4.5 Article

Ranking local climate policy: assessing the mitigation and adaptation activities of 104 German cities

Journal

CLIMATIC CHANGE
Volume 167, Issue 1-2, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-021-03142-9

Keywords

Climate mitigation; Climate adaptation; Climate policy integration; Urban planning; City ranking; Germany

Funding

  1. Germany's Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [FKZ 01LR1709A1, FKZ 01LR1709B1]

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This article examines the relationships between mitigation and adaptation efforts in urban areas, ranking 104 different sized German cities based on climate policy indicators. The study identifies six clusters of cities, each with different roles in climate policy, influenced by structural factors such as city size, historical climate policies, and funding programs for mitigation and adaptation.
Climate mitigation and climate adaptation are crucial tasks for urban areas and can involve synergies as well as trade-offs. However, few studies have examined how mitigation and adaptation efforts relate to each other in a large number of differently sized cities, and therefore we know little about whether forerunners in mitigation are also leading in adaptation or if cities tend to focus on just one policy field. This article develops an internationally applicable approach to rank cities on climate policy that incorporates multiple indicators related to (1) local commitments on mitigation and adaptation, (2) urban mitigation and adaptation plans and (3) climate adaptation and mitigation ambitions. We apply this method to rank 104 differently sized German cities and identify six clusters: climate policy leaders, climate adaptation leaders, climate mitigation leaders, climate policy followers, climate policy latecomers and climate policy laggards. The article seeks explanations for particular cities' positions and shows that coping with climate change in a balanced way on a high level depends on structural factors, in particular city size, the pathways of local climate policies since the 1990s and funding programmes for both climate mitigation and adaptation.

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