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“Adaptation to the Consequences of Climate Change Process: progress achieved and capacity building needed” Budapest, 19-20 November, 2007 EEA Activities.

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Presentation on theme: "“Adaptation to the Consequences of Climate Change Process: progress achieved and capacity building needed” Budapest, 19-20 November, 2007 EEA Activities."— Presentation transcript:

1 “Adaptation to the Consequences of Climate Change Process: progress achieved and capacity building needed” Budapest, 19-20 November, 2007 EEA Activities on Adaptation: progress achieved and cooperation ahead Michaela Schaller, ETC/ACC André Jol & Stéphane Isoard, European Environment Agency

2 European Environment Agency The European Environment Agency is the EU body dedicated to providing sound, independent information on the environment We are a main information source for those involved in developing, adopting, implementing and evaluating environmental policy, and also the general public The EEA mission

3 3 EEA’s mandate To help the Community and member countries make informed decisions about improving the environment, integrating environmental considerations into economic policies and moving towards sustainability To coordinate the European environment information and observation network (Eionet) About 300 national institutions National focal points European topic centres National reference centres Other institutions

4 4 EEA member and collaborating countries Member countries Collaborating countries

5 5 EEA’s clients Institutions and governments European Commission, Parliament, Council, EEA member countries Influencers NGOs, business, media, advisory groups, scientists, debaters General public EEA’s networking partners Eionet partners in 32 member countries + collaborating countries (NFPs, NRCs) Commission services (DG ENV, TREN, AGRI, Eurostat, JRC) International organisations (UNEP, UNECE, WHO, OECD) EEA’s products diverse publications & information (Reports, briefings, etc.) http:// www.eea.europa.eu

6 6 EEA‘s main Products on Impacts, Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate Change (Past) EEA Report No 2/2004 „Impact of Europe‘s changing climate“ Review of scenario exercises in the context of cc adaptation in Europe (CASE background study) EEA Technical Report No 7/2005 „Vulnerability and adaptation to climate change in Europe“ EEA Technical Report No 2/2007 „Climate change and water adaptation issues“ (Europe‘s Environment. The fourth Assessment, 2007)

7 7 Key European CC vulnerabilities (biogeographical regions)

8 8 River flooding events 1998-2005 About 100 (river) floods: more than 700 fatalities, a million people affected and 25 billion EUR in insured economic losses Data-source: EEA, 2006, unpublished

9 9 Water Quantitiy One ‑ third of the pan ‑ European population lives in countries where water resources are under substantial pressure. Over the past five years, the region has suffered more than 100 major floods. River catchments affected by flooding 1998-2005

10 10 Vernagt glacier (Austria) lost more than 50% of mass between 1912 and 2003 Source: Global Outlook for Ice and Snow, UNEP, 2007

11 11 Source: Zemp, 2006

12 12 Projected shifts in water runoff in the Alps (increase in winter, decrease in summer) Source: Beniston, 2005

13 13 Projected changes in water runoff (decrease in south/east, increase in north/north west) Source: PESETA project, PRUDENCE; IPCC SRES A2 high emission scenario (change mean 2071-2100 relative to 1961-1990)

14 14 Projected increase in heat-related deaths in Southern Europe Source: PESETA project, PRUDENCE; IPCC SRES A2 high emission scenario (change mean 2071-2100 relative to 1961-1990)

15 15 Projected local extinction of plants in Southern Europe Source: ATEAM, 2004, IPCC A2 scenario

16 16 Key relevant EU research programmes PRUDENCE/ENSEMBLES (ENSEMBLE based predictions of climate change and their impacts) ADAM (Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies: Supporting European Climate Policy) ALARM (Assessing LArge scale Risks for biodiversity with tested Methods) BRANCH (Biodiversity Requires Adaptation in Northwest Europe under a CHanging climate) CarboEurope (Assessment of the European Terrestrial Carbon Balance) CIRCLE (Climate Impact Research Coordination for a Larger Europe, European Research Area) CIRCE (Climate Change and Impact Research: the Mediterranean Environment) CLAVIER (Climate Change and Variability:Impact on Central and Eastern Europe) COST 725 (Establishing a European Phenological Data Platform for Climatological Applications) ESPACE (European Spatial Planning: Adapting to Climate Events) Euro-limpacs (Evaluating the Impacts of Global Change on European Freshwater Ecosystems) FLOODSITE (Integrated Flood Risk Analysis and Management Methodologies) GRACE (Groundwater Resources and Climate Change Effects) PACE (Permafrost and Climate in Europe) SCENES (Water Scenarios for Europe and for Neighbouring States)

17 17 Examples of national assessments Finland: FINADAPT (Assessing the adaptive capacity of the Finnish environment and society under a changing climate) Germany: KomPass (Competence Centre on Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation) Hungary: VAHAVA Changing (VÁltozás) Impact (HAtás) Response (VÁlaszadás) Netherlands: CcSP (Climate Changes Spatial Planning) Portugal: SIAM (Scenarios, Impacts and Adaptation Measures) Spain: ECCE (Assessment of the Preliminary Impacts in Spain due to Climate Change) Sweden: SWECLIM (Swedish Regional Climate Modelling Programme) UK: UKCIP (Climate Impact Programme) All countries: communications to UNFCCC

18 Preparation of national adaptation strategies: Denmark, Germany, Finland, France, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, UK Sectoral actions mainly in areas with a long tradition of dealing with climate extremes such as flood defence, water scarcity and droughts Water sector- recent focus of EEA study (with German Presidency) with a country survey: very high awareness, measures implemented, planned or underway from technical engineering, building codes, spatial planning, improved forecasting, improved landscape management, behaviour campaigns, new economic instruments Current adaptation measures

19 19 Recent droughts and flooding – range of actions Droughts: New legislation: France, Portugal New water savings standards, recycling: Cyprus, UK New infrastructure, desalinisation plants: Cyprus, Spain, UK Effective economic instruments: Germany Floods: Emergency responses, improved forecasting- all Self- protection and flood awareness Spatial planning and land management Hard and soft engineering

20 20 ●Scope and review impacts (and opportunities) - mapping exercise ●Simple risk analysis to assess the probability and the consequences ●Adaptation responses considered and appraised (decision making) ●Ad. Plan (raise awareness, strengthen capacity, incorporate in policy / operations) Strategic: broad corporate plans, policies and management strategies Operational: specific services that each organisation provides Functional: as applies to the internal business processes and units ●Consultation throughout ●Review: act (learn) act again ●Number of organisations involved – from scoping to detailed analysis (hazard, vulnerability and exposure ) High Risk (priority) Low Risk Probability 4 1 2 3 +4+3+2+1 Magnitude Possible practical steps Source: Paul Watkiss

21 21 Challenges: what is needed next? Climate-proof EU policies and Directives (Agriculture, Industry, Energy, Health, Water, Marine, Ecosystems/Biodiversity, Forestry) Integrate adaptation into EU’s funding programmes (Structural, Cohesion and Solidarity funds, Agriculture and Rural Development funds) Consider new policies, e.g. spatial planning as an integration tool Integrate adaptation in EU external relations (developing countries) Enhancing the knowledge base, e.g. regarding regional scale and information on costs Involvement of civil society, business sector organisations and enhanced information exchange Exploit opportunities for innovative adaptation technologies

22 22 Future Activities EEA (ETC/ACC) CC Impacts & Adaptation Provide support to EU policy development on adaptation (e.g. follow-up of Green Paper) Continue networking with main clients and partners, e.g. -1 st EIONET Workshop on CC vulnerability, impacts & adaptation (27-28 November 2007) Publish indicator based assessment report on impacts of cc in Europe in 2008 (update of 2004) & update core set cc impact indicators Develop adaptation indicators & scenarios Develop approaches to integrate cc impacts & adaptation issues in other main policy areas Further work on costs of adaptation, exploring approaches to include country specific information

23 23 Thank you for your attention!

24 24 European Topic Centres (ETC) Consortia of institutions across EEA member countries dealing with a specific environmental topic and contracted by EEA to perform specific activities as defined in the EEA work programme ETC Water ETC Land Use & Spatial Information ETC Resource & Waste Management ETC Air & Climate Change ETC Biological Diversity

25 25 Why is adaptation important ? Climate change cannot be totally avoided Anticipatory adaptation can be more effective and less costly than “retrofitting” or “emergency adaptation” Climate change may be more rapid and pronounced than currently known Immediate benefits from adaptation to current climate variability and extreme events Avoid maladaptive policies and practices

26 26  Timing – pro-active vs. reactive ?  Cost-effective adaptation – what is proportionate and efficient?  Ancillary effects – positive and negative?  Differences in scale, from EU to local  Integration & consistency?  Appropriate adaptation “stakeholder- led”, rather than enforced  Cross-sectoral  Uncertainty – different confidence for average temperature vs. extremes  Determined by future socio-economic development  Ownership - different actors (builder vs. operator)  Time-scales – investing now for benefits in the (far) future  Inequalities (impacts and adaptive capacity) ComplexitiesChallenges Some issues with adaptation Source: Paul Watkiss

27 27 EEA is member of the advisory group of the following projects ADAM (Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies: Supporting European Climate Policy; 6th FP; 2006-2009) SCENES (Water Scenarios for Europe and for neighbouring States; 6th FP; 2007-2010) ALARM (Assessing LArge scale Risks for biodiversity with tested Methods, 6th FP) GEMS (Global and regional Earth-system (Atmosphere) Monitoring using Satellite and in-situ data, 6th FP) Euro-limpacs (Evaluating the Impacts of Global Change on European Freshwater Ecosystems, 6th FP) CarboEurope-IP (Assessment of the European Terrestrial Carbon Balance, 6th FP) CIRCLE (Climate Impact Research Coordination for a Larger Europe, European Research Area (ERA-Net), 6th FP) CcSP (Climate changes Spatial Planning, Netherlands research programme)

28 28 Projected crop yield decrease in Southern Europe, increase in Northern Europe (2 models) Source: PESETA project, PRUDENCE; IPCC SRES A2 high emission scenario (change mean 2071-2100 relative to 1961-1990)


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