Title: Climate Adaptation: Risk, Uncertainty and Decision-Making
1Climate AdaptationRisk, Uncertainty and
Decision-Making
- Dr. Robert Willows
- Environmental Forecasting Manager
2Climate Change
Sequestration
Climate Variability
Emissions
Impacts
Energy Supply
-ve
Adaptation
Energy Demand
Scenarios
Scenarios
Economic and Social Issues and Development
3Study objectives
- Help identify climate-sensitive decisions
- Help achieve better decisions
- Provides guidance on the use of tools and
techniques
- Should provide generic guidance on climate risks
- Consistent with DETR guidelines for Environmental
Risk Assessment (Greenleaves 2)
4UKCIP Technical Report
Climate Adaptation Risk, Uncertainty and
Decision Making
- Part 1 A review of
- Risk and uncertainty
- Decision-making under uncertainty
- Risk-based climate impact assessment
- Part 2 Framework and Guidance
- Stage by Stage guidance to support the process of
undertaking risk-based appraisal of climate
influenced decisions
5Decision Making Framework
Climate change issue
Climate change policy
Climate change research, monitoring
Identify problem
Establish criteria for decision-making
Monitor
Climate change scenarios
Socio-economic scenarios
Risk assessment
Vulnerability assessment
Data information collection
Implement decision
Impact assessment
Options appraisal
Identify options
No
Make decision
No
Adaptation strategies
Climate change application
Objectives met ?
Climate change policy
Problem defined correctly ?
Yes
Yes
6Risk Hazard Consequence
7Hazard Risk and Uncertainty
8Risk and Uncertainty
9Risk and Uncertainty
10Risk Prioritisation Temporally-dynamic risks
11Climate sensitive decisions
Large
Climate adaptation decisions
Significanceofclimate changeor climate
variable(s)
Climate influenced decisions
Moderate
Climate independent decisions
None
None
Moderate
Large
Significance of non-climate factors or
non-climate variable(s)
12Decision errors?
13Adaptation strategies under Uncertainty
Optimistic Precautionary Risk Averse Least
Regret No-regret
- The option the may produce the best
adaptation outcome
MaxiMax
- The option associated with the most
favourable of the least favourable
possible outcomes
MaxiMin
- That option associated with the lowest
lost opportunities or regret
MiniMaxRegret
- The best adaptation option under all
possible outcomes
14Generic options for climate risk management
- Wider use of risk assessment, forecasts and
options appraisal - preferably proactive technical response
- Delay and buy-time
- proactive technical response to reduce
uncertainty
- Research ? e.g. modelling, technology, adaptive
capacity
- Monitoring
- system performance monitoring - proactive
technical response - climate impact monitoring - reactive technical
response
- Data and information supply, and education,
awareness raising - proactive and reactive
- Contingency planning
- low probability, high consequence events
- strategic planning response
15Generic options for climate risk management
- Diversification or bet-hedging
- proactive technical or policy response
- Insurance - proactive, fiscal response
- Defend and Manage - reactive technical measures
- Change of use
- proactive or reactive, planning response /-
technical measures
- Retreat and Abandon
- strategic planning response
- Safety factors, climate headroom, buffering
measures - technical and regulatory response
16Adaptation measures and options
- Adaptation not just Defend, Managed Retreat, or
Abandon - Informed by formal assessment of climate change
risk, adaptation options may comprise a portfolio
of different adaptation measure. These may
include - Delay decisions, buy-time, data and
information gathering, RD, monitoring,
contingency planning, bet-hedging,
insurance/other risk spreading strategies,
safety factors/headroom.
17Decision Making Framework
Climate change issue
Climate change policy
Climate change research, monitoring
Identify problem
Establish criteria for decision-making
Monitor
Climate change scenarios
Socio-economic scenarios
Risk assessment
Vulnerability assessment
Data information collection
Implement decision
Impact assessment
Options appraisal
Identify options
No
Make decision
No
Adaptation strategies
Climate change application
Objectives met ?
Climate change policy
Problem defined correctly ?
Yes
Yes
18See associated notes pages...
19Risk screening - climate variable checklist
- Helps to both identify (Table 1) and define the
different characteristics (Table 2) of
potentially significant or relevant climate
variables - Includes preliminary assessment of sensitivity
and confidence - Useful for screening of variables
- Not constrained by availability of climate
forecast variables (e.g. from GCMs or RCMs) - Encourages rigorous analysis of climate influence
- Table 1 is not complete - proxy and compound
variables will depend on nature of particular
assessment
20Climate variable checklist
Types of variables
- Examples
- Primary CO2, sea-level, temperature,
precipitation, wind, cloud cover - Synoptic Weather types, pressure, storm track,
lightning - Compound Humidity, evapotranspiration, mist,
fog, growth season - Proxy Soil Moisture, river flow, wave climate
21Climate variable checklist
Characteristics of variables
- Examples
- Magnitude and Direction Increase, decrease, rate
of change - Statistic Average, time-integrated,
variability and frequency - Averaging period Instantaneous ... hourly .
Annual ..decadal - Joint probability events Consecutive,
coincident or joint occurrence, - and variables correlation
22(Climate) Influence diagrams
23Describing confidence ..
24Downscaling 1
- Space
- GCM ? site
- Time
- Monthly ? daily
25SDSM - Statistical Down-Scaling Model (Rob
Wilby, Kings College London)
- Daily data - observed data at site
- Model - site data and large-scale data from GCM
- Scenario - generate ensembles of daily time
series
26Downscaling - Flood return period prediction
27Scenario analysis and risk assessment
Q. Can we create scenarios which reflect changes
in variability as well as the mean?
A. YES - but it is difficult and scenarios
remain contingent on assumptions and
non-quantified uncertainties
Q. Can we assign probabilities to different
scenarios?
A. Probably. Expert judgement can be used to
assign probability to the range encompassed by
any two scenarios but uncertainty components
within suite of scenarios have to be well-posed
28Estimating probabilities of different futures
We typically use a small number of scenarios
If we make assumptions about the likelihood of
different emissions futures, use many more
climate models, and incorporate the effects of
natural climatic variability, we can generate
many more scenarios
29Probabilistic scenarios
1
(Subjective) Probability
0
L-gtM
L-gtMH
L-gtH
Scenario
30Incorporating climate change into water resources
management
The future hydrological resource base will not
be the same as the present resource base
Mean climate will be different, due to climate
change and natural climatic variability
Variability in climate will be different.
Altered frequency of successive dry years?
.but we dont know how different.
31Influence diagrams - water resource management
management objectives
demand
land use change
Supply-side
water resources model
hydrological model
baseline data
reliability
Demand-side
Climate change
adaptive response
32Use of socio-economic scenarios
Water resources for the future
A STRATEGY FOR ENGLAND AND WALES
March 2001
33Coping with uncertainty
1. Flexible management approaches - review
situation and adjust plans if appropriate -
continued monitoring
2. Improved seasonal forecasts - based on
understanding of causes of seasonal
climatic variability
3. Scenario analysis and risk assessment
34Conclusions and recommendations (for
decision-makers)
- Emphasis on understanding impact of present-day
observed climate variability
- Future climate change is only one source of
decision uncertainty
- Assessment of climate risk should be hierarchical
/tiered
- Climate adaptation should be iterative
- Assumptions and sources of uncertainty should be
treated explicitly in risk and impact assessments
in order to reach robust decisions