Limits to Climate Change Adaptation: Case Study of the Australian Alps

被引:22
|
作者
Morrison, Clare [1 ]
Pickering, Catherine [2 ]
机构
[1] Griffith Univ, Int Ctr Ecotourism Res, Griffith Sch Environm, Nathan, Qld 4222, Australia
[2] Griffith Univ, Sch Environm, South Brisbane, Qld 4101, Australia
关键词
conservation; tourism; thresholds; society; economics; SNOWY MOUNTAINS; CHANGE VULNERABILITY; WINTER TOURISM; SKI RESORTS; IMPACT; SNOWMAKING; INDUSTRY; VEGETATION; VARIABILITY; SENSITIVITY;
D O I
10.1111/j.1745-5871.2012.00758.x
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Climate change is occurring and not being mitigated, motivating adaptation but adaptation strategies can have biophysical, economic, technological, and social limits. We review publicly available documents to assess how successful current and proposed adaptation strategies may be for the Australian Alps, including likely limits and potential collaborations and conflicts among stakeholders. Conservation managers, the tourism industry, and local communities have implemented or are proposing a range of adaptation strategies in the region. Some stakeholder strategies complement each other (e.g. invasive species control, fire management), while others are potential sources of conflict (water and electricity for snowmaking, year-round tourism). Economic costs and biophysical constraints are the most important limits to these adaptation strategies. These types of limits and conflicts between different stakeholders on adaptation strategies are likely to occur in other regions and demonstrate that adaptation may only provide partial and short term solutions to the challenges of climate change.
引用
收藏
页码:11 / 25
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Climate change and Australian production forests: impacts and adaptation
    Keenan, R. J.
    AUSTRALIAN FORESTRY, 2017, 80 (04) : 197 - 207
  • [22] Adaptation and Maladaptation in Australian National Climate Change Policy
    Granberg, Mikael
    Glover, Leigh
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING, 2014, 16 (02) : 147 - 159
  • [23] A review of Australian institutions for riparian adaptation to climate change
    Pittock, Jamie
    Marshall, Nadine
    Capon, Tim
    Parsons, Meg
    Robertson, Alistar I.
    Casaril, Carolina
    JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE, 2014, 5 (03) : 315 - 327
  • [24] Health system adaptation to climate change: a Peruvian case study
    Aracena, Stephanie
    Barboza, Marco
    Zamora, Victor
    Salaverry, Oswaldo
    Montag, Doreen
    HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING, 2021, 36 (01) : 45 - 83
  • [25] Actions for adaptation and mitigation to climate change: Madrid case study
    Oquendo-Di Cosola, Valentina
    Adan Sanchez-Resendiz, Jorge
    Olivieri, Lorenzo
    Olivieri, Francesca
    REVISTA FACULTAD DE INGENIERIA-UNIVERSIDAD DE ANTIOQUIA, 2021, (101): : 84 - 99
  • [26] Adaptation of Public Spaces to Climate Change Case Study of Lodz
    Bochenek, Anna
    Klemm, Katarzyna
    Stefanska, Magdalena
    ARCHITECTURE CIVIL ENGINEERING ENVIRONMENT, 2024, 17 (04) : 129 - 145
  • [27] Mainstreaming climate change adaptation into development: a case study of Bangladesh
    Ayers, Jessica M.
    Huq, Saleemul
    Faisal, Arif M.
    Hussain, Syed T.
    WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE, 2014, 5 (01) : 37 - 51
  • [28] Spatial and temporal scales of future climate information for climate change adaptation in viticulture: a case study of User needs in the Australian winegrape sector
    Dunn, M. R.
    Lindesay, J. A.
    Howden, M.
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF GRAPE AND WINE RESEARCH, 2015, 21 (02) : 226 - 239
  • [29] Social limits to climate change adaptation: temporalities in behavioural responses to climate risks
    Berkhout, Frans
    CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY, 2024, 71
  • [30] Smallholder adaptation to climate change: dynamics and limits in Northern Ghana
    Wolfram Laube
    Benjamin Schraven
    Martha Awo
    Climatic Change, 2012, 111 : 753 - 774