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Exploring the moderating role of climate services on flood resilience: Insights from Chinese SMEs

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Exploring the moderating role of climate services on flood resilience: Insights from Chinese SMEs

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.1111/jfr3.12750
Connecting research and practice
  • Aug 10, 2021
  • Journal of Flood Risk Management
  • Paul Samuels

Connecting research and practice

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 10
  • 10.1016/j.envsci.2020.01.018
Applying the Knowledge Product Evaluation (KnoPE) Framework to two urban resilience cases in the United States
  • Feb 24, 2020
  • Environmental Science & Policy
  • Kathleen M Ernst + 1 more

Applying the Knowledge Product Evaluation (KnoPE) Framework to two urban resilience cases in the United States

  • Preprint Article
  • Cite Count Icon 3
  • 10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1802
When the unprecedented becomes precedented: Lessons from Cyclones Idai and Kenneth
  • Mar 3, 2021
  • Karen Macclune + 1 more

<p>Learning from global disasters — understanding what happened, the successes that prevented impacts from being worse, and the opportunities to reduce risk to future events — is critical if we are to protect people from increasingly extreme weather. Population growth is overtaxing ecosystems and climate change is creating new and intensifying existing climate hazards. Proactive and collaborative efforts are needed between all levels, from local to international, and across sectors connecting social science, economics, policy, infrastructure and the environment, to address these challenges. Perhaps most urgently, however, is the need to harness humanitarian response, development, disaster risk reduction, and climate change adaptation to work in concert – we can no longer afford to deliver these needs in isolation.</p><p>In March and April 2019 Cyclones Idai and Kenneth – two of the most destructive and powerful cyclones to ever hit southeast Africa – resulted in a widespread humanitarian disaster in Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, the impacts of which continue today in terms of livelihoods lost, food insecurity, and loss of permanent shelter for thousands. Damages were intensified by the novel nature of the impacts – the storms brought with them climate threats that were new to the areas and people impacted, leading to greater failure of existing preparedness and response mechanisms than might have been expected.</p><p>This talk will present learnings from a study conducted by members of the Zurich Flood Resilience Alliance on the impacts of Cyclones Idai and Kenneth, highlighting opportunities for building multi-hazard resilience to future events. In particular, we will highlight the opportunities we found for strengthening resilience, even when challenged by entirely new climate hazards, through strengthening early warning systems and climate services, building capacity and resourcing for early action, supporting the construction of resistant homes and development of more diverse farming practices, and, most crucially, by better connecting humanitarian response and Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) efforts.</p><p>These lessons are part of a series of Post-event Review Capability (PERC) learnings conducted by Zurich since 2013. The PERC methodology (available at: https://www.floodresilience.net/perc) supports broad, multi-sectoral resilience learning from global disaster events and identifies key actions for reducing future harm.</p><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div>

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