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Business Adaptation to Climate Change A systematic review of the body of research Prepared by: David Nitkin Ryan Foster Jacqueline Medalye Table of Contents Section Pages Study background 3-8 State and shape of the literature 9-17 Key findings 18-23 Risks, opportunities, and barriers 24-34 Leaders and laggards 35-38 What you can do 39-48 Future work 49-53 Sector strategies 54-80 STUDY BACKGROUND Study Background: Guiding questions • Are businesses incorporating climate change into their business models and strategies? If so, how? And are do differences exist across business units, in terms of risks, opportunities, processes, and outcomes? • Are certain sectors ahead of others? If yes, what drivers account for these differences, and what lessons can leading industries offer the laggards? • What tools and processes do businesses use to evaluate the opportunities to be gained from adapting to climate change? Are there any examples of businesses creating a competitive advantage by building adaptive capacity? Study Background: Methods • Systematic review (i.e., comprehensive, transparent search) of academic, practical, and teaching related sites (e.g. ABI Inform, Google, ECCH case studies) • The universe of 2,455 eligible studies were culled to 201, based on relevance and uniqueness • The 201 studies were rated and categorized by 2 PhD students • Questions – – – – What do we know? What don’t we know? What are the stakes? How to be a leader? Study Background: Definition of Adaptation “Adjustments in natural or human systems in response to actual or expected climate stimuli and their effects or impacts which moderates harm or exploits opportunities” -IPCC Third Assessment Report Study Background: Adaptation vs. Mitigation MITIGATION • Cut GHG emissions • Long term • Global • Causes focus • Regulation • Compliance themes • Public good ADAPTATION • Change practices • Short term • Regional/ local • Consequences focus • Voluntary • Leadership language • Business, individual Study Background: Adaptation vs. Mitigation MITIGATION • Indirect benefits to actor • All systems • Benefits not seen for decades • Effectiveness more certain • Sometimes ancillary benefits • Monitoring relatively easy ADAPTATION • Direct benefits to actor • Selected systems • Benefits seen more immediately • Effectiveness less certain • Mostly ancillary benefits • Monitoring more difficult STATE AND SHAPE OF LITERATURE Literature: Status • Search key words 2,400 candidates • Sensitivity, vulnerability, resilience, adaptative capacity, risk, opportunity • Identified and reviewed 201 studies • New language (climate proofing, climate resiliency, processes of co-adaptation) Literature: Types • Academic – Journal articles • Government, International Organizations – Educational organizations – Climate change leadership councils (Pew, Tyndall) • Practitioner Literature – Insurance, reinsurance, finance company reports – Carbon Disclosure Project; Industry Referrals Literature: Number of studies by source type Journal, Peer Review 66 Consortium/ NGO/ Think Tank 28 Journal, Secondary 23 Newspaper, Magazine 25 Industry Report 7 Referred Study 17 Government report 7 Web-Site 10 Internal organization 5 Other 13 Literature: Findings by Sector (sectors with more than 5 studies) Insurance 35 Finance 7 Agriculture 23 Mining 5 Tourism & Recreation 20 Forestry 4 Energy 13 Oil & Gas 4 Water 12 Infrastructure 3 Construction 10 Transport 3 Literature: Findings by Sector (sectors with fewer than 5 studies) Food & beverage 3 Chemicals 1 Electricity 2 Manufacturing 1 Airlines 2 Fishing 0 Information technology 2 Retail 0 Automotive 2 Real estate 0 Coal 1 Media 0 Literature: Content Analysis Topic # studies Case studies, lessons learned 32 Tools for business 18 Risk frameworks screening 9 Scenarios 5 Decision Trees 2 Literature: Focus on Academic Literature • • • • Sector level Approach adaptative cognition and action Closely linked to IPCC assessments Avoid definitions in abstract in favour of operationalizing the concept through – Theoretical construct – Empirical studies Literature: Limitations of the Literature • English language only (there are other language sources, notably German) • Available on web • Reports, case studies and articles that are web accessible • Articles or web sites, not books or book chapters KEY FINDINGS Findings: Literature • We are in early stage of “early adapter” literature: citations in last ten years • Not many sectors have heavy coverage (more than 10 case studies) in literature • Not many companies have a well told story in literature on adaptation • Some adaptation literature is really adaptation to mitigation challenges Findings: Management • Important to add climate change risk and vulnerability analysis to decision-making • Place to start is to define risk because climate change has many indirect • Rationale based on traditional economics: save money, reduce risk, increase energy efficiency, minimize waste Findings: Action • One size or answer doesn’t fit all • What’s right for one company may not readily “work” for another (management, geography, business strategy) • Not all businesses need to take action now, but most need to ensure decision-making includes a good vulnerability analysis (property damage, business disruption) Findings: Value of Literature • Possibilities of collaboration • Organizational adaptation is individual and direct response • Mitigation not enough: curb GHGs too late to prevent significant warming • Some businesses, managers confuse weather (daily) and climate (long term) Findings: Climate Change • Requires diligence in looking not only at extreme events (flooding, hurricanes, drought) but also at – greater intensity of extremism – Significant uncertainties • May lead to technical change for some sectors and not others • When it does, it can either enhance or badly hurt (destroy) a company RISKS, OPPORTUNITIES & BARRIERS Risks & Opportunities: Landscape • Risks are tangible and real – Canada highest country risk – Africa highest vulnerability – Mitigation may not be enough • Opportunities are dramatic – Prosper not just survive – Positive cost-benefits Risks & Opportunities: Types of Climate Change Risk Market Changing consumer behaviour Operations Increasing operational, infrastructure costs Reputation Being perceived as a laggard Counterparty Bankrupted suppliers Political/Legal New regulations, lawsuits Business/ Competitive Uncertain costs, deferred decisions Risks & Opportunities: Scientific Status Climate Change • Scientific community has accepted that (a) climate change is happening; (b) that it is largely man-made; and (c) it will have significant effects (IPCC 2007, Stern 2006, Source 178) • Increase risk drought, desertification, melting ice, flooding, intense hurricane activity Risks & Opportunities: Opportunities • The business sourced literature puts an especial emphasis on business opportunities • Mitigation and adaptation are co-dependent but different contexts of climate change • Actions involve shorter term adaptation (decreasing unavoidable damages) together with longer term mitigation can reduce risk Risks & Opportunities: Forms of Adaptation • • • • Bearing the cost Preventing losses Sharing or spreading losses through insurance Changing the activity (for example, making ski resorts four season facilities) • Changing the location of activities • Enhancing the adaptive capacity of ecosystems to be more resilient. Source: Natural Resources Canada Risks & Opportunities: Types of Adaptation • Intent: timing relative to climate change (proactive, reactive) • Temporal (short-term, long-term) • Spatial (local, regional) Risks & Opportunities: Barriers to Adaptation • • • • • Lack vision Lack regulation Lack leadership Lack long term sector specific climate change data Poor pricing certain resources (water) Risks & Opportunities: Findings on Vulnerability (1) • Degree to which system is susceptible to and unable to cope with adverse effects of climate change • Three factors affect vulnerability: – Nature of climate change to which exposed – Climate sensitivity of system – Capacity of system to adapt (IPPCC, p 21) Risks & Opportunities: Findings on Vulnerability (2) • Businesses likely affected by – Climate change itself – Exposures: regulatory, physical, competitive and reputational • While climate change may well be a slow-moving force, relative to terrorism or hurricane, asset prices will on occasion move sharply when – new evidence reaches the market – policies are changed. Source: Lehman Brothers Risks & Opportunities: Time Scales and Forecast • Short: 3-12 months, typical biz, long range hurricane; info on coming season, year • Medium: 5-10 yrs, longest biz can consider • Long: 10-100 yrs; pension fund, nuclear generation or waste; limited climate data Source: Med Office Consult LEADERS AND LAGGARDS Leaders and Laggards: High Resources Dependence High Level of Coverage Agriculture Moderate Level of Coverage Fishing Low Case Study Coverage Chemicals Energy Transport Forestry Industrial products Electronics Pharmaceuticals Leaders and Laggards: Long Planning Horizons High Level of Coverage Moderate Level of Coverage Low Case Study Coverage Energy Transport Automotive Health Mining Real estate Waste-Nuclear Leaders and Laggards: Already Affected by Climate High Level of Coverage Moderate Level of Low Case Study Coverage Coverage Agriculture Tourism & Recreation Insurance Fishing Forestry Food and beverage Pharmaceuticals Health Real estate WHAT YOU CAN DO What You Can Do: Strategies (1) • • • • • Rethink business strategy: look into pure adaptation Prepare for the worst: contingency planning Cut green exposure/taxes; really mitigation Determine if there is any/no risk Develop climate resilience strategy with codependent mitigation, adaptation actions What you can do: Strategies (2) Manage Transfer Avoid Bear the cost Share or spread losses through insurance Prevent losses Adjust Adapt Anticipate Change nature activities, business Enhance adaptive capacity Invest in acquiring better info What you can do: Adaptation Pyramid Adapt Risk + opportunity = Adapt initiative Building resilience Decreasing vulnerability What you can do: Lessons from Insurance • Pricing and capital markets are deficient and lacking • Extreme windstorm events will increase in particular with major impact on businesses and insurers • Climate change will have great impact on asset values: more important to price risk accordingly • Not addressing these issues will bring lawsuits from shareholders, investors and clients What You Can Do: Why Mitigation is Not Enough • UNEP: critical to adopt vigorous adaptation measures even as we strive to cut emissions because even with aggressive mitigation – can’t avoid further warming – benefits of mitigation not seen before 2040 – ocean’s at least 0.6 degrees warmer due to inertia, whatever we do • Key is to realize “triple dividend” – Need integrate and/or synergize sustainable development, risk management and adaptation. – This will integrate adaptation policies with sustainable development policies and disaster management. What you can do: The wait-and-see option • Wait See Approach Predominates • North American Task Force FI, UNDP study of costs of waiting by time periods • Wait and see is folly as issue is inescapable carbon footprint responsibilities: it’s the market curve, not the regulatory curve; it’s a business imperative, not an environmental one What you can do: Proactive and Reactive Matrix Lead Wait for gov’t regulations Adapt React Act Do risk analysis Monitor Follow What you can do: Collaborations (1) • Industry collaborations – Insurance • Academic/industry centres – Pew Centre – Tyndall Centre – Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change What you can do: Collaborations (2) • Institutional networks or shared action-study mechanisms – – – – – Carbon Disclosure Project Equator Principles UNEP Financial Initiative CERES Investor Network on Climate Risk (INCR) – Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change FUTURE WORK Gaps in Knowledge: Literature •Lack of consensus surrounding meaning of business adaptation •“early” literature: Not often literature address risks, opportunities and adaptation at firm level •Rarely reveal insights not only of actions •taken and why but also what action alternatives not taken, or why Gaps in Knowledge: Decision Making • Uncertainty re: statistically significant variations – climate change risk by region – Perceptions of climate change risk • Actual risk exposure for each sector by country • Lack empirical data carbon emissions/risk measure for each plant, office • Lack transparency firm level opportunities analysis Gaps in Knowledge: Meteorology • Near absence projections beyond 2012 • Weather and climate info needed across a range of time scales • Need know impacts climate change on water, weather, food, health and ecosystems at temperature increases 1 to 5 degrees Gaps in Knowledge: Future Research Agenda • Research collaboration – Industry associations – Multi-stakeholder networks – Academic-practitioner collaborations • Assess efficacy various decision-making models • Climate change scenarios – Disaggregate, sectoral SECTOR STRATEGIES Sector Strategies: Agriculture (1) Challenge: drought in Africa ADAPTATION INITIATIVE Drought and flood resistant seeds BUILD RESILIENCE New heat-tolerant goats DECREASE VULNERABILITY Irrigation, drip systems New heartier crop strains Exterminate cattle ticks Cold tolerant plant species On-farm genetic diversity banks Water conservation Invest in women as seed keepers Sector Strategies: Agriculture (2) Challenge: increased incidence weather extremes ADAPTATION INITIATIVE New irrigation trading rights BUILD RESILIENCE Biodiversity conservation Fertilize oceans with Revegetation for iron (reduce CO2) carbon sequestration Use biofuels Improve rangeland management DECREASE VULNERABILITY Adopt plumbing fixtures Grow more resilient crops Relocate activities Sector Strategies: Automotive Sector ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Set emission targets Design, use more carbon efficient raw materials Design lower emission products Build hybrids, more Measure carbon fuel efficient vehicles footprint (total and plant basis) Assess which types adaptation will increase GHG Sector Strategies: Building and Construction (1) Challenge: high tides and storm surges ADAPTATION INITIATIVE Redesign roofs and windows BUILD RESILIENCE New product, materials, markets DECREASE VULNERABILITY Modular systems Invest in better water treatment Larger drain pipes Watertight storage Design for safer living Flood prevention equipment Measure carbon footprint Sector Strategies: Building and Construction (2) Challenge: droughts, less water ADAPTATION INITIATIVE Redesign roofs and windows BUILD RESILIENCE Increase use local power supply DECREASE VULNERABILITY Modular systems Prefabrication Move offices Better emergency planning Better drainage (material, sewers) Improve insurance coverage Better water storage Sector Strategies: Chemicals ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY New agricultural, health products “No till” farming herbicides Assess, invest in biotechnology Use less carbon intensive fuels Exit some businesses based on carbon emission grounds Better insulation, energy efficiency Reuse heat from manufacturing Sector Strategies: Electric Utilities ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Catastrophic event bonds Reduce water for cooling Reduce air travel Zero air and water emission plants Reconfigure data centre Reduce carbon emissions through supply chain Reuse heat to make electricity Sector Strategies: Energy (1) Challenge: lower water levels, less water ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Water acquisition strategy Contingency planning Cut carbon exposure New exploration fields, locations Low impact vehicles Report carbon emissions Set CO2 output targets Drill ships Deep injection water to recover oil Sector Strategies: Energy (2) Challenge: extreme events, melting permafrost ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Diversify location critical functions Pollution to reflect sunlight Run wires into stations at roof level Reflect sunlight back More generation into space from renewables Recycle CO2 into fuel (hydrogen) Target outage reduction timing Relocate vulnerable operations Tougher anchor platform specs Sector Strategies: Finance ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Facilitate emission trading markets Catastrophic events bonds Measure carbon footprint Invest in clean power, Weather derivatives Energy efficient lighting, renewables sensors Climate change investment fund Conservation throughout operation Sector Strategies: Fisheries Challenge: more severe floods, droughts, storms, spread of disease ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Fish farming Diversify into other species Build better climate models Conservation Sector Strategies: Food and Tobacco ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE Set water use targets Invest in sustainable agriculture Seed research DECREASE VULNERABILITY Abandon storage facilities in hot climates Investment in water Measure carbon management footprint Use more resistant seeds Educate supply chain Sector Strategies: Forestry ADAPTATION INITIATIVE Plant climate resistant species New reforestation partner strategies Convert wood damaged by pine beetle to biofuel BUILD RESILIENCE Process dead trees Plant forests to sequester CO2 Plant trees reduce urban heat islands DECREASE VULNERABILITY Community reforestation Increase urban (waste) sources Sector Strategies: Health ADAPTATION INITIATIVE Invest in water treatment and storage Better emergency management BUILD RESILIENCE Introduce climate resilient seeds, food varieties Social protection DECREASE VULNERABILITY Increase mangrove swamps (hurricane protection) Disaster responses foe epidemics Pest management Sector Strategies: Industrial Products ADAPTATION INITIATIVE Rainforest skin: analyze carbon sequestration Set carbon footprint targets BUILD RESILIENCE More sophisticated thermostats DECREASE VULNERABILITY Design products made from carbonefficient materials Reduce carbon emissions through supply chain Design products that consume less energy Telecom substitute for travel Sector Strategies: Insurance (1) Challenge: increased incidence of catastrophic losses ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Public-private partnerships Association networking Manage supply chain expectations Finance low carbon technology Weather derivatives Innovative financing Invest in GHG credits Client risk education Enhance design standards Sector Strategies: Insurance (2) Challenge: increased natural catastrophe exposure ADAPTATION INITIATIVE Reduce reliance on historical losses info DECREASE VULNERABILITY Corporate responsibility partnerships BUILD RESILIENCE New insurance products, underwriting procedures Better predictive models of climate change Catastrophic event bonds Customized insurance policies Protect high value property in vulnerable areas Increase attention water-related property damage Support carbon footprint disclosure Sector Strategies: Mining and Metals Challenge: more extreme weather events ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Sturdier buildings, machinery Close loop Increase maintenance operations systems of rail, roads Emphasize recycled sources for metals Catastrophic Water strategy insurance coverage Curtail building roads Sector Strategies: Oil and Gas Challenge: extreme weather events ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Invest in offshore, onshore wind turbines Invest in hydrogen fuel cells Multi-fuel (not just gas) stations Better climate change data, scenarios Shift to alternative energy Review drilling station risks Sector Strategies: Pharmaceuticals ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE New tropical disease “No till” farming products herbicides Low GHG emission production DECREASE VULNERABILITY Trap factory fugitive emissions Water recycling Sector Strategies: Real Estate ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE New forms of Relocate new catastrophic insurance investment in less coverage risky zones Reposition asset portfolio DECREASE VULNERABILITY (No literature) Sector Strategies: Retail ADAPTATION INITIATIVE Reduce power consumption BUILD RESILIENCE Buy, use green/ renewable energy DECREASE VULNERABILITY Location decision models include climate change Measure, target carbon footprint Reduce emissions throughout supply chain Purchase carbon offsets Combine heat, power (use waste heat): on-site energy production Energy efficient lighting, sensors Buy local Sector Strategies: Tourism & Recreation ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Develop off-site activities Snow farming and fencing Ski slope design Invest in more indoor facilities All year round tourism Invest in artificial snow Create artificial beaches Develop higher terrains Flexible ticket pricing Sector Strategies: Transport (1) ADAPTATION INITIATIVE BUILD RESILIENCE DECREASE VULNERABILITY Year-round roads Ice class vessels Apply higher emission standards Scenarios re: marine, Climate research land transport systems Strategic marine Water treatment services Maintenance and safety standards Relocate railroads to new growing areas Sector Strategies: Transport (2) Challenge: change in permafrost, sea and lake ice, and snow cover ADAPTATION INITIATIVE NorthWest Passage Eject CO2 from atmosphere at poles BUILD RESILIENCE Thermosyphons DECREASE VULNERABILITY Improve insurance coverage Water tight storage Improve supply chain management Move offices Sector Strategies: Water Utilities ADAPTATION INITIATIVE Promote conservation BUILD RESILIENCE Catastrophic event bonds DECREASE VULNERABILITY Reduce water for cooling Better risk forecasts data More resources on climate change from nbs.net • Reports from this study • Other resources on climate change