Reducing Climate Risks Through Adaptation Actions
Abstract
The Congressionally-mandated Fourth National Climate Assessment (NCA4) report builds on previous assessment efforts to highlight the risks posed to American society by a changing climate. The report highlights numerous case studies of successful adaptation actions being undertaken across the country to minimize climate-related risks. Adaptation—defined as actions taken at the individual, local, regional, and national levels to reduce impacts from today's weather and climate conditions, and to prepare for future changes—mainly occurs at a local level, with governments, businesses, communities, and individuals responding to different specific impacts based on their geography, vulnerability, and capacity. The Adaptation chapter (Chapter 28) of NCA4 builds on the adaptive risk management process highlighted in the Third NCA by describing progress over the past four years, best practices and lessons learned, and the risk reduction potential from incremental and moving beyond incremental change. The chapter also surveys methodological approaches being employed and how both the economic and broader social welfare benefits of adaptation may be assessed.
This poster will highlight approaches, case studies, and best practices underway across the nation, including regional and urban efforts spanning different sectors including water, energy, health, agriculture, ecosystems, and disaster risk reduction. The chapter was written by a team of Federal and non-Federal authors with wide-ranging expertise in infrastructure, national security, natural resource management, urban systems, etc., and underwent multiple rounds of public and governmental review throughout 2017 and 2018.- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2018
- Bibcode:
- 2018AGUFMPA31D1177A
- Keywords:
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- 3305 Climate change and variability;
- ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSESDE: 9350 North America;
- GEOGRAPHIC LOCATIONDE: 1630 Impacts of global change;
- GLOBAL CHANGEDE: 1637 Regional climate change;
- GLOBAL CHANGE