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Some climate change is inevitable because of past greenhouse gas emissions. The current global average temperature is about 0.7–0.8 °C above the pre-industrial level. Even if greenhouse gas concentrations had been stabilised in the year 2000, temperature would still increase by 1.2 °C above the pre-industrial level by the end of the 21st century. Strategies to adapt to climate change are therefore necessary. Temperature rises of 2 °C or more above the pre‑industrial level are likely to cause major disruptions. They would challenge our ability to adapt at affordable economic, social and environmental cost.
The vulnerability to climate change varies significantly across regions and sectors in Europe, making adaptation a context- and location-specific challenge. Vulnerable regions include the Mediterranean basin, north‑western and central-eastern Europe and the Arctic, together with many coastal zones and other areas prone to river floods, mountains and cities. The costs of adaptation in Europe could potentially be large (possibly billions of euro per year in the medium- and long-term). Available assessments suggest that timely and proportionate adaptation makes economic, social and environmental sense, and is likely to be far less costly than inaction. The majority of projected impacts and vulnerabilities are, or are expected to be, negative, and these often need to be addressed proactively by public policies. The EEA therefore focuses on adverse effects. Impacts and vulnerabilities were identified for various regions.
Effective adaptation needs to contemplate all possible climate conditions during the horizon of a policy decision. It should therefore consider no-regret measures (suitable under every plausible scenario) and a broad variety of adaptation options (i.e. grey or technological measures; green/ecosystem-based measures; and soft measures addressing behaviour, management and policies). Adaptation success factors and barriers (typically limited scientific knowledge and uncertainty) are being increasingly identified. Guidance for good practices and the development of adaptation indicators should be further advanced, and this could be usefully informed by regional assessments and case studies.
At a national level, European countries are often aware of the need to adapt to climate change. So far, 11 European countries, and a few regions and cities, have adopted adaptation strategies. The EEA keeps an overview of national adaptation strategies in its 32 member countries ( www.eea.europa.eu/themes/climate/national- adaptation-strategies), and helps to transfer lessons learnt.
The EU plans to develop a European Clearinghouse on climate change impacts, vulnerability and adaptation, to address the current lack of knowledge-sharing. Moreover, the European Commission adopted a White Paper on Adaptation to Climate Change in 2009 and plans to publish a Communication on Mainstreaming Adaptation and Mitigation in 2011. A comprehensive EU adaptation strategy is expected to be developed by 2013. Internationally, the EU supports particularly vulnerable developing countries under the umbrella of the United Nations Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC).
For references, please go to https://eea.europa.eu./soer/2010/europe/adapting-to-climate-change or scan the QR code.
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