Title: UK APPROACH TO CLIMATE CHANGE: IMPACTS AND ADAPTATION
1UK APPROACH TO CLIMATE CHANGEIMPACTS AND
ADAPTATION
Dr Penny BramwellDepartment of the
Environment,Transport and the Regions
2Rationale - why is adaptation important?
- Greenhouse gases already in the atmosphere mean
we will have to adapt to some climate change - Responsibility for adaptation falls widely - not
just Govt. - Costs of not adapting long timescales need to
prioritise - Need to engage and raise awareness
- Develop common assumptions toolkit guidance
- Establish mechanism for reporting and monitoring
3DETR Research Programmeon Impacts and Adaptation
Funding of 1 Million p.a. including
- UK indicators of climate change
- Global impacts work
- Bilateral studies with developing countries
- UKCIP
- Initial work on adaptation priorities
- Internal review of vulnerability of key
operational and policy responsibilities
4Observations / Indicators
Spring date of oak leafing in relation to the av.
temperature in central England in Jan-Mar
- Extreme weather events
- e.g. floods (SE England)
5Helping organisations adapt
- UK Climate Impacts Programme
- facilitating organisations to assess their
vulnerability to climate change and plan
appropriate adaptation responses - taking a stakeholder-led approach and raising
institutional awareness - developing a toolkit of climate change scenarios,
socio-economic scenarios costing methodology
and guidelines for decision-making and
undertaking impacts assessments
6UKCIP Programme Structure
Department of the Environment, Transport and the
Regions
Steering Committee
UKCIP Programme Office
Science Advisory Panel
User Forum
INTEGRATION
REGIONAL / SUB-UK STUDIES
SECTORAL STUDIES
DETR/MAFF
Health
South East England
Wales
Scotland
Northern Ireland
MONARCH
South West England
North West England
North East England
Biodiversity Review
ACCEL-ERATES
West Midlands
East Midlands
London
Yorkshire Humberside
Gardens
Water Demand
MarClim
7Current status ofsub-UK studies
- Scotland scoping study completed December 1999
- Further studies started
North East England - start-up meeting held May
2001
- Northern Ireland scoping study underway
- Scoping study to be undertaken
Yorkshire and Humberside - start-up meeting held
March 2001
Scoping study initiated / underway
- East Midlands scoping study completed July 2000
- Study to be completed
Conference held
- North West England scoping study completed
December 1998 - Funding being sought for next steps
- Full study being considered
Scoping study completed
- REGIS study underway in North West England and
East Anglia - to be completed early 2001 - Eastern region study at inception
- Gaps in Eastern England regional coverage to be
filled.
Gaps
Integrated assessment underway. Coverage to be
extended
- West Midlands scoping study underway
- Scoping study to be undertaken.
- Wales scoping study completed February 2000
- Funding being sought to implement next steps.
Study output
Further work needed
London start-up meeting summer 2001
South West England conferences held December 1999
(Cornwall) and January 2001 (Cheltenham). Funders
for scoping study coming forward. Scoping study
to be undertaken
- South East England scoping study completed
November 1999. - Move to extend area - meeting March 2001
- Gaps in regional coverage to be filled.
8Consortium of key decision-makers formed
UK Climate Impacts Programme
UKCIP facilitated stakeholder workshop - identify
key study issues
Stakeholder consultation
UKCIP tool-kit / guidance
Scoping study
Steering Group
Launch of results and workshop to identify next
steps and priorities for detailed work
9Funders of UKCIP studies
- The Scottish Executive, National Assembly for
Wales, Department of the Environment Northern
Ireland, Northern Ireland Environment and
Heritage Service, Acordis, Arkleton Trust,
Association of British Insurers, AXA Insurance,
Blaby District Council, Boston District Council,
Carlton TV, CCMS - Plymouth Marine Laboratory,
Cheshire County Council, Cornwall County Council,
Country Life Magazine, Countryside Agency,
Countryside Council for Wales, Department of
Health, Derbyshire County Council DETR Wildlife
and Countryside Directorate, Dúchas The Heritage
Service, National Parks and Wildlife (Republic of
Ireland), Duchy of Cornwall, East Midlands
Airport, East Midlands Link, English Nature,
Environment Agency, Farming and Rural
Conservation Agency, Government Offices for the
East Midlands, North West England, South East
England, South West England and West Midlands,
Hampshire County Council, Kent County Council,
Lancashire County Council, Leicestershire County
Council, MAFF, Manchester Airport, Marsh UK Ltd,
Midlands Environment Business Club, The National
Trust, The National Trust for Scotland, NatWest
Bank, North West Regional Association, North West
Regional Chamber, North West Water,
Northamptonshire County Council, Nottinghamshire
County Council, Peak District National Park,
PROSPER, Rolls Royce plc, The Royal Horticultural
Society, Royal Society for the Protection of
Birds, Scottish Natural Heritage, Severn Trent
Water, South West Water, Surrey County Council,
Surrey Wildlife Trust, Sustainability North West,
SWEB, SWEL, Tarmac plc, Thames Water, Toyota UK,
TXU Europe Power Ltd, UKWIR,University of Exeter,
University of Plymouth, Wessex Water, West Sussex
County Council, Westcountry Television,
Westcountry Tourist Board, Wilkinson and WWF-UK.
10UK Adaptation Priorities
- Commissioned independent research to identify UK
priorities for action on adaptation workshop
held with key decision makers - Adaptation priorities
- Water resources management
- Coastal and riverine flood protection
- Enhanced resilience of buildings and
infrastructure - Protection of designated species and habitats
- Land use and sectoral planning
- Better climate information
- Need for awareness raising
11UK Adaptation Priorities
- UK Climate Change Programme (Nov 2000) explains
the impacts of climate change on the UK how we
might adapt to them - Initiated debate on strategic adaptation
priorities at a national level ongoing - but
initial feedback suggests - broad consensus on the adaptation priorities at a
sectoral level - debate welcomed but emphasised that more was
urgently required to fully understand the
implications - wide-support for the stakeholder-led approach
that the Government was taking on adaptation
through UKCIP - need for better predictions and data
12Internal Review of Vulnerability
- Internal assessment of the vulnerability of key
policy and operational responsibilities to
climate change - Hope to encourage others to undertake similar
assessments - raise profile of adaptation
- alert decision-makers scale and potential costs
implied by adaptation
13Specific Government Action on Adaptation
- 25 year water resources and drought plans from
water companies - promoting efficient use of water (inc. new Water
Regs) - incorporated SLR allowance into coastal defences
- 100m programme to improve flood warning services
- commenced development of CHaMPS which include
consideration of sea level rise
14Specific Government Action on Adaptation
- strengthening planning guidance in flood plain
areas to advise precautionary risk-based approach
- started to consider the huge implications of c.c.
for the planning process (best practice guide) - supported agri-environment schemes which will
help maintain and enhance biodiversity in the
countryside - taken action to strengthen protection of SSSIs
- begun to consider implications for Building Regs
15Planned New Work
- No Regrets measures
- More detailed regional work within UKCIP
(matching funding from regions) - Higher profile meetings with other Government
departments and key interest groups - New UKCIP scenarios - giving greater spatial
detail and more information on extremes targeted
guidance - Input into the Third National Communication
16Other Approaches
- Bilateral meetings and presentations (by climate
experts) - with those with some vulnerability and
decision-making responsibilities - Raising awareness of the need to consider the
importance of factoring the UKCIP98/02 scenarios
in planning and other policy guidance
17Conclusion
- Still at early stages
- Fast moving issue
- Floods and other extreme events putting climate
change in the public eye - Need to develop awareness without scare-mongering
- Need a co-ordinated approach to risk-based
decision-making - Need a common framework tool-kit approach