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134 R.A. Jameset al.
Fig.5.7 Ananalysis byHansen andStone, revisiting impacts in the IPCCWGII report to assess
whether they can be linked to anthropogenic forcing.NoteBlue symbols show impacts which
have been attributed to anthropogenic forcing with at least medium confidence, and confidence
bars indicate the confidence level, with the colour of the confidence bars indicatingwhether the
observed impact is related to changes in air temperature (red), ocean surface temperature (violet)
or precipitation (blue). Impacts that are linked to regional climate trends, butwith little evidence
for anthropogenic forcingare shown ingrey. SourceHansenandStone (2016)
permafrostdegradation,bleachinganddeclineofcoral reefs, increasing forestfires,
and the increase in shrub cover in Arctic regions. For impacts-related to precipi-
tation, the evidence of anthropogenic forcing is still weak, and formany impacts,
the evaluation of the relative contribution of anthropogenic climate change is still
qualitative. It iscurrentlydifficult tomakequantitativestatementsdue to the limited
availabilityof long-term,highqualitydataon thepotential (non-climatic)driversof
change required toperformacomprehensiveanalysis.
However, despite the remaininggapsandchallenges, there is alreadysubstantial
evidence available about the attribution of climate change impacts (see Fig. 5.7),
which can contribute to an understanding of how anthropogenic climate change
is influencing losses and damages. The steps taken to integrate impacts research
(Sect. 5.3.2)with climate research (Sect. 5.3.1), are promising, and several authors
haveproposed frameworks, andprovidedexamples to illustrate, “end-to-end”attri-
Loss and Damage from Climate Change
Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
- Titel
- Loss and Damage from Climate Change
- Untertitel
- Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
- Autoren
- Reinhard Mechler
- Laurens M. Bouwer
- Thomas Schinko
- Swenja Surminski
- JoAnne Linnerooth-Bayer
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-72026-5
- Abmessungen
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 580
- Schlagwörter
- Environment, Climate change, Environmental law, Environmental policy, Risk management
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima