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Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on July 27th, 2007
by Pincas Jawetz (PJ@SustainabiliTank.com)

 http://www.adamproject.eu/

THE ADAM PROJECT is funded by the European Commission and co-ordinated by the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research in the UK.

ADAM means “Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies: supporting European climate policy” and is an integrated research project running from 2006 to 2009 to lead to a better understanding of the trade-offs and conflicts that exist between adaptation and mitigation policies.

ADAM will support EU policy development in the next stage of the development of the Kyoto Protocol and will inform the emergence of new adaptation strategies for Europe.

WHY IS ADAM IMPORTANT?

According to the organizers of ADAM: The UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Kyoto Protocol provide the primary international policy context for the work to be undertaken in ADAM. ADAM will examine the extent to which existing policy trajectories in Europe will deliver Europe?s commitments to these agreements and will co-develop with stakeholders portfolios of policy options where current trajectories are insufficient.

Most importantly, ADAM will also develop a Policy Appraisal Framework which will engage policy communities within Europe and allow policy advisors to examine and explore the effectiveness of different policy options against specific yet contrasting criteria.

ADAM announced now the publication of their first newsletter: [link]

and ADAM is planning for a conference:

Living with climate change: are there limits to adaptation?

7 & 8 February 2008, Royal Geographical Society, London.

Conference Announcement

The Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research and the University of Oslo, PLAN of Norway, with the support of the Global Environmental Change and Human Security (GECHS) project, announce a two day international conference to be held on 7 and 8 of February 2008 at the Royal Geographical Society in London.

The title of the conference is “Living with climate change: are there limits to adaptation?”

The overall objective of this conference is to consider strategies for adapting to climate change, in particular to explore the potential barriers to adaptation that may limit the ability of societies to adapt to climate change and to identify opportunities for overcoming these barriers. The conference is aimed at researchers and practitioners with an interest in understanding how societies adapt to climate change.

The conference will explore the following three themes:

Theme 1: Adapting to thresholds in physical and ecological systems

Keynote speaker: Garry Peterson, McGill University

Projections indicate significant physical and ecological changes as a result of a changing climate.

What barriers and limits exist to adapting to such changes?What thresholds are there in physical and ecological systems beyond which it is not feasible for societies to adapt? In what ways is adapting to +2 degrees Celsius possible? What might adaptation mean in a system nearing a threshold? How is adaptation possible if the change occurring is irreversible? Which habitat ranges, ecosystem functions and threats of extinction of particular species have been identified to constitute thresholds?

Theme 2: The role of values and culture in adaptation

Keynote speaker: Benjamin Orlove, University of California

Values and culture underpin how societies perceive and interpret the world, and this in turn influences adaptation decisions and actions.

In what ways do values, including non-material values, underpin adaptation decisions and actions? What role does culture play in adaptation? What do irreversible losses of cultural heritage mean to societies? How do impacts of climate change on culture differ from other changes in culture? How can the potential values of future generations be incorporated into current adaptation?

Theme 3: Governance, knowledge and technologies for adaptation

Keynote speaker: Susanne Moser, National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)

Governance structures determine the way in which existing adaptive capacity can be utilised. Knowledge and technology also affect how adaptation can proceed in societies.

What are the barriers to adaptation within various governance structures? In what ways does the status of knowledge and embedded uncertainty about climate change act as a limit to adaptation? How do different ways of knowing influence adaptation? Are there limits to the opportunities that technology can provide for adaptation? How may different forms of governance, including democratic governance, act as barriers to adaptation?

We invite the submission of abstracts, by 10 August 2007, from researchers wishing to present papers under one of the three themes outlined above. See the Call for abstracts for further details.

Important dates:PLAN of Norway,
Deadline for submission of abstracts: 10 August 2007
Notification of acceptance of abstracts: 1 October 2007
Registration at reduced rate before: 15 December 2007
Submission of full papers: 31 December 2007
Close of registration 18 January 2008

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