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Using Risk Assessment to Inform Adaptation

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Title: Using Risk Assessment to Inform Adaptation


1
Using Risk Assessment to Inform Adaptation
In-session Workshop on Impacts Of, and
Vulnerability and Adaptation To, Climate
Change Hotel Maritim, Bonn, Germany 18 June 2004
  • Roger N. Jones

2
Risk
  • Can be broadly defined as the likelihood of an
    adverse event or outcome
  • How does this relate to Article 2 of the UNFCCC?

3
Article 2 UNFCCC
  • Aims to prevent dangerous
  • anthropogenic climate change
  • by stabilising greenhouse gas emissions,
  • thus allowing
  • Ecosystems to adapt naturally
  • Food security to be maintained
  • Sustainable development to proceed

4
Scales of dangerous climate change
  • Global thresholds of criticality
  • Grounded ice sheet melts,
  • N. Hemisphere flips to cold conditions,
  • Amazon wilts and burns due to heat and drought
  • Global in scale but very unlikely to occur (?
    with ?T)
  • Local thresholds of criticality
  • Any activity where
  • the harm caused exceeds given levels of tolerance
  • impacts become non-viable with no reasonable
    substitute
  • Local in scale, number and severity increasing
    with ?T,
  • benefits fewer with ?T

5
Linking climate to adaptation over time
6
Measuring the ability to cope
7
Coping under climate change
8
Adapting through the coping range
9
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10
Different activities have different adaptive
capacities
Coral Reefs
Developed Country Agriculture
Developing Country Agriculture
Protected Coastal Infrastructure
11
Adaptation and mitigation
  • Adaptation increases the coping range through
    biological and social means
  • Mitigation reduces the magnitude and frequency of
    greenhouse-related climate hazards
  • Therefore, they are complementary, not
    interchangeable.
  • They also reduce different areas of climate
    uncertainty

12
Some major methods
  • Natural hazards method
  • Risk Hazard Vulnerability
  • (what are the likely damages?)
  • Vulnerability-based method
  • Risk Probability Consequence
  • (what is the likelihood of exceeding a given
    state of vulnerability?)
  • Policy assessment
  • Does a given policy increase or decrease risk
    under climate change?

13
Selecting a method
  • Natural Hazard
  • Probabilities of hazard constrained
  • Main drivers known
  • Chain of consequences understood
  • P(Hazard) Consequences
  • Exploratory
  • Vulnerability
  • Probabilities not constrained
  • Many drivers
  • Multiple pathways and feedbacks
  • P(Vulnerability)
  • e.g. critical threshold exceedance
  • Normative

14
Likelihood of threshold exceedance
15
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16
Activities most at risk
  • Those where
  • critical thresholds are exceeded at low levels of
    global warming,
  • adaptive capacity is low and/or adaptation is
    prohibitively expensive, difficult or unknown and
  • the consequences of exceeding those thresholds
    are judged to be serious

17
Resources
  • UNDP Adaptation Policy Framework
  • www.undp.org/cc/apf.htm
  • UKCIP Willow and Connell (2003)
  • www.ukcip.org.uk/risk_uncert
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