risks - Exploratory scenarios of climate with other
biophysical and socio-economic conditions - Probabilities of hazard constrained
- Main drivers known
- Chain of consequences understood
- P(Hazard) Consequences
- Largely exploratory
22Vulnerability-driven approach
Approach Method Outcome Scenarios Criteria
- What is the risk of a specific place, process,
group or activity being harmed? - Determine the likelihood of critical threshold
exceedance - Understanding of exposure to harm and harmful
processes - Characterisation of socio-economic outcomes can
use climate scenarios or diagnose exposure
through inverse methods - Probabilities of hazard not constrained
- Many drivers resulting in vulnerability
- Multiple pathways and feedbacks
- P(Vulnerability)/Hazard (e.g. critical threshold
exceedance) - Largely normative
23Resilience-driven approach
Approach Method Outcome Scenarios Criteria
- What advantages can we gain by better
understanding of our current/future capacities? - Assess ability to withstand shocks, recover from
setbacks and manage change. - Better knowledge of coping mechanisms and
socio-political institutions, barriers to
adaptation, increased benefits - Baseline adaptation, adaptation analogues from
history, other locations other activities - Impacts and/or vulnerability understood
- Evidence of successful adaptation
- Benefits thought to be likely
- Barriers to adaptation recognised
- Risks that require treatment
24Policy-driven approach
Approach Method Outcome Scenarios Criteria
- How will our current plans for the future be
affected by climate change? - Assess the efficacy of an existing or proposed
policy under climate change - Fitter policy under climate change
- Unmanaged climate change impacts and
vulnerability - Policy aims are sensitive to climate change
- Desire to mainstream adaptation