Adaptation regulatory regimes to address climate change challenges in transboundary water basins: Can multilateral regionalism help?

被引:5
|
作者
Vinogradov, Sergei [1 ,2 ]
Wouters, Patricia [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Dundee, Ctr Energy Petr & Mineral Law & Policy, Dundee, Scotland
[2] Wuhan Univ, China Inst Boundary & Ocean Studies CIBOS, Wuhan, Peoples R China
[3] Wuhan Univ, China Inst Boundary & Ocean Studies CIBOS, Int Water Law Acad, Wuhan, Peoples R China
关键词
ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS; INTERNATIONAL-LAW; LEGAL ANALYSIS; SOUTH-ASIA; CHINA; COOPERATION; MANAGEMENT; TREATY;
D O I
10.1111/reel.12371
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Global climate change threatens regional water security in various ways. The transboundary waters flowing across Asia from their source in the Himalayan 'water towers' are finite resources, already adversely impacted by rising temperatures. China and India share many of the river basins of this region, and both countries implement ambitious national development plans that rely on these resources. Global approaches to address climate change issues on transboundary waters have emerged, but require national and regional cooperative actions, supported by coherent regulatory regimes with adaptation at the core. In the absence of transboundary water agreements between China and India, how will they meet the impacts of changing climatic conditions on their shared freshwaters? This article considers the multilateral and bilateral regulatory frameworks that govern China and India's transboundary waters in the context of global warming challenges. The findings suggest the emergence of an incomplete adaptation regulatory regime that has yet to coalesce, but which nonetheless shows some promise within a multilateral regionalism context. The hallmarks of an ideal transboundary water adaptation regulatory regime include two main components-comprehensive cooperation and basin-wide resilience management regime. Neither of these exist in the transboundary waters shared between China and India, but there is reason for hope.
引用
收藏
页码:406 / 416
页数:11
相关论文
共 44 条
  • [1] Can Adaptive Comanagement Help to Address the Challenges of Climate Change Adaptation?
    Plummer, Ryan
    [J]. ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY, 2013, 18 (04):
  • [2] Adaptation to Climate Change: Challenges for Transboundary Water Management
    Timmerman, Jos G.
    Koeppel, Sonja
    Bernardini, Francesca
    Buntsma, Joost J.
    [J]. ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ELEMENTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE, 2011, : 523 - 541
  • [3] Improving governance in transboundary cooperation in water and climate change adaptation
    Timmerman, Jos
    Matthews, John
    Koeppel, Sonja
    Valensuela, Daniel
    Vlaanderen, Niels
    [J]. WATER POLICY, 2017, 19 (06) : 1014 - 1029
  • [4] Using AI to help address skin health challenges caused by climate change
    Goldust, Mohamad
    Grant-Kels, Jane M.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, 2024, 63 (07) : e126 - e127
  • [5] Climate Change, Water and Agriculture: Challenges and Adaptation Strategies
    Hardelin, Julien
    Lankoski, Jussi
    [J]. EUROCHOICES, 2015, 14 (02) : 10 - 15
  • [6] Climate change: Impacts on insurers and how they can help with adaptation and mitigation
    Maynard, Trevor
    [J]. GENEVA PAPERS ON RISK AND INSURANCE-ISSUES AND PRACTICE, 2008, 33 (01): : 140 - 146
  • [7] Climate Change: Impacts on Insurers and How They Can Help With Adaptation and Mitigation
    Trevor Maynard
    [J]. The Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance - Issues and Practice, 2008, 33 : 140 - 146
  • [8] Want climate-change adaptation? Evolutionary theory can help
    Jones, James Holland
    Ready, Elspeth
    Pisor, Anne C.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN BIOLOGY, 2021, 33 (04)
  • [9] Do treaties matter? Climate change, water variability, and cooperation along transboundary river basins
    Dinar, Shlomi
    Katz, David
    De Stefano, Lucia
    Blankespoor, Brian
    [J]. POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, 2019, 69 : 162 - 172
  • [10] Integrated Water Management Approach for Adaptation to Climate Change in Highly Water Stressed Basins
    Elpida Kolokytha
    Dimitrios Malamataris
    [J]. Water Resources Management, 2020, 34 : 1173 - 1197