4.3 Article

The vulnerability sourcebook and climate impact chains - a standardised framework for a climate vulnerability and risk assessment

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/IJCCSM-07-2019-0042

Keywords

Climate change; Adaptation; Vulnerability assessment; Indicators; Risk assessment; Impact chains

Funding

  1. Deutsche Gesellschaft fur internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)

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The Vulnerability Sourcebook methodology provides a standardised framework for assessing climate vulnerability and risk in adaptation planning. It is based on participative development of climate impact chains to prioritize climate factors and drive climate related threats, vulnerabilities and risks.
Purpose This paper aims to present the Vulnerability Sourcebook methodology, a standardised framework for the assessment of climate vulnerability and risk in the context of adaptation planning. The Vulnerability Sourcebook has been developed for the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and has been applied in more than twenty countries worldwide. Design/methodology/approach It is based on a participative development of so-called climate impact chains, which are an analytical concept to better understand, systemise and prioritise the climate factors as well as environmental and socio-economic factors that drive climate related threats, vulnerabilities and risks in a specific system. Impact chains serve as the backbone for an operational climate vulnerability assessment with indicators based on quantitative approaches (data, models) combined with expert assessments. In this paper, the authors present the concept and applications of the original Vulnerability Sourcebook, published in 2015, which was based on the IPCC AR4 concept of climate vulnerability. In Section 6 of this paper, the authors report how this concept has been adapted to the current IPCC AR5 concept of climate risks. Findings The application of the Sourcebook is demonstrated in three case studies in Bolivia, Pakistan and Burundi. The results indicate that particularly the participative development of impact chains helped with generating a common picture on climate vulnerabilities and commitment for adaptation planning within a region. The mixed methods approach (considering quantitative and qualitative information) allows for a flexible application in different contexts. Challenges are mainly the availability of climate (change) and socio-economic data, as well as the transparency of value-based decisions in the process. Originality/value The Vulnerability Sourcebook offers a standardised framework for the assessment of climate vulnerability and risk in the context of adaptation planning.

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