It is going to be more and more imperative that countries around the world and people everywhere (nobody is excluded from this) will need to learn to cope with the impacts of climate change. What is really needed is money to help strengthen the capacity and the ability of poorer people with lower livelihoods through education and intermediate levels of technology to strengthen their livelihoods and their economy. “We should be able to help strengthen the capacity and the ability of poorer people with lower livelihoods” Prof. Ian Burton says. Micro insurance would help people in the period of risk and it could be provided in a manner which would encourage people to take adaptive actions. “It is an idea both of spreading risks and of helping to promote the idea of adaptation” Prof. Burton explains.
Content about: adaptation
Even considering that some mitigation target might be achievable, we need to deal with effects of climate change in the near future and in the longer term. This means that adaptation is necessary even if it is not easy to achieve. “In some cases it might be inexpensive, but in some cases it might be really costly” Dott. Irene Lorenzoni says in this video interview to Climate Science&Policy. In which way adaptation strategies could affect our societies? “There are different facets of adaptation goals” Dott. Lorenzoni explains: “As individuals we don’t necessarily have the freedom of choice to respond to climate change in any way that we might want to. We are constrained to a certain extent, by the societal structures in which we operate”
Looking at the past to understand what’s happening today. In this way you could summarize how Archaeology and Anthropology contribute to our comprehension of Climate Change and its impact on our societies.
Archeologist Brian Fagan, author of The Great Warming Climate Change and The Rise and Fall of Civilizations, explains how ancient Climate Change affected the Earth in the past and how some civilizations (such are the Pueblo Indian from Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, in the 11th century, or the Egyptian civilization in 2180 BC) were able to adapt to the changed climate while other civilizations perished under the effect of a silent elephant walking across centuries
What do we mean when we talk about adaptation to climate change? And in which way could Microfinance play an effective role for strategies to face Global Warming impacts in developing countries?
Shardul Agrawala, OECD Environmental Directorate answers to Climate Science&Policy’s questions during the International Workshop “The Social Dimension of Adaptation to Climate Change” in Venice.
Microfinance – Mr. Agrawala explains – is essentially the provision of loans and other financial services to the poor sections of the society; its effectiveness in responding to Climate Change impact demands attention to small project with a focus on local programs, specially in Developing Countries. The way in which the international community will be able to deliver loans for this small project is a big challenge for our the future and our capability to face Climate Change impacts
An ecologically fragile region, where the degradation of the environement is already penalising the population and the economic development.
Tourism, electricity generation, urbanisation, the future of agricolture and water availability, transportation: the consequences of climate changes will affect all sectors, and are primarily worsening within all existing problems.
That’s why, according to a paper drafted by Iddri in collaboration with Cired, adaptation issues, long-term investment decisions and long-term development plan, are a priority in the Mediterranean area