Harald Heinrichs · Pim Martens Gerd Michelsen · Arnim Wiek Editors
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core text sustainability
Fig. 25.1
The climate change agenda (Derived from Smit et al. 1999 ) 25 Climate Change: Responding to a Major Challenge for Sustainable Development 306 assessments which focus on current day adaptation deficits (Sattherthwaite and Dodman 2013 ). • Consideration of non-climate stressors: When looking to the future, it also needs to be recognised that climate-related events will impact on societies that are likely to be very different than today’s; hence, an integrated assessment of both climate and non-climate scenarios will ultimately be necessary to gain a better understanding of future risks (McEvoy et al. 2008 ). • Recognition of the need for greater interdisciplinary working: Whilst mitigation has dominated policy and research agendas in recent years, there is an increasing recognition that actors also need to be preparing for change that is unavoidable. This has resulted in a greater consideration of vulnerability, adaptation and in many parts of the world already experiencing extreme events, disaster risk reduc- tion. Drawing these different research domains closer together, with improved linkages between natural and social scientists, will be critical for effectively addressing the complexities of climate change. 2 New ways of working between scientists, policymakers and the wider stakeholder community will also be vital. These advances have also filtered through to the public realm, as reflected in mainstream acceptance of human-induced climate change and the need for society to respond. Findings from actor-based research carried out for the EU-funded proj- ect ADAM (Adaptation and Mitigation: in support of European policy) suggest that, on the whole, the climate change issue is no longer questioned as it was in the past. Across all sectors, there is a common acknowledgement that climate change is hap- pening and that we need to prepare for future change. Indeed, in the words of one interviewee, ‘the world is changing fast and I no longer have to deal with sceptics as I have done in the past’, whilst others have noted how ‘rapidly the climate change issue has risen in profile over the past couple of years’ and that there has been a ‘rapid sea change in attitude following recent climate related events, such as the heat wave in 2003’ (McEvoy et al. 2008 ). This shift in public perception has also been accompanied by a greater institutional impetus for change. Over the past cou- ple of years, there has been an increasing recognition that climate change is not merely an environmental issue but one with important social and economic dimen- sions as well. This argument received much attention as a result of the Stern report in 2006 (Stern 2006 ). Although not the first economic report on this issue, it has become the most widely known document of its kind. In it, the author provides stark warning that climate change could result in a ‘market failure on the greatest scale the world has seen’. It is also important to recognise that these changes have taken place in a rapidly evolving policy context. Of the two mainstream agendas, mitigation is relatively ‘mature’ in comparison to adaptation, though new instruments continue to be devel- oped and introduced. Perhaps the most high profile of these is carbon trading, a 2 The Dutch NWO-funded VAM programme (Vulnerability, Adaptation, Mitigation and Adaptation- Mitigation) is a contemporary example of an attempt to encourage interdisciplinary working. See http://www.nwo.nl/nwohome.nsf/pages/NWOP_5XDGSK_Eng?OpenDocument P. Martens et al. 307 market-based mechanism given momentum by the signing of the Kyoto Treaty in 2005. Adaptation, on the other hand, can be considered an agenda still very much in its infancy. Politically, it is also recognised that there is a need for greater cohesion between climate change and sustainable development objectives. To date, climate change and sustainable development have tended to be treated as two distinct agen- das; however, there is considerable added benefit to be gained by ensuring a more coherent approach. Not only will climate change have an adverse impact on prog- ress towards a sustainable future, sustainable development activity can reinforce our response to climate change by both enhancing adaptive capacity and increasing resilience. As noted by the IPCC, however, few plans for promoting sustainability have explicitly included either adapting to climate change impacts or enhancing adaptive capacity. Download 5.3 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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