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If adapting to climate change sounds easy, it shouldn’t

Image of two large, semi-circular barriers.

Enlarge / Storm surge barriers, like these in the Netherlands, can play a role in adaptation. (credit: Mischa Keijser )

Last Monday, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a new report that followed August’s initial portion of this massive, three-part effort. Much of the immediate news coverage has focused on the latest attempts to communicate the seriousness of the impacts of climate change. The report concludes, “The cumulative scientific evidence is unequivocal: Climate change is a threat to human well-being and planetary health. Any further delay in concerted anticipatory global action upon adaptation and mitigation will miss a brief and rapidly closing window of opportunity to secure a liveable and sustainable future for all. ”

There is a great deal in this report on our understanding of climate change impacts, which are worsening as warming progresses. These topics should be familiar unless you’ve just stepped out of a time machine (and are not arriving from the long term, or they’d be even more familiar). They include everything from sea level rise and weather extremes to food security and direct human health risks.

But the other focus of this particular portion of the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report is adaptation to climate change. It’s easy in order to throw this term around as if it’s an alternative to be able to halting global warming or some painless thing that will happen associated with its own accord. Both ideas would be mistaken.

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