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Research advancements for impact chain based climate risk and vulnerability assessments

European policymakers face growing pressure to take action on climate change, such as following local climate actions plans recommended by the European Union. However, effective climate change adaptation (hereafter adaptation) requires a scientific information-base of empirically grounded local, actionable knowledge concerning climate risks and adaptation options.

Åsa Gerger Swartling, Mathilda Englund, Karin André / Published on 15 June 2023

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Citation

Petutschnig, L., Rome, E., Lückerath, D., Milde, K., Gerger Swartling, Å., Aall, C., Meyer, M., Jordá, G., Gobert, J., Englund, M., André, K., Bour, M., Attoh, E. M. N. A. N., Dale, B., Renner, K., Cauchy, A., Reuschel, S., Rudolf, F., Agulles, M., Melo-Aguilar, C., Zebisch, M., & Kienberger, S. (2023). Research advancements for impact chain based climate risk and vulnerability assessments. Frontiers in Climate, 5. https://doi.org/10.3389/fclim.2023.1095631

As the climate crisis continues to worsen, there is an increasing demand for scientific evidence from Climate Risk and Vulnerability Assessments (CRVA). The authors present 12 methodological advancements to the Impact Chain-based CRVA (IC-based CRVA) framework, which combines participatory and data-driven approaches to identify and measure climate risks in complex socio-ecological systems. The advancements improve the framework along five axes, including the existing workflow, stakeholder engagement, uncertainty management, socio-economic scenario modeling, and transboundary climate risk examination. Eleven case studies were conducted and evaluated to produce these advancements.

This paper addresses two key research questions:

(a) How can the IC-based CRVA framework be methodologically advanced to produce more accurate and insightful results? and

(b) How effectively can the framework be applied in research and policy domains that it was not initially designed for?

The authors propose methodological advancements to capture dynamics between risk factors, to resolve contradictory worldviews, and to maintain consistency between Impact Chains across policy scales. They suggest using scenario-planning techniques and integrating uncertainties via Probability Density Functions and Reverse Geometric Aggregation.

This research examines the applicability of IC-based CRVAs to address transboundary climate risks and integrating macro-economic models to reflect possible future socio-economic exposure. The authors’ findings demonstrate that the modular structure of IC-based CRVA allows for the integration of various methodological advancements, and further advancements are possible to better assess complex climate risks and improve adaptation decision-making.

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SEI authors

Åsa Gerger Swartling
Åsa Gerger Swartling

Head of Knowledge Management, Senior Research Fellow

Global Operations

SEI Headquarters

Mathilda Englund
Mathilda Englund

Research Associate

SEI Headquarters

Karin André
Karin André

Team Leader: Cities, Communities and Consumption; Senior Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters

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Frontiers in Climate Open access
Topics and subtopics
Climate : Climate policy, Adaptation
Related centres
SEI Headquarters
Regions
Europe, EU

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