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Table SPM-2: Regional adaptive capacity,
vulnerability, and key concerns.a,b
Adaptive Capacity, Vulnerability, and Key Concerns
by Region
Africa
Asia
Australia and New Zealand
Europe
Latin America
North America
Polar Regions
Small Island States
Adaptive Capacity, Vulnerability,
and Key Concerns in Africa
- "Adaptive
capacity of human systems in Africa is low due to lack of economic
resources and technology, and vulnerability high as a result of heavy
reliance on rain-fed agriculture, frequent droughts and floods, and
poverty. [5.1.7]
- Grain yields are projected to decrease for many scenarios, diminishing
food security, particularly in small food-importing countries (medium
to high confidence6).
[5.1.2]
- Major rivers of Africa are highly sensitive to climate variation;
average runoff and water availability would decrease in Mediterranean
and southern countries of Africa (medium confidence6).
[5.1.1]
- Extension of ranges of infectious disease vectors would adversely
affect human health in Africa (medium confidence6).
[5.1.4]
- Desertification would be exacerbated by reductions in average annual
rainfall, runoff, and soil moisture, especially in southern, North,
and West Africa (medium confidence6).
[5.1.6]
- Increases in droughts, floods, and other extreme events would add
to stresses on water resources, food security, human health, and infrastructures,
and would constrain development in Africa (high confidence6).
[5.1]
- Significant extinctions of plant and animal species are projected
and would impact rural livelihoods, tourism, and genetic resources (medium
confidence6).
[5.1.3]
- Coastal settlements in, for example, the Gulf of Guinea, Senegal,
Gambia, Egypt, and along the East-Southern African coast would be adversely
impacted by sea-level rise through inundation and coastal erosion (high
confidence6).
[5.1.5]
"
Source
& © :
IPCC
TAR SPM of WG II pages 14-17
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Adaptive Capacity, Vulnerability, and Key Concerns
in Asia
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Adaptive Capacity, Vulnerability, and Key Concerns
in Australia and New Zealand
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Adaptive Capacity, Vulnerability, and Key Concerns
in Europe
- "Adaptive
capacity is generally high in Europe for human systems; southern
Europe and the European Arctic are more vulnerable than other parts
of Europe. [5.4
and 5.4.6]
- Summer runoff, water availability, and soil moisture are likely to
decrease in southern Europe, and would widen the difference between
the north and drought-prone south; increases are likely in winter in
the north and south (high confidence6).
[5.4.1]
- Half of alpine glaciers and large permafrost areas could disappear
by end of the 21st century (medium confidence6).
[5.4.1]
- River flood hazard will increase across much of Europe (medium to
high confidence6);
in coastal areas, the risk of flooding, erosion, and wetland loss will
increase substantially with implications for human settlement, industry,
tourism, agriculture, and coastal natural habitats. [5.4.1
and 5.4.4]
- There will be some broadly positive effects on agriculture in northern
Europe (medium confidence6);
productivity will decrease in southern and eastern Europe (medium confidence6).
[5.4.3]
- Upward and northward shift of biotic zones will take place. Loss of
important habitats (wetlands, tundra, isolated habitats) would threaten
some species (high confidence6).
[5.4.2]
- Higher temperatures and heat waves may change traditional summer tourist
destinations, and less reliable snow conditions may impact adversely
on winter tourism (medium confidence6).
[5.4.4]"
Source
& © :
IPCC
TAR SPM of WG II pages 14-17
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Adaptive Capacity, Vulnerability, and Key Concerns
in Latin America
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Adaptive Capacity, Vulnerability, and Key Concerns
in North America
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Adaptive Capacity, Vulnerability, and Key Concerns
in the Polar Regions
- "Natural systems in polar regions are highly vulnerable to climate
change and current ecosystems
have low adaptive
capacity; technologically developed communities are likely to adapt
readily to climate change, but some indigenous communities, in which
traditional lifestyles are followed, have little capacity and few options
for adaptation. [5.7]
- Climate change in polar regions is expected to be among the largest
and most rapid of any region on the Earth, and will cause major physical,
ecological, sociological, and economic impacts, especially in the Arctic,
Antarctic Peninsula, and Southern Ocean (high confidence6).
[5.7]
- Changes in climate that have already taken place are manifested in
the decrease in extent and thickness of Arctic sea ice, permafrost thawing,
coastal erosion, changes in ice sheets and ice shelves, and altered
distribution and abundance of species in polar regions (high confidence6).
[5.7]
- Some polar ecosystems may adapt through eventual replacement by migration
of species and changing species composition, and possibly by eventual
increases in overall productivity; ice edge systems that provide habitat
for some species would be threatened (medium confidence6).
[5.7]
- Polar regions contain important drivers of climate change. Once triggered,
they may continue for centuries, long after greenhouse gas concentrations
are stabilized, and cause irreversible impacts on ice sheets, global
ocean circulation, and sea-level rise (medium confidence6).
[5.7]"
Source
& © :
IPCC
TAR SPM of WG II pages 14-17
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Adaptive Capacity, Vulnerability, and Key Concerns
in the Small Island States
- "Adaptive
capacity of human systems is generally low in small island states,
and vulnerability high; small island states are likely to be among the
countries most seriously impacted by climate change. [5.8]
- The projected sea-level rise of 5 mm yr-1
for the next 100 years would cause enhanced coastal erosion, loss of
land and property, dislocation of people, increased risk from storm
surges, reduced resilience of coastal ecosystems,
saltwater intrusion into freshwater resources, and high resource costs
to respond to and adapt to these changes (high confidence6).
[5.8.2
and 5.8.5]
- Islands with very limited water supplies are highly vulnerable to
the impacts of climate change on the water balance (high confidence6).
[5.8.4]
- Coral reefs would be negatively affected by bleaching and by reduced
calcification rates due to higher CO2
levels (medium confidence6);
mangrove, sea grass bed, and other coastal ecosystems and the associated
biodiversity would be adversely affected by rising temperatures and
accelerated sea-level rise (medium confidence6).
[4.4
and 5.8.3]
- Declines in coastal ecosystems would negatively impact reef fish and
threaten reef fisheries, those who earn their livelihoods from reef
fisheries, and those who rely on the fisheries as a significant food
source (medium confidence6).
[4.4
and 5.8.4]
- Limited arable land and soil salinization makes agriculture of small
island states, both for domestic food production and cash crop exports,
highly vulnerable to climate change (high confidence6).
[5.8.4]
- Tourism, an important source of income and foreign exchange for many
islands, would face severe disruption from climate change and sea-level
rise (high confidence6).
[5.8.5]
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Source
& © :
IPCC
TAR SPM of WG II pages 14-17
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