Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Will it be too late?

In recent decades, changes in climate have caused impacts on natural and human systems on all continents and across the oceans. Differences in vulnerability and exposure arise from non-climatic factors and from multidimensional inequalities often produce by uneven development processes. These differences shape differential risks from climate change. Impacts from recent climate-related extremes, such as heat waves, droughts, floods, cyclones, and wildfires, reveal significant vulnerability and exposure of some ecosystems and many human systems to current climate variability. 

The report provides sufficient and detailed evidence, allowing us to draw conclusions to the question, “To what extent does climate change affect the world"? Prior to reading the report, I have always considered climate change as a minor problem, affecting only the microcosm. Of course, summertime might get a little bit hotter, the wind might be slightly stronger during winter, and a few more storms might fly by during the Monsoon season, but those are only minor impacts, compared to what is actually changing in the world. The main reason might be because I live in a more fortunate part of the world, in a middle-class family, where the extent of the problems do not reach. The adaptation proposals in the report tends to address the lower-working class and people living in poverty, more than those with higher social status. 

Due to these changes, adaptation is becoming embedded in some planning processes, with more limited implementation of responses. Most assessments of adaptation have been restricted to impacts, vulnerability, and adaptation planning, with very few assessing the processes of implementation or the effects of adaptation actions.

Adaptation experience is accumulating across regions in the public and private sector and within communities. Governments at various levels are starting to develop adaptation plans and policies and to integrate climate-change considerations into broader development plans. Responding to climate-related risks involves decision making in a changing world, with continuing uncertainty about the severity and timing of climate-change impacts and with limits to the effectiveness of adaptation. This motivates exploration of a wide range of socioeconomic futures in assessments of risks.

Increasing magnitudes of warming increase the likelihood of severe, pervasive, and irreversible impacts. The overall risks of climate change impacts can be reduced by limiting the rate and magnitude of climate change. There are many principles that can influence effective adaptation. It is important to note that significant co-benefits, synergies, and trade-offs exist between mitigation and adaptation and among different adaptation responses; interactions occur both within and across regions.
http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/images/basics/factorysmoke.jpg

http://www.niu.edu/clasep/images/climate_change.jpg