4.6.4. Factors Affecting Adaptive Capacity
From the beginning of human attempts to shape the water environment to human
benefit, water management has dealt with the variability of the native supply
of water and the variability of demands for the use of water (Stakhiv, 1998).
Great strides have been made in dealing with even extreme water regimesparticulary
droughtsthrough interventions on the supply and demand sides (e.g., Stern
and Easterling, 1999). Drought management planning is playing an increasing
role in many water management agencies, lowering their susceptibility to drought
impacts. Thus, in some ways the prospects of a change in the resource baseperhaps
characterized by lower mean supplies and higher variabilityrepresent only
a sharpening of traditional challenges to water management. There are three
important differences, however. First, future climate change is highly uncertain
at spatial and temporal scales that are relevant to water management: All we
know is that the future may not necessarily be like the recent past. Second,
as noted above, the potential pervasiveness of these changes across large regions
presents challenges that preclude some traditional steps of adaptation and requires
innovative approaches that go beyond experience to date. Third, climate-induced
effects may be nonlinear, carrying potential for surprises beyond those incorporated
in traditional water management.
The ability to adapt to climate variability and climate change is affected
by a range of institutional, technological, and cultural features at the international,
national, regional, and local levels, in addition to specific dimensions of
the change being experienced. Among the most important features are the following:
- The capacity of water-related institutions, consisting of water agencies
authority to act, skilled personnel, the capability and authority to consider
a wide range of alternatives (including but not limited to supply-side and
demand-side interventions) in adapting to changed conditions, the capability
and authority to use multi-objective planning and evaluation procedures in
the assessment of policy alternatives, procedures for conflict resolution,
and incentives to undertake serious ex post analysis of policies and projects
to learn what has really worked (OECD, 1985). For example, OConnor et
al. (1999) found in the Susquehanna River Basin, USA, that experienced full-time
water managers are more likely to consider future scenarios in their planning
than part-time managers.
- The legal framework for water administration that always constrains, for
better and for worse, the options that are open to water management. Naturally,
laws change as needs change, but the changes are slow and greatly lag changing
needs. In many countries, the legal framework for water management is moving
toward increasing environmental protection (e.g., the European Unions
habitats directive). Such a direction poses further constraints on options
to address climate change, but if the move reflects an increasing concern
with sustainable water management (however defined), opportunities for considering
adaptation to climate change are increased.
- The wealth of nations in terms of natural resources and ecosystems, human-made
capital (especially in the form of water control systems), and human capital
(including trained personnel) that determines what nations can afford
to commit to adaptation. This should include the ability and willingness
to transfer wealth among population groups and regions within a country and
among nations. This is the major constraint on adaptation to climate change
in poorer countries.
- The state of technology and the framework for the dissemination (or monopolization)
of technology, especially in the fields of bioengineering of drought- and
salt-resistant varieties of plants and techniques for the desalination of
seawater.
- Mobility of human populations to change residential and work locations in
response to severe climate events or climate change. This is a major factor
in coastal and island areas. Mobility is severely hampered by population pressures,
especially in tropical island settings.
- The speed of climate change is crucial in determining the capabilities of
societies to adapt and change water management practices. Speed of change
and the cumulative extent of change affect the impacts on society in nonlinear
fashions (Howe et al., 1990; National Research Council, 1992).
- The complexity of management arrangements also may be a factor in response.
In principle, the fewer agencies involved in water management, the easier
it will be to implement an adaptation strategy (although the structure within
the agencies will be very important). If there are many stakeholders to involveperhaps
with conflicting requirements, management goals, and perceptions and each
with some management control over part of the water systemit may be
more difficult to adapt to changing circumstances. There is evidence that
in some mature infrastructure systems, there may be substantial oportunities
for increasing the resilience of water resource systems through institutional
changes as well (Hansler and Major, 1999).
- The ability of water managers to assess current resources and project future
resources. This requires continuing collection of data and the ability to
use scenarios with hydrological models to estimate possible future conditions.
Whether adaptation takes place or not may be heavily influenced by the occurrence
of extreme events. Such events often are catalysts for change in management
and may serve two roles. First, they may expose failings in the current water
management system. Second, they may raise the perception among decision makers
of the possibility of climate changeeven if they cannot be attributed
directly to climate change.
Recent experience with extreme events (e.g., the Chinese floods of 1998, the
Rhine floods of 1996 and 1997, the eastern European floods of 1997 and 1998,
and the Mozambique floods of 2000) shows that many societies are extremely exposed
to loss and damage during extreme events, especially floods. At first, it may
appear that this implies that existing adaptive techniques, as widely used by
water managers, are not working as expected to minimize risk and loss (some
loss will always be inevitable because no flood protection scheme can provide
complete protection): Adaptation is not working. However, there is extensive
evidence that social vulnerability to extreme events is serious and increasing
(Munasinghe and Clark, 1995; Hewitt, 1997; Tobin and Montz, 1997; Haughton,
1998; La Red, 1999; Mileti, 1999) and that this exposure to hazards has been
significantly increased by public and private development with insufficient
regard for known hazards (Hewitt, 1997; Marsden, 1997; Pulwarty and Riebsame,
1997). In the United States there was more damage from hurricanes between 1990
and 1995 than there was between 1970 and 1990, after adjustments for inflation
(Pielke, 1997), even though both periods had low hurricane frequency (Landsea
et al., 1996). Changnon et al. (1997) analyzed the dramatic increase in dollar
losses of insured property in the United States, which reached US$840 billion
in the 19901994 period, and conclude that changes in weather and climate
were not primary causes. Detailed meteorological analyses came to the same conclusion
for flooding losses (Changnon, 1998; Karl and Knight, 1998).
Thus, societies failure to adapt to extreme events in the broadest sense
(i.e., by allowing risk-prone development) appears to have been
largely responsible for increased damages, and that failure has not improved
with time (Changnon and Changnon, 1998; Pielke and Landsea, 1998; Kunkel et
al. 1999). It also appears that political decisions may have produced maladaptive
results (Wiener, 1996; Hewitt, 1997; Mileti, 1999). In the United States, insurance
has been a leading instrument for hazard awareness and post-event recovery.
After 30 years of promotion, education, and subsidized premiums, only 20% of
residents in floodplains were insured by the late 1990s (LeCompte and Gahagan,
1998; Pasterick, 1998). These failures to take advantage of insurance suggest
that even wealthy societies adapt poorly to foreseeable hazards.
The residual damages of hazard events also are inequitably distributed across
populations. This was shown clearly by studies of Hurricane Andrew in Florida
(Peacock et al., 1997), leading the director of the Pan American Health Organization
to state that those who lost the most had the least to lose (PAHO,
1999). Hurricane Mitch devastated Central America in 1998, exhibiting the extreme
vulnerability of that region (La Red, 1999; UNICEF, 1999). Among the responsible
factors were lack of land-use planning, deforestation, and inappropriate consumption
and production systems (Hewitt, 1997; Mileti, 1999; PAHO, 1999).
Thus, available evidence concerning the effectiveness of adaptation to meteorological
and geologic hazards indicates poor levels of individual and social adaptation
to hazards. This failing extends well beyond the water management sector as
conventionally defined and can be argued to reflect weaknesses in development
control, planning guidance, public education, and fiscal incentives. The foregoing
examples indicate that having the ability to adapt to change is not the same
as actually adapting to change: The tools often are not used, for a variety
of reasons.
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