Abstract

This study developed a set of composite indices to analyse the vulnerability to climate change of the agricultural sector in Sri Lanka using the data between 2001 and 2018. The aim was to identify the level of vulnerability of the agricultural sector to climate risks at the country level, as a tool to better understand the variability and magnitude of impacts and adaptive capacities required to overcome the risks due to climate change. To calculate the indices, environmental and socio-economic indicators representing the conceptual components of vulnerability, namely, exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity were selected based on previous studies. Secondary data were collected for the selected indicators and normalised considering the indicator's functional relationship to vulnerability. Normalised data were then weighted and aggregated using two weighting methods and two aggregation methods to calculate four vulnerability indices, in order to minimize the impact of the known limitations of the methodological approaches to create composite indices. The values for composite indices were standardised to the range 0-1 and divided into five levels of vulnerability based on equal intervals, which revealed a moderate level of agricultural vulnerability to climate change over the eighteen-year study period. The multidimensional assessment, further, revealed the upward trend of vulnerability due to the increased sensitivity of the system to climate change. Even though the adaptive capacity of the country has been strengthened in the recent past, it has a critical role to play in mitigating vulnerability. The study also suggests methods for predicting future vulnerability by replicating the calculations.

Highlights

  • The whole world is confronted by the momentous challenges of climate change, the impacts of which are unevenly distributed across the planet

  • Only 8101 out of 36,198 climate change-related publications cover Asia in that period (IPCC, 2014b) and few climate change assessments cover Sri Lanka. Based on this minimal coverage, this paper aims to contribute to the climate change literature on Sri Lanka, by providing a country-level analysis on agricultural vulnerability and by developing an agricultural vulnerability index

  • The first part of the section that follows describes the level of agricultural vulnerability to climate change over the past eighteen years based on the four indices and the factors most contributory to agricultural vulnerability to climate change in Sri Lanka

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Summary

Introduction

The whole world is confronted by the momentous challenges of climate change, the impacts of which are unevenly distributed across the planet. The third assessment report of the IPCC defines vulnerability as a function of exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity (McCarthy et al, 2001). Following McCarthy et al (2001), most of the current vulnerability studies show a shift towards more comprehensive vulnerability assessments which address vulnerability as a function of three components; exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity (Füssel and Klein, 2006). These types of vulnerability assessment identifies both vulnerable systems and the causes of vulnerability (Luers et al, 2003). Among the latter group, developing a composite index is the most common approach

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