What's at stake? A human well-being based proposal for assessing risk of loss and damage from climate change

被引:3
|
作者
Menk, Linda [1 ,2 ]
Schinko, Thomas [3 ]
Karabaczek, Veronica [3 ]
Hagen, Isabel [4 ]
Kienberger, Stefan [1 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Paris Lodron Univ Salzburg, Dept Geoinformat Z GIS, Salzburg, Austria
[2] Paris Lodron Univ Salzburg, Dept Geoinformat Z GIS, Christian Doppler Lab Geospatial & EO Based Humani, Salzburg, Austria
[3] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal IIASA, Populat & Just Soc Program, Laxenburg, Austria
[4] Univ Zurich, Dept Geog, Zurich, Switzerland
[5] Zentralanstalt Meteorol & Geodynam ZAMG, Vienna, Austria
来源
FRONTIERS IN CLIMATE | 2022年 / 4卷
关键词
loss and damage; NELD; human well-being; risk assessment; indicators; climate change; ADAPTATION;
D O I
10.3389/fclim.2022.1032886
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Current scientific discourse on the assessment of loss and damage from climate change focuses primarily on what is straightforwardly quantifiable, such as monetary value, numbers of casualties, or destroyed homes. However, the range of possible harms induced by climate change is much broader, particularly as regards residual risks that occur beyond limits to adaptation. In international climate policy, this has been institutionalized within the Loss and Damage discourse, which emphasizes the importance of non-economic loss and damage (NELD). Nevertheless, NELDs are often neglected in loss and damage assessments, being intangible and difficult to quantify. As a consequence, to date, no systematic concept or indicator framework exists that integrates market-based and non-market-based loss and damage. In this perspective, we suggest assessing risk of loss and damage using a climate change risk and vulnerability assessment (CRVA) framework: the Impact Chain method. This highly adaptable method has proven successful in unraveling complex risks in socio-ecological systems through a combination of engaging (political) stakeholders and performing quantitative data analysis. We suggest expanding the framework's logic to include not only the sources but also the consequences of risk by conceptualizing loss and damage as harm to nine domains of human well-being. Our approach is consistent with the risk conceptualization by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Conceptualization and systematic assessment of the full spectrum of imminent loss and damage allows a more comprehensive anticipation of potential impacts on human well-being, identifying vulnerable groups and providing essential evidence for transformative and comprehensive climate risk management.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Introduction: Climate Change and Human Well-Being
    Weissbecker, Inka
    CLIMATE CHANGE AND HUMAN WELL-BEING: GLOBAL CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES, 2011, : 1 - 15
  • [2] Human well-being and climate change mitigation
    Lamb, William F.
    Steinberger, Julia K.
    WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE, 2017, 8 (06)
  • [3] Climate Change, Human Well-Being and Insecurity
    Adger, W. Neil
    NEW POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2010, 15 (02) : 275 - 292
  • [4] Climate Change and Human Well-Being in the 2020s: Lessons From 2020
    Sheehan, Mary C.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH SERVICES, 2021, 51 (03): : 281 - 286
  • [5] Climate change, colonialism, and women's well-being in Canada: what is to be done?
    Williams, Lewis
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE SANTE PUBLIQUE, 2018, 109 (02): : 268 - 271
  • [6] Climate change, colonialism, and women’s well-being in Canada: what is to be done?
    Lewis Williams
    Canadian Journal of Public Health, 2018, 109 : 268 - 271
  • [7] Climate change, human health and well-being in Yakutia
    Burtseva, Tatiana
    Shadrin, Victor
    Avrusin, Sergei
    Solodkova, Irina
    Chasnyk, Vyacheslav
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CIRCUMPOLAR HEALTH, 2016, 75 : 29 - 30
  • [8] Climate Change and Human Well-Being Global Challenges and Opportunities Preface
    CLIMATE CHANGE AND HUMAN WELL-BEING: GLOBAL CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES, 2011, : V - X
  • [9] Human well-being, the global emissions debt, and climate change commitment
    Noah S. Diffenbaugh
    Sustainability Science, 2013, 8 : 135 - 141
  • [10] Human well-being, the global emissions debt, and climate change commitment
    Diffenbaugh, Noah S.
    SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE, 2013, 8 (01) : 135 - 141