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Assessment of Vulnerability to Climate Change and Human Rights

Assessment of Vulnerability to Climate Change and Human Rights. Presentation by Renate Christ, Secretary of the IPCC Geneva, 22 October 2008. AR4. FAR. SAR. TAR. A Progression of Understanding: Greater and Greater Certainty in Attribution to Human Influence.

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Assessment of Vulnerability to Climate Change and Human Rights

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  1. Assessment of Vulnerability to Climate Change and Human Rights Presentation by Renate Christ, Secretary of the IPCC Geneva, 22 October 2008

  2. AR4 FAR SAR TAR A Progression of Understanding: Greater and Greater Certainty in Attribution to Human Influence FAR (1990): “unequivocal detection not likely for a decade” SAR (1995): “balance of evidence suggests discernible human influence” TAR (2001): “most of the warming of the past 50 years is likely (odds 2 out of 3) due to human activities” AR4 (2007): “most of the warming is very likely (odds 9 out of 10) due to anthropogenic greenhouse gases” IPCC

  3. Distribution of regional per capita GHG emissions in 2004 IPCC

  4. Surface Warming Pattern A1B, 2090-2099 relative to 1980-1999 IPCC

  5. Crop responses depend on latitude High latitude:- production increases with 1-3°C rise in local mean temperature - decreases above 1-3°C rise. Low latitude: • Productiondecreases with 1-2°C risein local mean temperatures • Increased drought/flood frequency affect especially subsistence sectors at low latitudes IPCC

  6. Impacts on crops and lifestock

  7. Projected impacts on water resources By mid-century river runoff and water availability - increase by 10-40% at high latitudes, some wet tropics - decrease by 10-30% over dry mid-latitudes and dry tropics Drought-affected areas will likely increase in extent. More heavy precipitation events will augment flood risk. In the course of the century, water supplies stored in glaciers and snow cover are projected to decline, reducing water availability in regions where more than one-sixth of the world population currently lives. IPCC

  8. Climate change could impede nations’ abilities to achieve sustainable development

  9. Human settlements and low-lying areas - Risks associated with extreme events - High vulnerability inriverine and coastal areas - Urbanizationoften in high risk areas - Millions of people could experience more coastal flooding if Δ T > 2oC in this century. - Impacts exacerbated by storms, coral bleaching, degradation of coastal wetlands and increased human-induced pressures Sea level rise is inevitable ! IPCC

  10. Megadeltas – particularly vulnerable

  11. The health status of millions of people is projected to be affected • Increases in malnutrition • Increased deaths, diseases and injury due to extreme weather events • Increased burden of diarrhoeal diseases • Increased frequency of cardio-respiratory diseases due to changes in air quality • Altered spatial distribution of some infectious diseases. IPCC

  12. Distribution of Impacts • - Sharp differences across regions • - Low-latitude and less-developed areas • generally face greater risk • Those in weakest economic position are often the most vulnerable to climate change • Greater vulnerability of specific groups such as poor and elderly - also in developed countries Multiple non-climate stresses increase vulnerability IPCC

  13. Analytical Tools • Scenario driven impacts analysis • Provides broad overview • Vulnerability assessment • Broadened to include social vulnerability • Adaptation based approach • Examine adaptive capacity and improve resilience • Key vulnerabilities – long term goal Art.2 UNFCCC • Magnitude, timing, persistence and reversibility, likelihood of occurrence, potential for adaptation, distribution of impacts and importance of system at risk

  14. Risk-management framework Risk - defined by magnitude and probability of occurrence Captures • uncertainty • exposure • sensitivity • adaptation

  15. Risk-management framework • Assignment of probabilities to specific key impacts – can be very difficult • Mitigation reduces risks, delay in action increases risks • Adaptation reduces risk of negative impacts • More difficult to adapt to larger magnitudes and faster rates of warming • Some impacts cannot be avoided – sea level rise, loss of species • Climate change in context of socio-economic baseline

  16. Vulnerability, adaptation and mitigation

  17. GHG Stabilization and Temperature The lower the stabilization, the earlier global GHG should go down IPCC

  18. Impacts by sector

  19. Way forward • Identify vulnerable areas and communities • Identify driving forces that enhance or reduce vulnerability • Develop adaptation plans – bottom up and top down, use local coping capacity • Analysis of synergies and trade-offs of adaptation and mitigation measures – on case by case basis • Food prices, degradation of natural habitat, employment, • Assessment of attribution of damages and of avoided damages • Address question of insurance

  20. Nobel Peace Prize 2007 IPCC together with Mr Gore « for their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change"

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