2014
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-014-1214-0
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Cross-sectoral interactions of adaptation and mitigation measures

Abstract: Adaptation and mitigation are complementary strategies for addressing the impacts of climate change, yet are often considered separately. This paper examines the literature for evidence of the interactions of adaptation and mitigation measures across the agriculture, biodiversity, coasts, forests, urban and water sectors, focusing on Europe. It found that often adaptation and mitigation synergies and conflicts were not explicitly mentioned within a sector, let alone between sectors. Most measures, however, wer… Show more

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Cited by 70 publications
(38 citation statements)
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References 85 publications
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“…The most direct and urgent task is to implement effective adaptation options to enhance local adaptive ability and reduce the adverse impacts of climate change on crop yield. Adaptation strategies and measures that have synergies with mitigation will be important, as they are environmentally and economically more efficient (Berry et al 2014a;Fig. 3 Geographic distribution of agricultural adaptive capacity to climate change in China for the year 2010 Skourtos et al 2014).…”
Section: Agricultural Vulnerability To Climate Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The most direct and urgent task is to implement effective adaptation options to enhance local adaptive ability and reduce the adverse impacts of climate change on crop yield. Adaptation strategies and measures that have synergies with mitigation will be important, as they are environmentally and economically more efficient (Berry et al 2014a;Fig. 3 Geographic distribution of agricultural adaptive capacity to climate change in China for the year 2010 Skourtos et al 2014).…”
Section: Agricultural Vulnerability To Climate Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…by promoting the institutionalisation of multiple networks working on systemic innovation and win-win solutions; (ii) Consider how to redistribute long-term responsibilities accordingly (see Dangerman & Schellnhuber 2013;Tàbara et al 2010); (iii) Move away from the development of climate policy narratives about additional costs, impacts, and burdensharing to those focused on opportunities ; and (iv) Focus new climate assessment processes on solutions that are able to yield multiplicative, non-linear, and systemic effects in contrast to the traditional additive, wedge-based, or single-sector/scale approaches (see Berry et al 2015;Kates et al 2012;Wiek et al 2012).…”
Section: Transformation Sustainability and Transformabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…And yet, it has been noted that mitigation and adaptation measures influence each other in complicated ways, requiring integrative approaches that also take into account their tradeoffs, conflicts and disconnections (MOSER, 2012). For example, actions and measures may present different spatial and temporal scales (BERRY et al, 2015) or may involve different social groups within a country, or even different countries (e.g. AYERS; HUQ, 2009;DE SHERBININ et al, 2011, p. 456).…”
Section: Mitigation Adaptation and The Road To Parismentioning
confidence: 99%