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== Question about removed options ==

Hi ], I am just wondering why you have removed these three options?:
* Installing protective and/ or resilient technologies and materials in properties that are prone to flooding
* Surveying local vulnerabilities, raising public awareness, and making climate change-specific planning tools like future flood maps
* Requiring waterfront properties to have higher foundations
Do they not count as adaptation options, or have you perhaps merged or summarised them into one? ] (]) 12:00, 5 December 2022 (UTC)

: Thanks. I removed the first because it is a single source not discussing CCA (move to ], the second because it is not a structural measure (moved later in the article) and the third because it is contained in another option --] (]) 12:11, 8 December 2022 (UTC)
:: Thanks. ] (]) 12:44, 12 December 2022 (UTC)

== Putting all the options in one section instead of three ==

I am referring to by Richarit where he merged the three options into one section. I think I do agree with this change, the only disadvantage is that this section about options has now become rather large, and its sub-section headings are no longer visible in the TOC, unless the TOC is expanded to allow fourth level headings to be visible as well. Which is what I have now done . I normally prefer TOC level 3 but it's now TOC level 4. We need to take a close look at the sub-headings within those different options to ensure these are really the best sub-headings to use (and decide if we want them to be visible in the TOC or not). ] (]) 12:36, 5 December 2022 (UTC)

: Thanks for this. I think it looks fine with the sub headings visible and I agree we should look at these. They are not very consistent because some section texts were written before we did the reorganisation and some options were and are in the wrong categories. For example 'responding to sea level rise' mentions hard and soft options, but those soft options such as community strategies/adaptations would come under social/behavioural category below (and so would any sort of household level response to flood). One way around this would be to have a sub section on flooding and the main other hazards (drought & rainfall variation, heat, and flooding) below each category of option. so that would look like this :
# Structural and physical options
## For flooding
## For drought and rainfall variability
## For heat
## For sea level rise
## Other 1
## Other 2
# Social options
## For flooding
## For drought and rainfall variability
## For heat
## Other 1
## etc ..
: The disadvantage is that this approach (where we organise by type/category, then by hazard) would probably make it much too long for inclusion in the TOC. --] (]) 18:35, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
:: The other thing to mention is that the AR6 Ch 16 organises options (they now call them adaptation responses) in a different way - they organise into:
* Technological/Infrastructural
* Institutional
* Behavioural/cultural
* Nature-based
:: These map quite well into our 3 current categories (which were from 2014 report I think) but Nature-based is a new category that we have under structural and physical (but a bit broader than 'ecosystem based adaptation'). --] (]) 18:44, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
::: thanks for this. I think it might be better if we follow the IPCC way of grouping the options more closely, as this should be pretty much the gold standard... Also I find your proposal interesting for grouping it by "type of change". It has inspired me to try out a quite different structure which I have now implemented by creating a new section called "Adaptation responses by type of climate change impact". I am thinking here we can put the more tangible examples of how we adapt to certain impacts of climate change. The section "Adaptation responses by type of option" could then focus more on the theoretical approaches. Do you think this could work? I think for our readers this might work better as they might wonder "how can we adapt to flooding" and then they could jump directly to that section. ] (]) 13:06, 12 December 2022 (UTC)
::::agreed, this is a better arrangement if we are permitted to allocate two sections - it is a potentially big subtopic ] (]) 18:16, 19 December 2022 (UTC)

== Page number ==

@], in , you removed a page number. Just confirming that the remaining page number fully support the text? If not, please self-revert, as a wrong page range makes it much more difficult to verify text. ] (]) 17:49, 19 December 2022 (UTC)
: Hi, my reasoning for removing the end page number of the given range was "I think it's enough to give the starting page number, it gets too distracting otherwise". When the content for a cite goes over say 2 pages, I think it's sufficient to give the starting page number. This allows readers to easily find the correct location in the document. The page number itself is already a little bit of a distraction, especially if it's a high number like {{rp|2346}}. I find that if it then says {{rp|2346-2347}} this would be distracting for the reader. ] (])
:: But you are misleading people that verify such claims. It would cost me 15 rather than 5 minutes to verify such a claim; and there is a good chance I will come to the conclusion it's not supported and delete part of content that was correctly cited before. You can't just make up your own convention about how to cite sources. Surely the solution lies in using a different cite system if you really dislike the long inline text. In articles with the rp system, I tend to use shorter sources to ensure I don't overfill the article. ] (]) 19:54, 19 December 2022 (UTC)
::: Sorry, I am genuinely confused now. I thought the page number was meant to tell people where they can find the content that is being cited. So in I changed the page range that ] had provided with the page where the content was first mentioned in that document. Separately, I talked about it with the user (who is still quite new) because my understanding was that the page number is meant to provide the location where the content begins to be talked about, and that the end page number of a page range is not really required. Similarly to how I did it today: I cited content from chapter 8 of the WG III report. The content is explained from various angles over pages 8-63 and the following two pages but I think saying {{rp|8-63}} shows the reader exactly where the content is in the document. Have I unknowingly violated a style guide rule about citing page numbers that I wasn't aware of? If you say it's important to provide the ''range of pages'' (start to end), I can adjust my way of citing in future (and revert that edit in question), no problem. I honestly thought that what I was doing was quite normal (noting also that for journal papers nobody usually provides pages numbers even if the journal paper is quite long; control+F is useful for finding the right location anyhow). ] (]) 20:06, 19 December 2022 (UTC)
::::If all the information you cite is found on a single page, you can just cite that single page. Even if more pages talk about the same thing. If not all of the information can be found there, you need to cite all the other pages needed to verify the information. So if the end of page 4 says:
::::"Femke gave the birds some seeds to" and page 5 says "eat so that they had enough energy to fly about", I would need to cite both pages if I were to paraphrase that.
::::It's true that we're stricter on citing pages than journals (and in general, in checking that the sources actually pan out. You wouldn't believe how sloppy scientists are with citations now and then). ] (]) 20:19, 19 December 2022 (UTC)
::::: I've now put the end page number back in just to be on the safe side. I'd still like to understand this better as for my own edits I usually only put the starting page number (but most of the time, the content that I want to cite is only on one single page anyhow). I've checked through the guidelines and it usually says "page number or range", see e.g. here: ]. "It helps to give '''a page number or page range'''—or a section, chapter, or other division of the source—because then the reader does not have to carefully review the whole cited source to find the relevant supporting evidence, which promotes efficient source checking." (bolding added by me). I thought that meant I can give either a page number or a page range. Is it possible that this is partly down to personal preference? If everybody uses page ranges, I can of course get in the habit of doing that, too. No problem. ] (]) 20:24, 19 December 2022 (UTC)
::::::If there is a single page that supports the text fully, you should cite that.
::::::If there isn't, you should cite a range/multiple pages.
::::::You're allowed to cite a range (personal preference) when information is found on one page, but it's preferred to only cite one page in that case. ] (]) 20:31, 19 December 2022 (UTC)

== Purposes section ==
Proposal to organise Purposes according to the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA). The GGA was established in the Paris Agreement and it aims to do 3 broad things: enhance adaptive capacity, strengthen resilience and reduce vulnerability to climate change.

The current Purposes section is confusing because 'respond to impacts' and 'reduce risk factors' headings overlap as objectives (I suppose the former could be more about reacting to evolving hazards and the latter could be more about reducing risk in general?). In any case 'respond to impacts' text doesn't discuss responses, only the impacts whereas 'reduce risk factors' covers responses and risk concepts broadly including vulnerability and adaptive capacity. So we could just have this section as purpose (considering that reduce risks is a quite standard definition, based on the risk propeller on p6 here ) after discussing impacts. On the other hand, we could try to structure this section on the 3 components GGA (also means some overlaps). This is coming more from the political declaration rather than the scientific report but I think it does tie in with what we are doing.
# enhance adaptive capacity - we have the subsection on adaptive capacity fitting here
# strengthen resilience - relating to system-level resilience and climate resilient developent discussed a lot in AR6
# reduce vulnerability to climate change - rewrite/expand current text for 'reduce risk factors'. The problem here is that 'exposure' is no longer considered to be a component of vulnerability (since AR5) but a separate risk factor, so I am wondering how to bring it in under this heading (?)
Any thoughts or feedback is welcome ] (]) 20:10, 19 December 2022 (UTC)--
: Yes, I think it would be a good idea to re-arrange the purposes section. It was actually me who created it (from existing text) in an edit in April 2021, see . Previously the structure looked like this: https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Climate_change_adaptation&oldid=1019006236. It's probably also better to remove the excerpt from ] or reduce it to just one paragraph. Also, I am wondering if "aims" might be a better section title than "purposes"? I don't have a strong preference on this though. ] (]) 09:51, 20 December 2022 (UTC)
::Thanks for your response. This was (finally) completed now! ] (]) 16:03, 4 March 2023 (UTC)

== Nature-based solutions versus ecosystem-based adaptation ==

Can we please make it clearer in ] what the difference is between Nature-based solutions versus ecosystem-based adaptation? Are the terms used interchangeably in the adaptation literature or is one the overarching term for the other? ] are not specific to adaptation, they can also perform other functions, like wastewater treatment. ] (]) 10:00, 20 December 2022 (UTC)

:Yes, you are right - NBS is the overarching term and it is newer than EbA but there is a lot of overlap. I have mentioned this in the page. It is not really possible to separate out EbA and other types of NBS (the other important concepts/approaches in NBS such as Green Infrastructure, Climate Smart Agriculture, Ecosystem based DRR are also arguably part of EbA). Instead I have added subsections on benefits for ecosystems and for people. We can add more examples of options here (they are also going to overlap a lot). ] (]) 20:13, 31 January 2023 (UTC)

== Revisiting the 4 images in the lead ==

{{multiple image
| perrow = 2
| total_width = 500
| image1 = FrontLines-EGAT 2011 Environment Photo Contest Top Entry (5842818280).jpg
| image2 = Seawallventnor.jpg
| image3 = 2013.02-402-294a Pearl millet,breeding,selfing ICRISAT,Patancheru(Hyderabad,Andhra Pradesh),IN wed20feb2013.jpg
| image4 = 20080708 Chicago City Hall Green Roof Edit1.jpg
| footer = Adapting to climate change involves structural, physical, social and institutional approaches. Clockwise from top left: ] planting and other ]; ]s to protect against ] worsened by ]; ]s provide cooling in cities and reduce ] effects; ] for ].
}}
I'd like to revisit our choice of 4 images for the lead. See also related discussion ]:
* The first two are good, I think.
* The third one with the selective breeding is too difficult to grasp for a layperson, I think. Can we find a better one to illustrate agricultural techniques for adaptation? I guess an irrigated field would be one but maybe not a terribly sustainable solution?
* Also the one with the green roof is nice but is it too exotic? Are green roofs too rare at this stage? Perhaps replace it with a different one that shows greening of cities, e.g. one with shade and trees? (note Wikimedia Commons is likely to have lots of images for that) ] (]) 10:54, 1 February 2023 (UTC)

:We adopted a similar format for lead images on the weADAPT article at https://www.weadapt.org/knowledge-base/climate-adaptation-learning-resources/an-introduction-to-adaptation and I wonder if any of these would fit your needs ? I am not sure of the Creative Commons status but we had permission to use them there so if there is one or two you like we could enquire ] (]) 16:01, 4 March 2023 (UTC)

==Wiki Education assignment: Tech Writing for Agriculture==
{{dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment | course = Misplaced Pages:Wiki_Ed/CSUMB/Tech_Writing_for_Agriculture_(Spring_2023) | assignments = ] | start_date = 2023-01-24 | end_date = 2023-05-19 }}

<span class="wikied-assignment" style="font-size:85%;">— Assignment last updated by ] (]) 19:25, 19 February 2023 (UTC)</span>

== "Adaptation options" section ==

The word "options" doesn't feel right here. It imples mutual exclusivity. ] (]) 16:44, 3 March 2023 (UTC)
: Why would "options" imply that the options are mutually exclusive? If so, what would be a better title for this section, or could the section text make it clearer that the options are not mutually exclusive? ] (]) 17:03, 3 March 2023 (UTC)
:: I don't know why it implies mutual exclusivity to me, only that it does. Perhaps something like "adaptation by area" would work better?--] (]) 14:27, 4 March 2023 (UTC)
:::I think "options" is quite often used to describe the activities; however we also use the word 'responses' because this is what the IPCC report used (because the focus in the report was on implemented/documented adaptation). Perhaps the categories are more like areas, within which there are many options. A portfolio of options/measures (implies they are to be implemented together) - but do we want to introduce another term ? ] (]) 16:22, 4 March 2023 (UTC)
:::: "approaches" ? —<span style="font-family:Times New Roman;font-size:100%;color:dark blue;background-color:transparent;;">] (])</span> 16:22, 4 March 2023 (UTC)

== Summary of recent edits (mid Feb- early March) ==

* ‘Aims’ section: I redeveloped the former ‘purposes’ section into a longer ‘aims’ section that aligns with the GGA 3 components and unpacks these a bit. The policy goals of adaptation are context dependent and very varied, but it might be possible to give some examples in the planning and implementation section further down and link to these.
* ‘Adaptation options’ section: I filled it in quite a bit with more examples of each type (all from the IPCC WG2 AR6 report)
* ‘Sectoral and regional risks and adaptation’: I developed this section with several new subsections, and I deleted some of the older material about vulnerability. For each sector (Food is still missing) there is a paragraph or two about the main risks facing the sector and a paragraph or two of the main adaptation responses that are documented. Some of this was much too closely copied from the IPCC WG2 AR6 report, so thanks to ] for pointing this out.
* ‘Related activities’: section was worked on by me and ]. We moved the text about Effects of climate change here under a new subsection about ‘climate change impacts’ research. We also have two other activities ‘disaster risks, response and preparedness’ and ‘climate change mitigation’ which are research and policy areas.
:: I've changed the "related activities" section heading to "Understanding the need" for now. Another option could be "scientific framing" maybe. ] (]) 10:43, 17 March 2023 (UTC)

Things remaining for me to work on :
* Improve the lead section
* Develop the section on Planning and implementing, to include more on the demand-driven approach and the tools available

Some suggestions of improvements that other people could work on
* The bit on regional risks and adaptation is weak because it only mentions regional vulnerability and measurement of adaptive capacity that is very old, from AR4 or 5. It would be good to update this with the latest information from the IPCC WG2 chapters for each region (ch 9-15 or add from the TS).
* ‘Related activities’: On the subsection on Climate change mitigation synergies it would be good to mention NBS / forests/agricuture as current examples are only from urban sector.
* ‘Related activities’: in this section the link with sustainable development could also be made. There is already text about this and SDG13 in the section on ‘global goals’
* ‘Adaptation by type of impact’ : The subsection on ‘Changed rainfall patterns in agriculture’ should be broadened to mention other sectors like energy and industry and the heading changed to ‘changed rainfall patterns’
* ‘Adaptation by type of impact’ : Other main types of impacts missing are extreme cold spells, various impacts on storms and wildfire - perhaps check also ‘Effects of climate change’. Something to consider is listing the direct effects first and then the more indirect, so starting with climate extremes : heat and cold waves, tropical cyclones, changing precipitation, and then drought, floods, wildfires and then all of the other systems that are impacted such as migration/mobility, trade, conflict etc. Could put some introductory text to explain this logic.
* ‘Sectoral and regional risks and adaptation’: Food and agriculture section is still missing (IPCC chapter 5)
] (]) 16:35, 4 March 2023 (UTC)

: Thanks for your work here! The article will need quite a bit of work on making it easier to understand. Will you work on this as part of the project? For instance, the IPCC glossary is used to explain vulnerability like "the propensity or predisposition to be adversely affected", which can be written much easier without the need to use quotations.
: I've noticed some ] from the glossary in general, Richardit. Can you do some more rewording towards a general audience there? ] (]) 20:07, 4 March 2023 (UTC)
::Thanks Femke - yes, some colleagues in our team will be looking closely at readability and scoring the article with a couple of tools, and I will work with them.
::] uses this definition of vulnerability so we would also need to change it there if we can find some better wording. The common usage as in the extent to which one is likely to experience damage or harm as discussed on (this page itself is now a bit out of date) might be used ?
::I will look at the other wording for glossary and try to make a few improvements ] (]) 15:31, 11 March 2023 (UTC)

== What to do about the regional risks section? ==

The regional risks section needs some work. As Richarit pointed out above: "The bit on regional risks and adaptation is weak because it only mentions regional vulnerability and measurement of adaptive capacity that is very old, from AR4 or 5. It would be good to update this with the latest information from the IPCC WG2 chapters for each region (ch 9-15 or add from the TS)." I wonder if it's better to delete it for now as it's not really clear what it's all about and whether it digresses too much into the ] or ] areas? Do we really need it? Are adaptation efforts really so different from one region to the next? ] (]) 10:33, 17 March 2023 (UTC)

: Yes, the risks and responses are different for different regions/continents (there is a good overview in chapter 16 figures 16.2,3,4 and 5.). We could perhaps look at the respective articles on climate change in these regions and what they say about adaptation. Eg. the ] page has quite a big section on CCA (it also shows differences within the continent) Although I still think the IPCC chapters would be the best source
BTW I think that the focus should be more on the adaptations than the risks.
] (]) 04:18, 22 March 2023 (UTC)
:: I agree with you, we should focus more on the adaptation options not on the risks. The risks are more relevant for other Misplaced Pages articles, I guess ] would be the main one. Taking content from the IPCC chapters is good but comes with its own problems (the need for, and difficulty of, paraphrasing and converting into simpler language). By the way, adaptation is also included as a section in the "climate change by country" articles, e.g. here for Australia: https://en.wikipedia.org/Climate_change_in_Australia#Adaptation How do we ensure that we don't double up on content if we talk about particular countries. Maybe it's better to group them by type of country, e.g. low income country with water scarcity problems, high income country with sea level rise problems, or something like that. ] (]) 14:34, 23 March 2023 (UTC)
::: Mind you, why do we have a section heading called "Risks by sectors"? I am confused now. Perhaps better "Adaptation challenges by sector"? ] (]) 14:36, 23 March 2023 (UTC)
::::It was formerly 'Sectoral and regional risks and adaptation' but it got shortened to 'risks by sectors'. The idea was to have a paragraph or two about the main risks facing the sector and a paragraph or two of the main adaptation responses in the sector (based on WG2 chapters). It should perhaps be called Adaptation by sector (this would be similar to the mitigation article which has ] for buildings, transport, etc.) or indeed challenges if this is a better term. ] (]) 07:00, 30 March 2023 (UTC)
::::: Ah, thanks for that explanation. I have changed it for now to "options by sector" and "options by region" (as the article is about adaptation, I felt we could have a section title that is short, rather than "adaptation options by sector"). Would this work? We now have:
*Options by type of action
*Options by type of impact
*Options by sector
*Options by region ] (]) 11:07, 30 March 2023 (UTC)
*:yes, I think it works well ] (]) 22:18, 12 April 2023 (UTC)

== Internal overlap / repetition in risks by sector ==

I was just doing some work on the section about adapting to heat waves in the section "Options by type of impact" and noticed that the issue of greener cities comes up now several times in the article, namely also in the section on cities and on health (in "risks by sectors"). I wonder how we could improve on that? I also wonder if the section heading "risks by sectors" really works. Would reader understand from the table of content what risk has to do with adaptation? ] (]) 10:36, 17 March 2023 (UTC)

:You are right - is it better to avoid redundancy in the article and/or link the sections ? Wouldn't the reader be likely to miss the connection if we take it out of sections ? In other articles about green cities, green infrastructure there is quite a gap when it comes to text about climate change adaptation. ] (]) 07:12, 30 March 2023 (UTC)
:: I think avoiding redundancy would be good, especially given that the article is getting a bit long now (51 kB). Internal linking within the article can be done (sparingly); for some reason it's not very recommended but I think every now and again it could be appropriate. Also, if you have identified a gap in e.g. ] then I think it would be wise to add a link across from there to here (and even add a paragraph or excerpt there if it makes sense). ] (]) 11:13, 30 March 2023 (UTC)


== Image size == == Image size ==
Line 238: Line 83:
::: I do think the article now needs a review with regards to reading ease aspects (the ] is great). ::: I do think the article now needs a review with regards to reading ease aspects (the ] is great).
::: For example, this sentence that you picked out above is too "academic" and would be very difficult to understand for lay persons: "On the other hand, climate resilience-focused projects can be seen as activities to promote and support transformational adaptation, since transformational adaptation is connected with implementation at scale and ideally at the system-level." We should strive to make it simpler; as a starting point, let's look for ways to change passive voice to active voice. This would force us to think about "who sees it like this?" Is it scholars, politicians, the general public, or who? ] (]) 20:13, 21 June 2023 (UTC) ::: For example, this sentence that you picked out above is too "academic" and would be very difficult to understand for lay persons: "On the other hand, climate resilience-focused projects can be seen as activities to promote and support transformational adaptation, since transformational adaptation is connected with implementation at scale and ideally at the system-level." We should strive to make it simpler; as a starting point, let's look for ways to change passive voice to active voice. This would force us to think about "who sees it like this?" Is it scholars, politicians, the general public, or who? ] (]) 20:13, 21 June 2023 (UTC)

== Add some content to maladaptation section? ==

I came across this article today: "". If someone has time, we could use some content from there to update/expand the current section on "maladaptation"? Pinging ] ] (]) 11:50, 30 October 2023 (UTC)

:I've added a bit from that section now. ] (]) 09:17, 18 July 2024 (UTC)

== Some content moved from ] ==

I've taken out this paragraph from ] as I think it didn't fit there. It's not well written though, more like a literature review. Is there anything in this that is worth saving?

++++++++
Adaptation based policy focuses on adjusting environmental and human systems to respond to the predicted impacts of global warming.<ref name=":12">{{Cite journal |last1=Klein |first1=Richard J.T. |last2=Schipper |first2=E. Lisa F. |last3=Dessai |first3=Suraje |date=2005 |title=Integrating mitigation and adaptation into climate and development policy: three research questions |journal=Environmental Science & Policy |language=en |volume=8 |issue=6 |pages=579–588 |doi=10.1016/j.envsci.2005.06.010}}</ref> According to Klein, Schipper and Dessai, adaptation is necessary to accommodate permanent changes to the human environment that, regardless of mitigation attempts, cannot be reversed.<ref name=":12" /> Haibach and Schneider suggest that climate policy continues to move towards 'crisis management and plans for preventative measures'.<ref name=":5">Haibach, H. and Schneider, K., 2013. The Politics of Climate Change: Review and Future Challenges. In: O. Ruppel, C. Roschmann and K. Ruppel-Schlichting, ed., Climate Change: International Law and Global Governance: Volume II: Policy, Diplomacy and Governance in a Changing Environment, 1st ed. Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, p.372.</ref> Ford also states that the UNFCCC has evolved to address 'exposure to predicted climate change impacts' by stressing the need to adapt.<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal |last=Ford |first=James |date=2007 |title=Emerging trends in climate change policy: the role of adaptation |journal=Journal of Climate |volume=3 |pages=5–14}}</ref> ] (]) 11:28, 11 November 2023 (UTC)
{{reflist-talk}} ] (]) 11:28, 11 November 2023 (UTC)

== Paragraph about indigenous knowledge removed ==

I've removed this recently added paragraph as I felt it was too detailed for this high-level article, and at the same time not really saying very much. All from one primary source.

++++++++++
The role of indigenous knowledge in climate change adaptation has gained increasing recognition in recent years. Traditional ecological knowledge, accumulated over generations, can provide valuable insights into local environmental conditions, climate variability, and sustainable practices. Makondo and Thomas (2018) argue that linking indigenous knowledge with western science can lead to more effective adaptation strategies. They propose a framework that integrates indigenous and scientific knowledge systems to develop context-specific, culturally relevant, and sustainable adaptation measures. By combining the strengths of both knowledge systems, communities can enhance their adaptive capacity and better respond to the challenges posed by climate change.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Makondo |first1=C. C. |last2=Thomas |first2=D. S. |year=2018 |title=Climate change adaptation: Linking indigenous knowledge with western science for effective adaptation |journal=Environmental Science & Policy |volume=88 |pages=83–91 |doi=10.1016/j.envsci.2018.06.014}}</ref>
] (]) 23:32, 17 March 2024 (UTC)
{{reflist-talk}} ] (]) 23:32, 17 March 2024 (UTC)

== April 9 edits I do not understand - Is somebody trying to wreck this page? ==

Twice this person did something today, I do not understand: IsaacYunusa

] (]) 19:39, 9 April 2024 (UTC)

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On 24 October 2019, it was proposed that this article be moved from Climate change adaptation to Global warming adaptation. The result of the discussion was not move.

This article is written in British English, which has its own spelling conventions (colour, travelled, centre, defence, artefact, analyse) and some terms that are used in it may be different or absent from other varieties of English. According to the relevant style guide, this should not be changed without broad consensus.
Section sizes
Section size for Climate change adaptation (60 sections)
Section name Byte
count
Section
total
(Top) 6,686 6,686
Definition 2,356 2,356
Understanding the need 609 6,054
Climate change impacts research 3,003 3,003
Disaster risks, response and preparedness 2,442 2,442
Aims 176 14,036
Policy aims 1,934 1,934
Reduce risk factors: vulnerability and exposure 4,151 4,151
Increase adaptive capacity 3,843 3,843
Strengthening resilience 2,448 2,448
Co-benefits with mitigation 1,484 1,484
Options by type of action 3,379 26,058
Infrastructural and technological options 140 777
Built environment 438 438
Early warning systems 114 114
Climate services 85 85
Institutional options 4,259 12,182
Building codes 1,570 1,570
Insurance 4,893 4,893
Coordination mechanisms 1,460 1,460
Behavioural and cultural options 481 6,098
Change in diets and food waste 2,986 2,986
Change in livelihood strategies 492 492
Migration and managed retreat 2,139 2,139
Nature-based options 1,781 3,622
Supporting ecosystems and biodiversity 1,200 1,200
Supporting people and societies 641 641
Options by type of impact 251 17,774
Flooding 5,565 5,565
Sea level rise 60 60
Heat waves 5,190 5,190
Changed rainfall patterns in agriculture 3,499 4,953
More spending on irrigation 1,454 1,454
Drought and desertification 1,755 1,755
Options by sector 640 18,752
Ecosystems and their services 2,872 6,220
Assisted migration of plants or animals 3,348 3,348
Health 2,771 2,771
Cities 2,049 2,049
Water 3,272 3,272
Livelihoods and communities 2,621 2,621
International impacts and cascading risk 1,179 1,179
Costs and finance 24 14,763
Economic costs 3,501 3,501
Cost benefit analysis 1,426 1,426
International finance 6,770 6,770
Additionality 3,042 3,042
Challenges 18 12,448
Differing time scales 2,961 2,961
Maladaptation 3,048 3,048
Limits to adaptation 2,890 2,890
Incentivizing private investment in adaptation 2,649 2,649
Trade-offs with mitigation 882 882
Planning and monitoring of implementation 3,113 10,833
By country and city 4,453 4,453
Global goals 3,267 3,267
History 3,723 3,723
See also 300 300
References 42 42
External links 711 711
Total 134,536 134,536

Archives

1



This page has archives. Sections older than 350 days may be automatically archived by Lowercase sigmabot III when more than 7 sections are present.

Image size

@ActivelyDisinterested: I noticed you made a few images smaller in this edit. Can you explain a bit? For me, it looked better on both mobile and desktop before. The graph has become unreadable, and the images too small to really discern.

Neither option is really in line with WP:IMGSIZE, as we're not using upright. Easily fixible for the second image, but I'm not sure how to fix that for the multimage one. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 20:24, 26 March 2023 (UTC)

That should have been 350 not 250, I'll update that. IMGSIZE says no more than 400 pixels wide, and multi image adds a frame to the image. Switching to upright might help, as the auto-formatter deals with that better. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested transmissions °co-ords° 20:36, 26 March 2023 (UTC)
Thanks. I didn't see that criterion. Seems like we need a better picture anyway, as it still displays poorly in the maximum size allowed.. Not sure if upright has the same restrictions.. —Femke 🐦 (talk) 20:41, 26 March 2023 (UTC)
Figure 1- Relationships among Risks, Resilience, Hazard Mitigation, and Climate Change Adaptation (27242486244)
Which picture do you mean when you say "Seems like we need a better picture anyway" - is it the schematic under "Aims" or is it one of the collage images from the lead? If it's this one (on the right), then I think perhaps we should drop it. It's not easy to read and seems to overly focus on weather-related issues. EMsmile (talk) 09:43, 27 March 2023 (UTC)
I've taken that schematic out now and have moved it to climate risk instead. EMsmile (talk) 09:20, 16 May 2023 (UTC)

Section sizes, potential for condensing

I've added to the top of the talk page a template to show the section sizes. It shows that the largest section is now "Options by type of impact" and here in particular the one on "migration pressures of humans". We could probably cull and condense that one a bit. The article is slowly getting to a size where it's on the long side (52 kB now). Still not too long but 60 kB would probably be too long. EMsmile (talk) 11:11, 30 March 2023 (UTC)

Thanks for adding the template - very useful. Yes, I think it would be good to cull that section. Migration pressures doesn't altogether fit with the other impacts in the section, which are climate hazards. Migration responses are triggered by some combination of climate impacts + other factors but doesn't fit very neatly into one category or sector - I think this is why IPCC has it in a cross chapter box! Richarit (talk) 22:17, 12 April 2023 (UTC)
I removed these two paragraphs which were using old sources and were not about the pressures or responses so much as the impacts and outcomes of migration (as disaster response) and so goes a bit off topic I think:
"Focusing on climate change as the issue may frame the debate around migration in terms of projections, causing the research to be speculative. Migration as tool for climate change adaptation is projected to be a more pressing issue in the decade to come. In Africa, specifically, migrant social networks can help to build social capital to increase the social resilience in the communities of origin and trigger innovations across regions by the transfer of knowledge, technology, remittances and other resources.
In Africa, Mozambique and Zimbabwe are clear examples of adaptation strategies because they have implemented relocation policies that have reduced the exposure of populations and migrants to disaster. Tools can be put in place that limit forced displacement after a disaster; promote employment programs, even if only temporary, for internally displaced people or establish funding plans to ensure their security; to minimize the vulnerability of populations from risk areas. This can limit the displacement caused by environmental shocks and better channel the positive spillovers (money transfers, experiences, etc.) from the migration to the origin countries/communities." Richarit (talk) 15:23, 21 April 2023 (UTC)
I made further changes to the organisation of the section and added more recent thinking and sources on human migration and shortened it a bit.
I was thinking that the "of ecosystems" subsection might work better if it were located in the options by sector->ecosystems. Any thoughts on that ? @EMsmile ? Richarit (talk) 14:20, 25 April 2023 (UTC)
I agree with you and have made that change. I was also wondering in which sense ecosystems can be called a "sector" but then looking at the WG II report I see there two chapters which mention "and their services" in their section titles. I think that makes sense so I have added "and their services" to our section heading, too. Please check if you agree with my recent changes. Your edits on the section about human migration are excellent. EMsmile (talk) 07:33, 26 April 2023 (UTC)
It is good like this I think. Assisted migration is mentioned in chapter 3 (assisted migration of butterflies has been studied) so I will add a link to the report in that section. Richarit (talk) 09:26, 26 April 2023 (UTC)

References

  1. Adamo, Susana B. (2008). Addressing Environmentally Induced Population Displacements. A Delicate Task. Population-Environment Research Network Cyberseminar on "Environmentally Induced Population Displacements.". Population Environment Research Network.
  2. Scheffran, Jürgen; Marmer, Elina; Sow, Papa (April 2012). "Migration as a contribution to resilience and innovation in climate adaptation: Social networks and co-development in Northwest Africa". Applied Geography. 33: 119–127. doi:10.1016/j.apgeog.2011.10.002.
  3. Ionesco, Dina; Mokhnacheva, Daria; Gemenne, François (2013). Atlas des migrations environnementales. Presses de Sciences Po.

Need elaboration for certain wordings

Adaptive ideas include: Taking advantage of global transportation systems to delivering surplus food to where it is needed (though this does not help subsistence farmers unless aid is given). Can anybody help explain reasons behind the wordings in bold? Thanks. ThomasYehYeh (talk) 06:26, 13 May 2023 (UTC)

Well spotted, ThomasYehYeh. I've deleted that sentence now. It was unclear and used an unreliable/old source. But the entire section still needs an overhaul. EMsmile (talk) 09:25, 16 May 2023 (UTC)

Article is far too vague

I appreciate the effort to date, but at this point, it is more like a long laundry list of floaty suggestions with relatively little concrete, actionable information. The entire article seems to consist of wordings like

> Exposure can be decreased

> the average sea level in a port might not be as important as the height of water during a storm surge. which causes flooding); the average rainfall in an area might not be as important as how frequent and severe droughts and extreme precipitation events become

> climate change adaptation is sometimes seen as one of many processes

> Disasters are often triggered

> As climate change is projected to increase (how much?) the frequency and severity of extreme weather events and disasters, adaptation may also include

> For humans, adaptation aims to moderate or avoid harm, and exploit opportunities ; for natural systems, humans may intervene to help adjustment

> Vulnerability can be decreased in urban settings through using green garden spaces to reduce heat stress and food insecurity for low-income neighbourhoods.

> On the other hand, climate resilience-focused projects can be seen as activities to promote and support transformational adaptation, since transformational adaptation is connected with implementation at scale and ideally at the system-level.

> Wildfires and increased pest infestations due to climate change caused much of the recent tree mortality in North America

"May, can, sometimes, might." It's all hedging, vague, generalizing language. A casual reader would go through this article and walk away with absolutely no idea how much different adaptation options are likely to cost individually (outside of that aggregate IPCC estimate at the end of the article) nor what those options can actually achieve for them for all the money spent. Can we really not do better on the specifics? InformationToKnowledge (talk) 19:23, 21 June 2023 (UTC)

This is an encyclopedia for lay readers, who generally seek Knowledge, not Information, User:InformationToKnowledge, and definitely not piles of Data. Moreover, numbers will be different from different sources, and the numbers will keep changing over time—a nightmare for an understaffed Wikipedian force. For example, it's not useful for lay readers to experience the mind-numbing quantity of numbers in Extinction risk from climate change, which has a percent sign "%" 253 (two hundred fifty-three) times. This is an encyclopedia article, not a literature review. —RCraig09 (talk) 19:43, 21 June 2023 (UTC)
Thank you for the feedback from both of you, much appreciated (I was feeling a bit lonely with this article, with mostly just User:Richarit and I talk about it and trying to improve it...) With regards to vagueness, well this is mostly how the pertinent literature (as summarised in IPCC reports) writes it, isn't it? And as it's a "global" high-level article it would not be easy to say much "concrete" stuff. It mainly talks about options that we have at our disposal. Or are you aware of other, better publications that we have not utilised for this article yet?
I do think the article now needs a review with regards to reading ease aspects (the new script for readability is great).
For example, this sentence that you picked out above is too "academic" and would be very difficult to understand for lay persons: "On the other hand, climate resilience-focused projects can be seen as activities to promote and support transformational adaptation, since transformational adaptation is connected with implementation at scale and ideally at the system-level." We should strive to make it simpler; as a starting point, let's look for ways to change passive voice to active voice. This would force us to think about "who sees it like this?" Is it scholars, politicians, the general public, or who? EMsmile (talk) 20:13, 21 June 2023 (UTC)

Add some content to maladaptation section?

I came across this article today: "Climate adaptation projects sometimes exacerbate the problems they try to solve – a new tool hopes to correct that". If someone has time, we could use some content from there to update/expand the current section on "maladaptation"? Pinging User:Richarit EMsmile (talk) 11:50, 30 October 2023 (UTC)

I've added a bit from that section now. EMsmile (talk) 09:17, 18 July 2024 (UTC)

Some content moved from History of climate change policy and politics

I've taken out this paragraph from History of climate change policy and politics as I think it didn't fit there. It's not well written though, more like a literature review. Is there anything in this that is worth saving?

++++++++

Adaptation based policy focuses on adjusting environmental and human systems to respond to the predicted impacts of global warming. According to Klein, Schipper and Dessai, adaptation is necessary to accommodate permanent changes to the human environment that, regardless of mitigation attempts, cannot be reversed. Haibach and Schneider suggest that climate policy continues to move towards 'crisis management and plans for preventative measures'. Ford also states that the UNFCCC has evolved to address 'exposure to predicted climate change impacts' by stressing the need to adapt. EMsmile (talk) 11:28, 11 November 2023 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ Klein, Richard J.T.; Schipper, E. Lisa F.; Dessai, Suraje (2005). "Integrating mitigation and adaptation into climate and development policy: three research questions". Environmental Science & Policy. 8 (6): 579–588. doi:10.1016/j.envsci.2005.06.010.
  2. Haibach, H. and Schneider, K., 2013. The Politics of Climate Change: Review and Future Challenges. In: O. Ruppel, C. Roschmann and K. Ruppel-Schlichting, ed., Climate Change: International Law and Global Governance: Volume II: Policy, Diplomacy and Governance in a Changing Environment, 1st ed. Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, p.372.
  3. Ford, James (2007). "Emerging trends in climate change policy: the role of adaptation". Journal of Climate. 3: 5–14.

EMsmile (talk) 11:28, 11 November 2023 (UTC)

Paragraph about indigenous knowledge removed

I've removed this recently added paragraph as I felt it was too detailed for this high-level article, and at the same time not really saying very much. All from one primary source.

++++++++++ The role of indigenous knowledge in climate change adaptation has gained increasing recognition in recent years. Traditional ecological knowledge, accumulated over generations, can provide valuable insights into local environmental conditions, climate variability, and sustainable practices. Makondo and Thomas (2018) argue that linking indigenous knowledge with western science can lead to more effective adaptation strategies. They propose a framework that integrates indigenous and scientific knowledge systems to develop context-specific, culturally relevant, and sustainable adaptation measures. By combining the strengths of both knowledge systems, communities can enhance their adaptive capacity and better respond to the challenges posed by climate change. EMsmile (talk) 23:32, 17 March 2024 (UTC)

References

  1. Makondo, C. C.; Thomas, D. S. (2018). "Climate change adaptation: Linking indigenous knowledge with western science for effective adaptation". Environmental Science & Policy. 88: 83–91. doi:10.1016/j.envsci.2018.06.014.

EMsmile (talk) 23:32, 17 March 2024 (UTC)

April 9 edits I do not understand - Is somebody trying to wreck this page?

Twice this person did something today, I do not understand: IsaacYunusa

Cbarlow (talk) 19:39, 9 April 2024 (UTC)

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