4.6 Article

Insights on Urban and Periurban Adaptation Strategies Based on Stakeholders' Perceptions on Hard and Soft Responses to Climate Change

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su11030647

Keywords

urban adaptation policy; green infrastructure costs and benefits; stakeholder perceptions

Funding

  1. Horizon 2020 research project INHERIT (INter-sectoral Health and Environment Research for InnovaTion) [GA-667364]
  2. ECOHEALTH (Adaptation to Climate Change in Spain: analysing Co-benefits among health, tourism, ecosystem and food) Fundacion Biodiversidad [G95532826]

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Adapting to expected impacts of climate change is a task shared by multiple institutions and individuals, but much of this work falls over local and regional authorities, which has made them experts over the issue. At the same time, adaptation to climate change has been a research interest in different academic fields; while private companies provide research and development efforts on the issue. Views from perspectives may contain common ground and discrepancies, but benefits from the discussion may differ among these three sectors. This study shows the application of collaborative approaches to analyze impacts and adaptation measures at a local level. A stakeholder workshop was held in the city of Bilbao to discuss impacts of climate change and adaptation in the local context of the Basque Country. The contributions were proposed on three axes: impacts from climate change, good practices proposed or already in action, and costs and benefits derived from those strategies. Participants were asked to rank a series of measures and practices extracted from their previous inputs. These measures were analyzed after applying bootstrapping techniques, according to the perceived costs and benefits assigned to each of the grouped measures and practices. Participants estimated that groups containing green adaptation measures and those that had potentially positive impacts over climate change mitigation were the most efficient measures, as reduced costs combined with high benefits could lead to win-win adaptation strategies, while grey infrastructures were seen as providing high benefits at high costs.

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