Abstract

Recent evidence shows that climate change is leading to irreversible and existential impacts on vulnerable communities and countries across the globe. Among other effects, this has given rise to public debate and engagement around notions of climate crisis and emergency. The Loss and Damage (L&D) policy debate has emphasized these aspects over the last three decades. Yet, despite institutionalization through an article on L&D by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in the Paris Agreement, the debate has remained vague, particularly with reference to its remit and relationship to adaptation policy and practice. Research has recently made important strides forward in terms of developing a science perspective on L&D. This article reviews insights derived from recent publications by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and others, and presents the implications for science and policy. Emerging evidence on hard and soft adaptation limits in certain systems, sectors and regions holds the potential to further build momentum for climate policy to live up to the Paris ambition of stringent emission reductions and to increase efforts to support the most vulnerable. L&D policy may want to consider actions to extend soft adaptation limits and spur transformational, that is, non-standard risk management and adaptation, so that limits are not breached. Financial, technical, and legal support would be appropriate for instances where hard limits are transgressed. Research is well positioned to further develop robust evidence on critical and relevant risks at scale in the most vulnerable countries and communities, as well as options to reduce barriers and limits to adaptation.

Highlights

  • NOTE AND COMMENTLoss and Damage and limits to adaptation: recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) insights and implications for climate science and policy

  • The recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) special report on 1.5 °C global warming (SR1.5) (IPCC SR1.5-IPCC 2018) suggests that achieving the 1.5 °C goal as stipulated by the Paris Agreement (UNFCCC 2015) will significantly reduce projected risks and further rises in observed climate change-related impacts compared to current warming of 1.1 °C above pre-industrial global temperature

  • The SR1.5 demonstrates that each degree of warming increases the magnitude of risks from anthropogenic climate change across sectors and regions, and that disadvantaged and vulnerable populations are at disproportionally higher risk from both present and future warming

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Summary

NOTE AND COMMENT

Loss and Damage and limits to adaptation: recent IPCC insights and implications for climate science and policy.

Introduction
Emerging evidence on residual risks and soft and hard adaptation limits
Tropics Global
Findings
Implications for science and policy
Full Text
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