Panorama
 
 
 
 
 

EUROPE ADAPTS TO CLIMATE CHANGE


Environmental Panorama
International
June of 2009


23 June 2009 - A new report from PEER, ‘Europe Adapts to Climate Change: Comparing National Adaptation Strategies’, critically analyzes the current status of national adaptation strategies in EU member states, and identifies a variety of opportunities to strengthen their further development and implementation, including timely and targeted scientific research.

Earlier this year PEER, a grouping of seven of the biggest European environmental research institutes including National Environmental Research Institute (NERI), Aarhus University published the report, ‘Climate Policy Integration, Coherence and Governance’.

The new reports deals with several aspects of implementing climate policy in Europe. The first report analyses the adaptation strategies of the EU member states, identifying a number of common strengths and weaknesses of the current strategies in the countries studied. The second report assesses the degree of climate policy integration in six different European countries, at national and local levels, as well as within key policy sectors such as energy and transport. It analyses measures and means to enhance climate policy integration and improve policy coherence.

Dr. Rob Swart, from Alterra in the Netherlands, the lead author of ‘Europe Adapts to Climate Change: Comparing National Adaptation Strategies’ says:
“We note that communication and awareness raising is going to be important to get public support for adaptation measures, and to help stakeholders to adapt. Since adaptation is very different from mitigation, communication should be designed specifically for that purpose, including exchange of experiences on adaptation practices. It could well be that breaking down institutional barriers will actually be more important than the technical feasibility of adaptation options.”

Both reports were launched 23. June in Brussels in the presence of Peter Gammeltoft, Head of Unit 'Protection of Water & Marine Environment' at the European Commission. The preliminary conclusions of the research were used in the European Commission's White Paper on climate change, published in April 2009.

Speakers at the Brussels event included Prof. Pat Nuttall, PEER's chair and director of the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, the lead authors of the two reports, Rob Swart, from Alterra in the Netherlands and Per Mickwitz, from Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE ), Prof. Ellen Margrethe Basse, head of the Climate Secretariat, Aarhus University, Denmark and Katherine Richardson, Vice Dean, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

Contact: Researcher, PhD Svend Binnerup (NERI - Denmark), tlf. +45 4630 1373, sbi@dmu.dk
Dr. Rob Swart (Alterra - The Netherlands), tlf. +31 (0) 317 481 193, rob.swart@wur.nl

Europe Adapts to Climate Change: Comparing National Adaptation Strategies. PEER Report No 1. Helsinki: Partnership for European Environmental Research. Swart, R.J., Biesbroek, G. R., Binnerup, S., Carter, T.R., Cowan, C., Henrichs, T., Loquen, S., Mela, H., Morecroft, M.D., Reese, M., & Rey, D. 2009. 280 pp.

The reports

PEER partners
Alterra, Wageningen University and Research Centre, The Netherlands
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, UK
Cemagref - Centre for Agricultural and Environmental Engineering Research, France
JRC - Joint Research Centre, Institute for Environment and Sustainability, European Commission
NERI, Aarhus University, Denmark
Finnish Environment Institute SYKE, Finland
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ, Germany

+ More

Valuation of changes in mortality risk: A welfare economic methodological study

22 June 2009 - The report discusses how a change in mortality risk is best described as changes in age-conditional survival probabilities rather than changes in expected lifetimes or changes in the number of deaths due to a given cause. Furthermore, how changes in individuals’ lifetime utility due to a change in mortality risk should be calculated is discussed. Finally, attention is given to how individuals’ willingness to pay for a change in mortality risk should be interpreted, as well as how these should be aggregated to give an overall willingness to pay.

When aiming to value a change in mortality risk in connection with welfare economic analysis the following issues generally arise:

• How should a change in mortality risk be described?

• If the valuation should reflect changes in individuals’ lifetime utility, how should this then be estimated?

• Should the valuation estimates be based directly upon current individuals’ willingness to pay for a change in mortality risk or should the willingness to pay estimates be interpreted in a lifetime utility perspective, and if so, how? Or should valuation exercise rather be based on a more objective estimation of the change in individuals’ expected consumption?

• How is individuals’ average willingness to pay estimated when individuals’ willingness to pay are an expression of different expected lifetimes and based on different personal time preferences?

On the background of a review of these issues, the author concludes that there is no clear valuation method for changes in mortality risk and thereby identifies a range of further research needs.

Contact: Senior Researcher Flemming Møller, tel. 4630 1221, fm@dmu.dk

Møller, F. 2009: Værdisætning af ændring i dødsrisiko. Beskrivelse af ændring i dødsrisiko, livstidsnyttefunktion, fortolkningen af personers betalingsvillighed og aggregeringen heraf. Danmarks Miljøundersøgelser, Aarhus Universitet. 100 s. - Arbejdsrapport fra DMU nr. 253. http://www.dmu.dk/Pub/AR253.pdf (in Danish)

 
 

Source: Danish Ministry of the Environment
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