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Vulnerability to climate change in the Arctic: A case study from Arctic
Vulnerability to climate change in the Arctic: A case study from Arctic

... These concepts are consistent with and are captured in the model of vulnerability employed here, where our system of interest is the community (Fig. 1). Vulnerability is conceptualized as a function of exposure-sensitivity of a community to climate change effects and its adaptive capacity to deal wi ...
mitigating climate change in the tea sector
mitigating climate change in the tea sector

... their livelihood. In Kenya, the tea sector employs more than 3 million people and smallholders account for 62% of total tea production in the country. Climate change is expected to have a significant impact on global tea production. Because tea relies on welldistributed rainfall, increased temperatu ...
THE BIG LIE - Council for American Students in International
THE BIG LIE - Council for American Students in International

... he reality of global warming and associated climate change is upon us. No longer is there any doubt, nor has there been among the vast majority of climate scientists for at least two decades, 2 that anthropogenic (human-caused) warming of the Earth is underway, mainly caused by the introduction into ...
The implications of climate change scenario selection for future
The implications of climate change scenario selection for future

... Basin complicates understanding its hydrology and hydrologic response to projected changes in climate. The latitude of the water-producing regions in the basin lies at the northern boundary of the area in the American Southwest in which earlier studies have projected declines in precipitation and ru ...
Ireland’s Climate: the road ahead IR E
Ireland’s Climate: the road ahead IR E

... have been produced by Irish researchers that provide projections of the future Irish climate in the coming decades, based on IPCC scenarios of greenhouse gas emissions. Until recently a lot of this work has depended on global climate model simulations produced outside Ireland. In the lead-up to the ...
Potential Consequences of Climate Variability and Change for the
Potential Consequences of Climate Variability and Change for the

... Chinese tallow increased by a factor of 30 between 1981 and 1995,often out-competing native species when canopy gaps form in mesic (medium moisture) and wet sites (Harcombe,et.al.,1998). These kinds of interactions and changes in forest dynamics are difficult to simulate. Mixed responses among speci ...
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2 Andean montane forests and climate change

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... and management of the GBR is shared between the federal and Queensland state governments. Established as a federal agency in 1975, the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority (GBRMPA) has primary responsibility over the GBR Marine Park while the Queensland state government is responsible for the i ...
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4. Financial transfers and adaptation in the South

... new financial flows to reduce greenhouse gas emissions (mitigation transfers) and become climate-resilient (adaptation transfers). We find that in the absence of institutional barriers to adaptation, mitigation or development, climate change will make isolated transfers less efficient: A large part ...
Historical and idealized climate model experiments
Historical and idealized climate model experiments

... IPCC, 2007). As part of the EMIC community’s contribution to the Fifth Assessment Report, 15 EMICs have contributed results from a series of experiments designed to examine climate change over the last millennium and to extend the representative concentration pathways projections that are being simu ...
Lake Victoria CC Readness brief No. 3 English
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... The livelihoods of countless African households will be imperiled without efforts to improve resilience to environmental hazards, including those attributable to climate change. Sustaining progress on the MDGs will require strengthening capacities to anticipate and respond to cl ...
An assessment of the foundational assumptions in high-resolution climate projections: the case of UKCP09
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... In Section 2 we discuss the aims of UKCP09. In Section 3 we outline the method used to generate high-resolution climate projections. We give considerable space to the description of UKCP09’s methods for two reasons. First, even though UKCP09 is widely discussed, its ways and means in generating pro ...
Smith et al. 2008
Smith et al. 2008

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What California`s Coastal Managers Need to Plan for Climate Change
What California`s Coastal Managers Need to Plan for Climate Change

... responsibilities, and what additional information and other knowledge resources they may  need to begin planning for climate change. This study was conducted in the broader context of  how science can best support policy makers and resource managers. Based on extensive  interview and survey research ...
CLIMATE CHANGE VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENTS: AN
CLIMATE CHANGE VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENTS: AN

... the vulnerable system and the stressors that it is exposed to (in terms of scientific research, data collection, or model experiments), and the transfer of resources to vulnerable societies (in terms of financial means, technologies, or expertise) in order to help them to prepare for and cope with u ...
The impact of climate change and weather on transport - MOWE-IT
The impact of climate change and weather on transport - MOWE-IT

... In ICF (2008) the impact of sea level rise on various types of transportation infrastructure along the East Coast of the United States is analyzed. Using digital elevation models they identify ‘‘transportation infrastructure that, without protection, will regularly be inundated by the ocean or at-ri ...
Contested science in the media: linguistic traces of
Contested science in the media: linguistic traces of

... manifest in a text” (p. 51). While framing may also take place through visuals (e.g., Bednarek & Caple, 2012; Oddo, 2013), verbal representation is the key focus in most framing studies (see the next section for examples). The current study is to some extent inspired by the frustration I as a text l ...
Are current building regulations adequately advancing sustainable
Are current building regulations adequately advancing sustainable

... practicable nationally consistent. This does not mean, however, that ‘one size fits all’ because different locations can have geographic, climatic or other differences, but the overall risk levels to the community should be reasonably similar. Governments require the ABCB to undertake a regulation i ...
Biodiversity climate change impacts report card technical paper
Biodiversity climate change impacts report card technical paper

... near complete absence of these in marine species. Freshwater organisms are more easily distributed the smaller they are. Many can fly as adults and birds redistribute others. Fish face more difficult barriers and in contrast to a largely bottom-up view (determination through physico-chemical process ...
What is Climate Change and How it will effect
What is Climate Change and How it will effect

... disease and conflict. Furthermore biological diversity the source of enormous environmental, economic, and cultural value will be threatened by climate change. ‘Climate change Mitigation’ which refers to efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions or to capture greenhouse gases through certain kinds ...
Development of a Methodology and a Tool for the Assessment of Vulnerability of Roadways to Flood Induced Damage
Development of a Methodology and a Tool for the Assessment of Vulnerability of Roadways to Flood Induced Damage

... The important aspect of simulating “over time” is that whereas impacts (such as that of unsustained growth in population or construction) may appear to be linear over a short time period (say a span of five years), in reality, they may be of exponential nature over a decade or a few decades. Having ...
Threats, Monitoring, and Policy to Present and Future Climate Change... Algonquin Park (Ontario, Canada) to the Adirondack Park (New York,
Threats, Monitoring, and Policy to Present and Future Climate Change... Algonquin Park (Ontario, Canada) to the Adirondack Park (New York,

... moves along different parts of the ocean-atmosphere-land system (Gillenwater, 2010). Different GHGs have varying global warming capacities. The release of these global warming gases could push ecosystems past tipping points that may create powerful negative feedback loops resulting in even larger in ...
NEPA, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND PUBLIC LANDS DECISION MAKING
NEPA, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND PUBLIC LANDS DECISION MAKING

... Water Supply Pipeline (RWSP or “Million Pipeline”)—a Colorado water project that proposes drawing 250,000 additional acre-feet of water out of the Colorado River Basin for use on the Front Range of Colorado and Southern Wyoming.17 The third examines some of the difficulties of incorporating climate ...
PDF
PDF

... will need to find new livelihoods. Displaced rural populations are likely to move to cities, which could cause incomes for unskilled labour to fall by 12 to 24 per cent in order to absorb the new workers. Income distribution in Namibia is already one of the most uneven in the world and this inequali ...
ap401e
ap401e

... On the GHG mitigation front, substantial technical potential exists in the agriculture sector with a broad set of practices (Caldeira et al., 2004; Smith et al., 2008), and 70 percent of this potential could be realized in developing countries (FAO 2009). This potential varies significantly by count ...
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Politics of global warming



The politics of global warming are complex due to numerous factors that arise from the global economy's interdependence on carbon dioxide emitting hydrocarbon energy sources and because carbon dioxide is directly implicated in global warming - making global warming a non-traditional environmental challenge:Implications to all aspects of a nation-state's economy - The vast majority of the world economy relies on energy sources or manufacturing techniques that release greenhouse gases at almost every stage of production, transportation, storage, delivery & disposal while a consensus of the world's scientists attribute global warming to the release of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. This intimate linkage between global warming and economic vitality implicates almost every aspect of a nation-state's economy; Perceived lack of adequate advanced energy technologies - Fossil fuel abundance and low prices continue to put pressure on the development of adequate advanced energy technologies that can realistically replace the role of fossil fuels - as of 2010, over 91% of the worlds energy is derived from fossil fuels and non carbon-neutral technologies. Developing countries do not have cost effective access to the advanced energy technologies that they need for development (most advanced technologies has been developed by and exist in the developed world). Without adequate and cost effective post-hydrocarbon energy sources, it is unlikely the countries of the developed or developing world would accept policies that would materially affect their economic vitality or economic development prospects;Industrialization of the developing world - As developing nations industrialize their energy needs increase and since conventional energy sources produce carbon dioxide, the carbon dioxide emissions of developing countries are beginning to rise at a time when the scientific community, global governance institutions and advocacy groups are telling the world that carbon dioxide emissions should be decreasing. Without access to cost effective and abundant energy sources many developing countries see climate change as a hindrance to their unfettered economic development;Metric selection (transparency) and perceived responsibility / ability to respond - Among the countries of the world, disagreements exist over which greenhouse gas emission metrics should be used like total emissions per year, per capita emissions per year, CO2 emissions only, deforestation emissions, livestock emissions or even total historical emissions. Historically, the release of carbon dioxide has not been historically even among all nation-states and nation-states have challenges with determining who should restrict emissions and at what point of their industrial development they should be subject to such commitments;Vulnerable developing countries and developed country legacy emissions - Some developing nations blame the developed world for having created the global warming crisis because it was the developed countries that emitted most of the carbon dioxide over the twentieth century and vulnerable countries perceive that it should be the developed countries that should pay to address the challenge;Consensus-driven global governance models - The global governance institutions that evolved during the 20th century are all consensus driven deliberative forums where agreement is difficult to achieve and even when agreement is achieved it is almost impossible to enforce;Well organized and funded special-interest lobbying bodies - Special interest lobbying by well organized groups distort and amplify aspects of the challenge (environmental lobbying, energy industry lobbying, other special interest lobbying);Politicization of climate science - Although there is a consensus on the science of global warming and its likely effects - some special interests groups work to suppress the consensus while others work to amplify the alarm of global warming. All parties that engage in such acts add to the politicization of the science of global warming. The result is a clouding of the reality of the global warming problem.The focus areas for global warming politics are Adaptation, Mitigation, Finance, Technology and Losses which are well quantified and studied but the urgency of the global warming challenge combined with the implication to almost every facet of a nation-state's economic interests places significant burdens on the established largely-voluntary global institutions that have developed over the last century; institutions that have been unable to effectively reshape themselves and move fast enough to deal with this unique challenge. Rapidly developing countries who see traditional energy sources as a means to fuel their development, well funded aggressive environmental lobbying groups and an established fossil fuel energy paradigm boasting a mature and sophisticated political lobbying infrastructure all combine to make global warming politics extremely polarized. Distrust between developed and developing countries at most international conferences that seek to address the topic add to the challenges. Further adding to the complexity is the advent of the Internet and the development of media technologies like blogs and other mechanisms for disseminating information that enable the exponential growth in production and dissemination of competing points of view which make it nearly impossible for the development and dissemination of an objective view into the enormity of the subject matter and its politics.
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