4.6. Adaptation Options and Management Implications
4.6.1. Introduction
The preceding sections have assessed the possible effects of climate change
on the water resource base and on the demand for water, as well as the potential
impacts on water users. Most published studies have looked at impacts in the
absence of planned adaptation to climate change, and the few studies that have
tried to cost impacts have had to make assumptions about adaptation. This section
assesses opportunities in the water sector for adapting to climate change and
explores any constraints which may exist.
Water management has always adapted to change (especially following extreme
events or in response to increased demand), and climate change is just one of
the pressures facing water managers. Other pressures include increasing demands
for water resources or protection against hazard, changing water management
objectives (which recently have included increasing recognition of the importance
of meeting environmental needs as well as those of offstream demands), changing
water management technologies, and altered legislative environments.
It is important to distinguish between development of adaptive options for
meeting changing demands and resources and assessment of the abilities of a
given water management agency (interpreted broadly) actually to adapt to climate
change. Over the years, a wide range of adaptive techniques has been developed,
largely in response to the need to meet increased demands. Broad distinctions
can be drawn among supply-side adaptive techniques (changing structures,
operating rules, and institutional arrangements) and demand-side
techniques (which change the demand for water or protection against risk and
include institutional changes as well). Examples of supply-side adaptations
include increasing flood defenses, building weirs and locks to manage water
levels for navigation, and modifying or extending infrastructure to collect
and distribute water to consumers. Demand-side techniques include water demand
management (such as encouraging water-efficient irrigation and water pricing
initiatives), changing water allocations (Miller et al., 1997), and nonstructural
flood management measures (such as land-use controls). Distinctions also can
be drawn between anticipatory and reactive actions. The former are taken in
advance of some change, the latter in response to a change. Reactive actions
include short-term operational adaptations, such as temporary exploitation of
new sources, and longer term measures. A major flood or drought, for example,
often triggers a change in water management. However, although many adaptive
options do exist, knowledge of these options and the expertise of officials
to execute them may be limited in some situations.
The optimum extent of adaptation can be characterized in terms of the benefits
and costs of adaptation. The extremes of adaptation are no adaptation
and adaptation sufficient to eliminate all effects (which usually
is not physically possible). The optimum level of adaptation minimizes the combined
costs of adaptation and residual negative effects, with the most cost-effective
steps taken first.
Water managers long have had access to many techniques for assessing options
and implementing adaptive strategies. However, the techniques used have changed
over time and vary between countries, and they are very much influenced by institutional
arrangements in place in a country. Factors that affect adaptive capacity in
a country include institutional capacity, wealth, management philosophy (particularly
management attitudes toward supply-side versus demand-side strategies, as well
as sustainable management), planning time scale, and organizational
arrangements (adaptation will be harder, for example, when there are many different
managers involved or where water managers do not have sound professional
guidance).
This section looks first at water management options, then at management techniques.
It contends that water managers generally are aware of technical and institutional
optionsalthough for many reasons may not have access to all of themand
that climate change challenges management techniques for assessing and selecting
options, rather than the technical and institutional options themselves.
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