Preface
This volume, Climate Change 2001: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability, is
the Working Group II (WGII) contribution to the Third Assessment Report (TAR)
of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The companion volumes
of the TAR are Climate Change 2001: the Scientific Basis (WGI) and Climate Change
2001: Mitigation (WGIII). A fourth volume of the TAR is being prepared to provide
a synthesis of the findings of the three Working Groups and will focus on questions
addressing particular policy issues raised in the context of the Framework Convention
on Climate Change.
Since the inception of the IPCC, its Working Group II has focused on the impacts
of projected climate change. The current WGII report differs somewhat in scope
from earlier WGII assessments. This report examines climate change impacts,
adaptation, and vulnerability across a range of systems and sectors, as was
done in the Second Assessment Report (SAR, published in 1996), and includes
a regional assessment, updated from the Special Report on Regional Impacts of
Climate Change (1998). Environmental, social, and economic dimensions of these
issues are assessed in this report, whereas the previous WGII report focused
primarily on environmental dimensions. Efforts are made in the new assessment
to address a number of issues that cut across the various sectors and systems
covered by the WGII report, as well as across the three Working Groups of IPCC,
such as sustainable development, equity, scientific uncertainties, costing methodologies,
and decisionmaking frameworks. Mitigation of climate change, treated in previous
WGII reports, is now the subject of WGIII's contribution to the TAR.
Research on climate impacts has grown considerably since the SAR, and much
has been learned in the past 5 years regarding the potential risk of damage
associated with projected climate change. The research has added to what we
know about the vulnerabilities to climate change of a wide range of ecological
systems (forests, grasslands, wetlands, rivers, lakes, and marine environments)
and human systems (agriculture, water resources, coastal resources, human health,
financial institutions, and human settlements).
Observational evidence of changes has accumulated in many physical and biological
systems (e.g., glacial melting, shifts in geographic ranges of plant and animal
species, and changes in plant and animal biology) that are highly consistent
with warming observed in recent decades. These observations are adding to our
knowledge of the sensitivity of affected systems to changes in climate and can
help us to understand the vulnerability of systems to the greater and more rapid
climate changes projected for the 21st century. A number of unique systems are
increasingly recognized as especially vulnerable to climate change (e.g., glaciers,
coral reefs and atolls, mangroves, boreal and tropical forests, polar and alpine
ecosystems, prairie wetlands, and remnant native grasslands). In addition, climate
change is expected to threaten some species with greater probability of extinction.
Potential changes in the frequency, intensity, and persistence of climate extremes
(e.g. heat waves, heavy precipitation, and drought) and in climate variability
[e.g., El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO)] are emerging as key determinants
of future impacts and vulnerability. The many interactions of climate change
with other stresses on the environment and human populations, as well as linkages
between climate change and sustainable development, are increasingly emphasized
in recent research and preliminary insights from these important efforts are
reflected in the report.
The value of adaptation measures to diminish the risk of damage from future
climate change, and from present climate variability, was recognized in previous
assessments and is confirmed and expanded upon in the new assessment. Understanding
of the determinants of adaptive capacity has advanced and confirms the conclusion
that developing countries, particularly the least developed countries, have
lesser capacity to adapt than do developed countries. This condition contributes
to relatively high vulnerability to damaging effects of climate change in these
countries.
The WGII report was compiled by 183 Lead Authors between July 1998 and February
2001. In addition, 243 Contributing Authors submitted draft text and information
to the Lead Author teams. Drafts of the report were circulated twice for review,
first to experts and a second time to both experts and governments. Comments
received from 440 reviewers were carefully analyzed and assimilated to revise
the document with guidance provided by 33 Review Editors. The revised report
was presented for consideration at a session of the Working Group II panel held
in Geneva from 13 to 16 February 2001, in which delegates from 100 countries
participated. There, the Summary for Policymakers was
approved in detail and the full report accepted.
This report contains a Summary for Policymakers (SPM)
and a Technical Summary (TS) in addition to the 19 chapters
comprising the full report. Each paragraph of the SPM has been referenced to
the supporting sections of the TS. In turn, each paragraph of the TS has been
referenced to the appropriate section of the relevant chapter. The first three
chapters set the stage for the report by discussing the context of climate change,
methods for research and assessment, and development of scenarios. Chapters
4 through 9 assess the state of knowledge regarding climate change impacts,
adaptation, and vulnerability for different natural and human systems or sectors.
Chapters 10 through 17 assess vulnerabilities
and key concerns of eight regions of the world: Africa, Asia, Australia/New
Zealand, Europe, Latin America, North America, polar regions, and small island
states. Chapter 18 presents a synthesis of adaptation
challenges, options, and capacity. Chapter 19 concludes
the report with a synthesis of climate change risks for unique and threatened
systems, extreme climate events, uneven distribution of impacts, global aggregate
impacts, and large-scale high-impact events. An electronic version of the report
that can be searched for key words will be available on the web (http://www.ipcc.ch)
and CD-ROM.
We wish to express our sincere appreciation to all the Coordinating Lead Authors,
Lead Authors, Contributing Authors, Review Editors, and expert and government
reviewers, without whose expertise, diligence, and patience and considerable
investments of uncompensated time a report of this quality could never have
been completed. We would also like to thank members of the Working Group II
Bureau for their assistance throughout the preparation of the report.
We would particularly like to thank Neil Leary, who headed the WGII Technical
Support Unit, and his staff, Dave Dokken, Kasey Shewey White, Sandy MacCracken,
and Florence Ormond. Their tireless and very capable efforts to coordinate the
WGII assessment ensured a final product of high scientific quality. In addition
we thank Richard Moss for his invaluable contributions to the early planning
phase of this work.
We would also like to thank Narasimhan Sundararaman, the Secretary of IPCC;
Renate Christ, Deputy Secretary; and the staff of the IPCC Secretariat, Rudie
Bourgeois, Chantal Ettori and Annie Courtin who provided logistical support
for government liaison and travel of experts from the developing and transitional
economy countries.
Robert T. Watson
IPCC Chairman
James J. McCarthy and Osvaldo F. Canziani
IPCC WGII Co-Chairs
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