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We still do not know if typhoons in a warmer world will be more fierce and frequent. We are left guessing as to how the monsoons, those dependable guests of ours, will behave before the vagaries of a changing climate. The sensitivity of natural and human systems to these changes or "climate-related stimuli" will vary according to the nature, magnitude and frequency of the changes. Higher sensitivity suggests the greater possibility of prolonged or irreversible damage. Among the natural systems that are expected to be climate-sensitive are coral reefs, mangroves, and forest ecosystems. |
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Human systems likely
to be affected are agriculture and fisheries, public health, freshwater
resources, and the like. Some of the more serious
impacts listed in the IPCC's Third Assessment Report (WGII) include:
- "A general reduction in potential
crop yields in most tropical and sub-tropical regions for most
projected increases in temperature
- "Decreased water availability
for populations in many water-scarce regions, particularly in
the sub-tropics
- "An increase in the number of
people exposed to vector-borne (e.g., malaria) and water-borne
diseases (e.g., cholera), and an increase in heat stress mortality
- "A widespread increase in the
risk of flooding for many human settlements (tens of millions
of inhabitants in settlements studied) from both increased heavy
precipitation events and sea-level rise"
Adaptation
Adaptation is necessary
to prevent potential damages, harness possible benefits and opportunities,
and manage the consequences of climate change and variability. To
some extent, natural and human systems can and do adapt autonomously
to these changes. The possibility however of large scale, prolonged
impacts demands adaptation planning to supplement these innate adaptive
mechanisms. Much of this planning
can draw from the experience of coping with current climate variability
and extremes. These changes, after all, can be the prelude of what
is in store for us in a warmer world. Adaptation planning can likewise
converge with related efforts in disaster mitigation and land use
planning. It can avoid the pitfall of maladaptation, an example
of which locates development in areas of high risk due to quick
financial gains, neglect of climate and other environmental factors,
misinformation, and the like. Examples of adaptation
measures are:
- coastal and water resource management
practices such as efficient storage, delivery and conservation
of the resource;
- agricultural irrigation;
- forest and mangrove protection
and buffer zones;
- hard and soft protection measures
(such as seawalls and beach nourishment respectively);
- public health infrastructure strengthening;
- diversification to less climate-sensitive
resource industries; and
- education, training, and awareness
raising.
Vulnerability
The vulnerability of
natural and human systems will depend on their climate impact exposure,
climate sensitivity, and the strength of their adaptive capacity. Poorer communities
and nations are less capable of adjusting to these changes, which
thus makes them more vulnerable than those with access to resources
and technology. Vulnerability is therefore differentiated because
adaptive capacity itself will vary according to the adverse or beneficial
influence of factors such as climate risk exposure, land use, population
growth, economic security, education, culture, public health, environmental
pollution, and other related adaptation drivers. Such differentiated
vulnerability only exacerbates the disparity between developed and
developing countries, which disparity is projected to become more
severe with the global increase in temperature. This regressive
outcome is possible also because of feedback mechanisms that amplify
the erosion of a poor community's adaptive capacity due to the hazards
posed by climate change itself. The human or societal
sectors of concern under adaptation and vulnerability are:
- Hydrology and Water Resources
- Agriculture and Forestry
- Terrestrial and Freshwater Ecosystems
- Coastal Zones and Marine Ecosystems
- Human Health
- Human Settlements, Energy, and
Industry
- Insurance and Other Financial
Services
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