What do we know about UK household adaptation to climate change? A systematic review

被引:0
|
作者
James J. Porter
Suraje Dessai
Emma L. Tompkins
机构
[1] University of Leeds,Sustainability Research Institute and ESRC Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy, School of Earth and Environment
[2] University of Southampton,Geography & Environment
来源
Climatic Change | 2014年 / 127卷
关键词
Flood Risk; Coping Response; Climate Risk; Cold Spell; Keyword Combination;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The UK Government’s first National Adaptation Programme seeks to create a ‘climate-ready society’ capable of making well-informed and far-sighted decisions to address risks and opportunities posed by a changing climate, where individual households are expected to adapt when it is in their interest to do so. How, and to what extent, households are able to do this remains unclear. Like other developed countries, research on UK adaptation has focused predominately on public and private organisations. To fill that gap, a systematic literature review was conducted to understand what actions UK households have taken in response to, or in anticipation of, a changing climate; what drives or impedes these actions; and whether households will act autonomously. We found that UK households struggle to build long-term adaptive capacity and are reliant upon traditional reactive coping responses. Of concern is that these coping responses are less effective for some climate risks (e.g. flooding); cost more over the long-term; and fail to create household capacity to adapt to other stresses. While low-cost, low-skill coping responses were already being implemented, the adoption of more permanent physical measures, behavioural changes, and acceptance of new responsibilities are unlikely to happen autonomously without further financial or government support. If public policy on household adaptation to climate change is to be better informed than more high-quality empirical research is urgently needed.
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页码:371 / 379
页数:8
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