Abstract

In a world that is becoming more and more exposed and vulnerable to the effects of global climate change, combining integrated risk assessment tools with effective strategies for both mitigation and adaptation is a key prerogative for policy-making. With the focus of both researchers and decision-makers gradually shifting from observing and assessing the bio-physical aspects of climate change to a more human and society centered understanding of the nature of the problem, the social, behavioral, economic and technological aspects have entered center stage of the public discourse. Responses to the climate change challenge have to establish an optimal interplay between mitigation, adaptation and socio-economic instruments. Yet, given the band-width and scale of the climate problematique and its projected impacts, very ambitious mitigation measures have to be undertaken without delays, a fact that is particularly true for emerging economies with their very rapid and unprecedented growth rates, both in GDP and GHG emissions terms. The challenge for the next years is to harmonize poverty eradication and attaining the Millenium Development Goals through stable economic growth with mitigating the effects of climate change. Therefore, “inclusive green growth” has become the motto of the day. But how can this goal be achieved? Obviously, quite fundamental changes have to be introduced that affect both the production and the consumption sectors and allow for real innovation in technologies and energy, in urban mobility, infrastructure and transportation grids. This paper illustrates the deep social and societal nature of climate change response strategies, especially in the area of mitigation, and shows that transitions to green and low-carbon economies will have to embed policies, incentive schemes and economic instruments in a larger societal context of social learning and behavioral change.

Highlights

  • The challenge for the years is to harmonize poverty eradication and attaining the Millenium Development Goals through stable economic growth with mitigating the effects of climate change

  • Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) lead authors have coined our understanding of vulnerability as being composed of exposure, sensitivity and adaptive capacity

  • The adaptive capacity of a socialecological system depends on the effective interplay between mitigation and adaptation dynamics mostly expressed by devising such factors as economy, technology, human and social capital, and governance tools [Martens and Chang, 2010]

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Summary

Introduction

The challenge for the years is to harmonize poverty eradication and attaining the Millenium Development Goals through stable economic growth with mitigating the effects of climate change. If these assumptions are correct, paying due attention to the social and societal factors will be of critical importance when identifying ambitious strategies toward sustainable changes in the technology and energy sectors, low carbon intensity and green growth, especially in the rapidly emerging and developing Asian countries.

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