Assessing Approaches to Stakeholder Engagement in Regional Climate Impacts Modeling


Book Description

Scientific research is key to understanding complex environmental systems and informing decisions about natural resource management in the context of climate change. However, when environmental science research is conducted without active stakeholder engagement, the result is typically development of new knowledge that does not directly serve the needs of individuals, industries and organizations that make decisions about environmental policy and resource management. Recent decades have seen rapidly expanding efforts to conduct environmental science research that directly informs government policies and private decision-makers' management plans, yet significant barriers remain in the pursuit of usable climate science. Strategies for effective collaboration among researchers and stakeholders, who have diverse needs and expertise, are not well developed. Metrics are needed for evaluating approaches to usable climate science production. This research advances understanding of how to foster effective stakeholder engagement for usable climate science outputs, focusing on regional environmental modeling efforts based at universities. By tracking researchers' perceptions about stakeholder engagement over the course of a 5-year project, assessing stakeholders' information needs and perceptions of research and identifying characteristics of effective boundary-spanning organizations, this work suggests strategies for evaluating the effectiveness of efforts to produce usable climate science and identifies strategies for academic scientists to develop their capacity to bridge boundaries between research and decision-making.







An Intellectual Framework for Assessing Agricultural Climate Adaptation Combining Stakeholder Engagement and Process Based Modeling


Book Description

"The impacts of climate change have significant implications for agricultural yields and water use. Previous studies have focused on impacts of climatic factors on crop phenology and yields, with little consideration of local farm management strategies that might mitigate some of these negative effects. Further, the inclusion of stakeholders is commonly left out of many biophysical studies of agricultural landscapes. Therefore, there is considerable uncertainty in the future of regional agroecosystems. In this study, we adopt a social-ecological systems perspective to develop an intellectual framework for assessing agricultural climate adaptation. With research questions focused in both biophysical and social science, we utilize a process-based crop simulation model and stakeholder meetings to examine agricultural response to climate change and adaptations that mitigate for climate change effects. This study advances our understanding of future climate effects on local agriculture, and provides a framework to include local variables into process-based modelling methods. A regional assessment of baseline (1980-2015) and future (2015-2099) yields and water use for four irrigated crops in the Lower Boise River Basin (LBRB) of southwestern Idaho was conducted using a stakeholder informed model. Six different future climate scenarios, ranging in precipitation and temperature, were applied to our model to understand the potential degree to which climate change might affect yields, hydrologic fluxes, and planting date. Analysis of crop yields in most climate scenarios show a slight to moderate decrease in wheat and corn yields by 2100, while alfalfa and sugarbeets stay the same or moderately increase in more mild scenarios. Next, we identify potential concerns with the current irrigation season, which starts on April 1. Under all climate scenarios, our model predicts the growing season to start earlier in the year based on ET estimates and planting dates. This has major implications for future water policy, as the current irrigation season may need to be redefined to allow for early season irrigation in the coming decades. Our results, along with continued communication and iterative stakeholder engagement in the LBRB, can lead to adaptive solutions and policy changes in the agricultural sector. This research highlights the usefulness of combining local information with biophysical models that aim to understand agricultural systems, and can therefore be adjusted to other regions."--Boise State University ScholarWorks.




Adapting to an Uncertain Climate


Book Description

Climate change highlights the challenges for long-term policy making in the face of persistent and irreducible levels of uncertainties. It calls for the development of flexible approaches, innovative governance and other elements that contribute to effective and adaptive decision-making. Exploring these new approaches is also a challenge for those involved in climate research and development of adaptation policy. The book provides a dozen real-life examples of adaptation decision making in the form of case studies: · Water supply management in Portugal, England and Wales and Hungary · Flooding, including flood risk in Ireland, coastal flooding and erosion in Southwest France, and flood management in Australia’s Hutt River region · Transport and utilities, including the Austrian Federal railway system, public transit in Dresden, and Québec hydro-electric power · Report examining communication of large numbers of climate scenarios in Dutch climate adaptation workshops.




Handbook Of Climate Change And Agroecosystems - Climate Change And Farming System Planning In Africa And South Asia: Agmip Stakeholder-driven Research (In 2 Parts)


Book Description

This two-part handbook focuses on the work that the Agricultural Model Intercomparison and Improvement Project (AgMIP) accomplished using a new method — the AgMIP Regional Integrated Assessment Protocol — in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and South Asia (SA), with funding from the UK Department for International Development. Through this research, AgMIP substantially improves the characterization and understanding of food security in SSA and SA and how its affected by climate variability and change.The chapters in this handbook demonstrate how AgMIP has enhanced the capacity of developing country researchers and stakeholders to work together, exploring and prioritizing adaptation to current and future climate stresses. Part 1 describes regional integrated assessment methods and analyses, while Part 2 presents the outcomes of farming system studies. The entire volume shows how AgMIP has established, as a public good, protocols for Regional Integrated Assessments that improve the capability of developing countries to address climate change challenges.Related Link(s)




The Regional Impacts of Climate Change


Book Description

Cambridge, UK : Cambridge University Press, 1998.




New Approaches to Local Climate Change Risk Analysis


Book Description

The JPI Climate – AXIS project “Unpacking climate impact CHAINs. A new generation of action – and user-oriented climate change risk assessments” (UNCHAIN) is approaching its end date (31.12.2022), and the project is looking for an opportunity to collect its remaining scientific publications into a Research Topic. The overall objective of UNCHAIN is to improve climate change risk assessment frameworks aimed at informed decision-making and climate change adaptation action through six methodological innovations: • To also cover the possible need for long-term and large-scale efforts of societal transformation; • To refine a structured method of co-production of knowledge and integrate this into impact modelling; • To develop and test an applicable framework for analyzing how societal change can affect local climate change vulnerabilities; • To develop and test a standardized analytical framework for addressing uncertainties involved in local decision-making on climate change adaptation; • To integrate the trans-national impacts of climate change; and, • To link mitigation and adaptation in climate risk and vulnerability assessments.




Adaptation Policy Frameworks for Climate Change


Book Description

Adaptation is a process by which individuals, communities and countries seek to cope with the consequences of climate change. The process of adaptation is not new; the idea of incorporating future climate risk into policy-making is. While our understanding of climate change and its potential impacts has become clearer, the availability of practical guidance on adaptation has not kept pace. The development of the Adaptation Policy Framework (APF) is intended to help provide the rapidly evolving process of adaptation policy-making with a much-needed roadmap. Ultimately, the purpose of the APF is to support adaptation processes to protect - and enhance - human well-being in the face of climate change. This volume will be invaluable for everyone working on climate change adaptation and policy-making.




Assessing Vulnerability to Global Environmental Change


Book Description

Assessing the vulnerability of human populations to global environmental change, particularly climate change, is now the main imperative of research and international action. However, much of the research into vulnerability is not designed to feed directly into decision making and policy, creating a gap between the knowledge created by researchers and what is required by decision makers. This book seeks to rectify this problem and bridge the gap. It discusses vulnerability as the central theme and brings together many different applications from disaster studies, climate change impact studies and several other fields and provides the most comprehensive synthesis of definitions, theories, formalization and applications to date, illustrated with examples from different disciplines, regions and periods, and from local through to regional, national and international levels. Case study topics cover sea level rise, vulnerability to changes in ecosystem services, assessing the vulnerability of human health and 'double exposure' to climate change and trade liberalization amongst other issues. Research outcomes stress that science-policy dialogues must be transparent to be effective and concentrate on a mutual understanding of the concepts used. A key research finding is that the most useful information for decision makers is that which shows the separate causes and drivers of vulnerability, rather than presenting vulnerability in an aggregated form. The book concludes with a unifying framework for analysing integrated methodologies of vulnerability assessment and guiding how research and policy can be linked to reduce vulnerability.




Development of Integrated Regional Climate Modeling Methodologies for Impact Assessment


Book Description

Climate change has been one of the most prominent and critical environmental concerns due to its potential impacts. Climate change projections, as generated through global climate models (GCMs), have been widely employed for assessments of such impacts. However, GCMs have difficulty in representing the detailed local features over limited regions. Therefore, advanced metrologies are consequently required to investigate the potential impacts of climate change. In this dissertation research, a set of integrated regional climate modeling methodologies were developed to advance the previous methodologies for potential impact assessments at regional scales under climatic changing conditions, including (a) a coupled dynamical-copula downscaling (CDCD) approach, (b) an ANOVA-based factorial dynamical downscaling (AFDD) approach, (c) a Bayesian factorial modeling (BFM) approach, (d) an ensemble RCMs-driven VIC model, (e) a stepwise cluster Bayesian (SCB) ensemble method, and (f) a mixed-level factorial inference (MLFI) approach. The developed approaches in this research could be applicable to develop future projections of climate and hydrology. Such approaches are capable of exploring the possible effects of climate change at local and regional scales. Moreover, the main and interactive effects of multiple uncertain factors on climatic and hydrologic variables could be examined based on the proposed factorial analysis approaches. The results can provide decision makers with valuable information for mitigation and adaptation of the severe impacts of climatic changes on economic, social, and environmental sectors.