Climate Policy 2(2002) 145-159 From Impacts Assessment to Adaptation Priorities: the Shaping of Adaptation Policy

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G00084.pdf
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English
Published: January 2002
Product code:G00084

Document begins: Climate Policy 2(2002) 145-159 From Impacts Assessment to Adaptation Priorities: the Shaping of Adaptation Policy Ian Burton, Saleemul Huq, Bo Lim, Olga Pilifosova, Emma Lisa Schipper Abstract Under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), adaptation has recently gained importance, yet adaptation is much less developed than mitigation as a policy response. Adaptation research has been used to help answer to related but distinct questions. (1) To what extent can adaptation reduce impacts of climate change? (2) What adaptation policies are needed, and how can they best be developed, applied and funded? For the first question, the emphasis is on the aggregate value of adaptation so that this may be used to estimate net impacts. An important purpose is to compare net impacts with the costs of mitigation. In the second question, the emphasis is on the design and prioritisation of adaptation policies and measures. While both types of research are conducted in a policy context, they differ in their character, application, and purpose. The impacts/mitigation research is orientated towards the physical and biological science of impacts and adaptation, while research on the ways and means of adaptation is focussed on the social and economic determinants of ...

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Lim, B., Schipper, E., Pilifosova, O., Burton, I. and Huq, S. (2002). Climate Policy 2(2002) 145-159 From Impacts Assessment to Adaptation Priorities: the Shaping of Adaptation Policy. .
Available at https://www.iied.org/g00084