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A review of climate risk information for adaptation and development planning

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 9, Pages 1193-1215

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/joc.1839

Keywords

climate change; risk; developing countries; adaptation; scenarios

Funding

  1. UK Department for International Development
  2. Natural Environment Research Council [ncas10009] Funding Source: researchfish

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Although the use of climate scenarios for impact assessment has grown steadily since the 1990s. uptake of Such information for adaptation is lagging by nearly a decade ill terms Of Scientific Output. Nonetheless, integration of climate risk information in development planning is now a priority for donor agencies because of the need to prepare for climate change impacts across different sectors and Countries. This urgency sterns from concerns that progress made against Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) could be threatened by anthropogenic climate change beyond 2015. Up to this time the human signal. though detectable and growing, will be a relatively small component of climate variability and change. This implies the need for a twin-track approach: oil the one hand. Vulnerability assessments of social and economics strategies for coping with present climate extremes and variability, and, on the other hand, development Of climate forecast tools and scenarios to evaluate sector-specific, incremental changes in risk over the next few decades. This review starts by describing the climate outlook for the next Couple of decades and the implications for adaptation assessments. We then review ways in which climate risk information is already being used in adaptation assessments and evaluate the strengths and and weaknesses of three groups of techniques. Next we identify knowledge gaps and Opportunities for improving the production and uptake of climate risk information for the 2020s. We assert that climate change scenarios can meet some. but not all, of the needs of adaptation planning. Even then. the choice of scenario technique must be matched to the intended application. taking into account local constraints of time, resources. human capacity and supporting infrastructure. We also Show that Much greater attention should be given to improving and critiquing models used for Climate impact assessment, as standard practice. Finally, we highlight the over-arching need for the scientific community to provide more information and guidance oil adapting to the risks of climate variability and change over nearer time horizons (i.e. the 2020s). Although the focus of the review is oil information provision and uptake in developing regions. it is clear that many developed Countries are facing the same challenges. Copyright (C) 2009 Royal Meteorological Society

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