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Third Annual Environmental Policy Conference:
Adaptive Research and Governance in Climate Change
October 30-31, 2003
Room 202, Pfahl Executive Conference Center
 
Click Here to Access Conference Presentations
 
Conference Schedule
 
The Official ARGCC Brochure with Conference Information (PDF File)
 

How might society adapt to climate change or to the large-scale mitigation and sequestration projects often proposed?  What institutional barriers will limit our ability to recognize new opportunities or threats that may arise as climate changes?  Can concepts from adaptive management aid policy-makers as they decide which alternatives are “best” for adaptation or mitigation?  If local land use activities become a global concern, how will local communities adapt and adjust to changing incentives and institutional frameworks?

These questions and others will be explored at a refereed conference on October 30-31, 2003 in Columbus, Ohio organized by the Adaptive Research and Governance in Climate Change (ARGCC) group and the Environmental Policy Initiative at the Ohio State University.  The goal of the conference is to critically assess the possibilities for applying the concepts of adaptive management and adaptive capacity to the problem of research and policy in global climate change and to do so at multiple scales. 

Conference themes:

Several keynote speakers will headline each of the conference themes.  The keynote speakers include Hadi Dowlatabadi of the Sustainable Development Research Institute at the University of British Columbia, Roger Kasperson of the Stockholm Environmental Institute, Ronald Mitchell of the Department of Political Science, University of Oregon, Robert Mendelsohn of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, and B.L. Turner of the Department of Geography, Clark University.

The conference will be held in Room 202 of the Pfahl Executive Conference Center adjacent to the Blackwell Hotel on the OSU campus.  The Blackwell and Pfahl Center is located on the Ohio State campus on Tuttle Park Place between Neil Avenue and Woody Hayes Drive. Public parking is available at the Tuttle Park Garage, on Tuttle Park Place just south of Woody Hayes Drive. Please email April Luginbuhl (luginbuhl.6@osu.edu) for more detailed directions, or go to the following link: http://www.theblackwell.com/Directions/

Conference Sponsors:

The Ohio State University Mershon Center, Environmental Policy Initiative (EPI), Climate Change and Environmental Research Initiative, and the Cluster for Interdisciplinary Research on International Themes (CIRIT)

Questions about the conference may be directed to Paul Robbins robbins.30@osu.edu

 

Conference Schedule (Names link to the authors' abstracts)

Thursday, October 30th, 2003

8am: Welcome and Introductory Remarks

8:30-10:15: Session I: Adaptive Approaches for Climate Policy and Management

8:30-9:00 Keynote Speaker: Hadi Dowlatabadi, Sustainable Development Research Institute

        Title: Adaptive Approaches for Climate Policy and Management

9:00-9:15 Philippa Shepherd, James Tansey, University of British Columbia, and Hadi Dowlatabadi

        Title: Adaptation in response to multiple stressors in the Okanagan region of British Columbia

9:15-9:30 Michael Obersteiner, Zuzanna Chladna, Fabio Dercole, Ulf Dickmann, Elena Molchanova, Sergio Rinaldi International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), HIS Institute for Advanced Studies

 

        Title: Adaptive Dynamics - Technology, Institutions and Global Change

9:30-9:45 Frans Berkhout, Julia Hertin Science and Technology Policy Research- University of Sussex, David Gann Innovation Studies Centre- Imperial College London

        Title: Learning to adapt: Organizational adaptation to climate change impacts

9:45-10:00 Steven Manson, Department of Geography, University of Minnesota

        Title: Adaptive integrated assessment of land use in Mexico

10:00-10:15 Question and Answer

10:15-10:30: Break

10:30-12:15: Session II: The Role of Markets as Society Adapts to a Changing Climate

10:30-11:00 Keynote Speaker: Robert Mendelsohn, Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Science

        Title: The Role of Markets as Society Adapts to a Changing Climate

11:00-11:15 Erin Baker- University of Massachusetts, Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering; Leon Clarke, Lawrence Livermore- National Laboratory; John Weyant- Stanford University

        Title: R&D as Greenhouse Insurance

11:15-11:30 Molly E. Brown, Jorge E. Pinzon- Science Systems and Applications, NASA-Goddard; Stephen Prince- University of Maryland, College Park

        Title:  Impact on Food Security of extreme climatic events in three Sahelian Countries

11:30-11:45 Heather Kohls, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee

        Title: Controlling Externalities in Firms with Market Power

11:45-12:00 Question and Answer

12:15-2:00: Lunch- Keynote Address on Climate Change and Risk

Roger Kasperson, Stockholm Environmental Institute

2:00-3:45: Session III: Adaptation and Institutions in Climate Change

2:00- 2:30 Keynote Speaker: Ronald Mitchell, University of Oregon, Department of Political Science

        Title: Adaptation and Institutions in Climate Change

2:30-2:45 Alex Thompson, Department of Political Science- Ohio State University

        Title: TBA

2:45-3:00 Nives Dolsak, University of Washington- Bothell

        Title: TBA

3:00-3:15 Barbara Koremenos, UCLA

        Title: “International Environmental Cooperation: Learning through Flexibility”

3:15-3:30 Itay Fischhendler, Department of Geography; The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

        Title: Legal and Institutional Adaptation to Climate Uncertainty: A Study of International Rivers

3:30-3:45 Question and Answer

3:45-4:00: Break

4:00-5:45: Session IV: Adapting Policy, Governance, and Industry

4:00-4:15 Eric Taylor, C-CIARN National Coordinator; Natural Resources Canada

        Title: The Canadian Climate Impacts and Adaptation Research Network

4:15-5:45 Panel discussion with government and industry representatives

Jackie Bird- The Ohio Coal Development Office

Dale Heydlauff- American Electric Power

Klaus Lambach- Ohio Public Utilities Commission

Kurt Waltzer- The Ohio Environmental Council.

6:30: Reception and Dinner

 

Friday, October 31st, 2003

8:30-10:15 am: Session V: Building and Sustaining Adaptive Capacity under Climate Change

8:30-9:00 Keynote Speaker: B. L. Turner, Clark University, Department of Geography

        Title: Building and Sustaining Adaptive Capacity under Climate Change

9:00-9:15 Jamie Benidcikson, Philippe Crabbé, Barham Danefshar, Ron Droste, Daniel Lagarec, David Lean, Roberto Narbaitz, Roger Needham, and Michel Robin- University of Ottawa, Canada

        Title: Institutional Adaptation of Water-related Infrastructures under Climate Change in Eastern Ontario.

9:15-9:30 Kenneth R. Young, Jennifer Lipton Department of Geography, University of Texas at Austin

        Title: Tropical Andean Climate Change: Implications for Agriculture, Biodiversity, and their Respective Institutions

9:30-10:00 David SG Thomas and Chasca Twyman, Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research

        Title: Equity in climate change adaptation amongst natural-resource dependant societies

10:00-10:15 Question and Answer

10:15-10:30: Break

10:30-12:15: Session VI: Discussion featuring the Keynote Speakers

Hadi Dowlatabadi

Roger Kasperson

Robert Mendelsohn

Ronald Mitchell

B.L. Turner

12:15: Lunch and Adjournment

 

Abstract List with Presentations
(Click on the Titles to Download Presenations)
 
Erin Baker, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Co-authors: Leon Clarke, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; John Weyant, Stanford University.
 
Erin Baker; 220 Elab; Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering; University of Massachusetts; Amherst, MA 01002; edbaker@ecs.umass.edu
 
Title: R&D as Greenhouse Insurance
 
This paper explores optimal R&D in response to uncertain climate change damages caused by the build up of greenhouse emissions. R&D may provide insurance in the following sense: environmentally friendly technologies may allow dramatic abatement at minimal cost should it be learned that damages from climate change will be severe. The role of learning is crucial. In an “act, then learn” scenario, R&D into radical technologies has very little value. If we consider the possibility of a mid-course correction in abatement policies, however, there is some probability that currently non-economic technologies will be extremely valuable. Thus, investments into R&D represent an adaptive approach to climate policy, increasing the flexibility for acting in the future.
The R&D planning problem is complicated, however, by the fact that there are many possible R&D programs involving very different changes in technology and, therefore, different costs to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  For example, a research program to improve the efficiency of coal-fired electricity generation will create a very different abatement cost structure than an R&D program into photovoltaic cells.  The first program will lower the cost for moderate reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, whereas the second program will reduce the costs of severely reducing emissions if climate change appears to be especially deleterious. This paper explores optimal R&D in the context of these two issues: (1) uncertainty and learning about the damages from climate change and (2) the choice of R&D program.
We address these issues in three steps. First, we consider the manner in which different R&D programs impact the costs of abatement, and specifically the shape of the abatement cost function. We then show, theoretically, how these different R&D programs imply different investment responses to uncertainty, some leading to an increase in R&D spending under uncertainty, others leading to a decrease. Finally, we test the implications of the theoretical analysis, and obtain broader policy insights, by adding R&D investment to a stochastic version of the DICE model.
We compare three common assumptions for R&D and link them to real R&D programs—into sequestration, cost reduction, and emission reductions. We show that the optimal amount of R&D into sequestration or emissions-reductions will generally decrease in uncertainty. On the other hand, the optimal amount of R&D into cost-reduction will increase for moderate increases in uncertainty, and thus may be considered as a hedge against some kinds of climate uncertainty.
While the literature on endogenous technical change has considered the impact of abatement policies on technical change, we consider optimal R&D. As Carraro et al[1] has pointed out, technical change is a policy variable in its own right—there is more to climate change policy than prices and quantities.  Hence, optimal R&D expenditures and the optimal allocation of R&D expenditures among competing technologies is an important climate change policy question.  The key focus of this paper is on the relationship between these policy questions and uncertainty and learning about the damages from climate change.
 
 
Jamie Benidcikson, Philippe Crabbé, Barham Danefshar. Ron Droste, Daniel Lagarec, David Lean, Roberto Narbaitz, Roger Needham, and Michel Robin
University of Ottawa, Canada; crabbe@uottawa.ca
 
Title: Institutional Adaptation of Water-related Infrastructures under Climate Change in Eastern Ontario.
 
This climate change adaptation community-based research project aims at identifying for small rural municipalities institutional strategies related to water resources infrastructures. The term infrastructure is understood in the broad sense of “capital” with its four components: natural, manufactured, human and social.
The epistemic partners in this research were the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, which regroups the major municipalities in Canada, leads a climate change mitigation program for municipalities and is interested in the replication of the present study, and local groups focused on water resources. One of the latter, the Eastern Ontario Water Resources Committee, has just completed an inventory of the water resources (mainly groundwater) in the United-Counties of Prescott and Russell and of Stormont, Dundas, and Glengarry, both located near the Quebec border. Our study complements this engineering inventory and other local initiatives by bringing to the latter both a climate change and an institutional dimension on top of other stresses such as demographic ones (in the vicinity of Ottawa) and land-use changes (larger scale agriculture leading to significant non-point pollution of local rivers and groundwater).
Institutional barriers and bridges to adaptation were systematically identified. From the Great-Lakes climate change studies combined with our regional temperature/precipitation scenarios, it appears that, except for extreme events and water treatment plants, climate change does not appear to constitute a major problem for Eastern Ontario. However, many climate change impacts on water-related infrastructures are poorly known and early adaptation strategies are bound to be cheaper to adopt than reactive ones. Barriers and bridges, both internal and external to the municipalities, were identified through interviews with municipal staff and councillors.
Both barriers and bridges pertain to information (consistency of the climate change information), jurisdictional and enforcement municipal responsibilities, planning, financial resources, liability, and health and education.
            Concrete steps for the development of a climate change municipal adaptation strategy are suggested.
            This study was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Community-University Research Alliance program.
 
 
Frans Berkhout*, Julia Hertin* and David Gann+
* SPRU-Science and Technology Policy Research, University of Sussex
+ Innovation Studies Centre, Imperial College London

Title: Learning to adapt: Organisational adaptation to climate change impacts
 
This paper sets out a framework for analysing adaptation by organisations to the direct and indirect impacts of climate change. Organisations such as business firms are the primary social units within which processes of adaptation will take place, even if their vulnerability, resilience and adaptive capacity will be largely determined by the institutional and cultural contexts in which they operate. Our analysis takes the perspective of the organisation, and views climate stimuli as one among many stimuli for change that the organisation will face. This contrasts with much climate-related literature which takes as its starting point climate stimuli, making an implicit assumption that some form of adaptation is likely to be induced by them (cf. Smit and Pilifosova, 2001). For us, adaptation and adaptive capacity are features of all organisations. The critical research and policy issue is whether and how organisations respond to these stimuli, given what we know about the ways in which organisations learn and innovate.
 
Drawing on evolutionary theories of economic change and organisational learning literatures, we argue that processes of adaptation involve changes to organisational ‘routines’ (Cyert and March, 1963; Nelson and Winter, 1982). Routines represent much of an organisation’s on-going activity. They come to be adjusted or disrupted in processes of learning, initiated partly in response to the recognition of environmental stimuli. On the basis of empirical research in the UK house-building and water services sectors, we argue that many characteristic signals and mechanisms that play a role in market-induced organisational learning and adaptation are absent or attenuated with regard to climate change stimuli. In particular, because of long time-scales and the intrinsic variability of climate change stimuli, opportunities for feedback and learning are infrequent and hard to recognise for the organisation. This has implications for how adaptation processes are likely to unfold, and draws attention to the importance of organisational adaptive capacity. We characterise adaptive capacity as being composed of two things: the capacity to cope with climate variability; and the capacity to make adjustments to organisational routines that either reduce organisational vulnerability or increase its resilience.
 
The paper begins by discussing how adaptation and its related concepts have been treated in the academic and policy literature related to climate change. We then discuss how ideas about learning and innovation in organisations can be usefully applied in understanding processes of adaptation to changing climate impacts and variability. We draw out some conclusions about processes of adaptation, the relationship between adaptation and adaptive capacity, and the adaptation pathways that are likely to be followed by different organisations. We introduce two new concepts: adaptation space (the aggregate set of adaptation options that are available to a group of organisations, like an industrial sector); and adaptation strategy (the explicit or implicit strategy followed by an organisation in the process of adapting).  These two concepts are used to develop a ‘model’ of adaptation by organisations embedded within economic, governance and cultural contexts. Our aim is to propose a simplified and integrated set of concepts that serve as the basis for the observation and measurement of adaptation and adaptive capacity.
 
Author:  Molly E. Brown, Science Systems and Applications, NASA-Goddard, Jorge E. Pinzon, Science Systems and Applications, NASA-Goddard, Stephen Prince, University of Maryland, College Park
 
Title:  Impact on Food Security of extreme climatic events in three Sahelian Countries
 
            Since the catastrophic famines of the 1970s and 1980s, intensive efforts have been made to find operational metrics for food security and its geographical variation in the West African Sahel.  Environment and price have been used as proxies of food insecurity.  Here we employ vegetation indicies derived from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) carried on the NOAA series of meteorological satellites and millet prices in markets.  Our previous work has shown that there is a relationship between the price of the primary subsistence crop, coarse grain millet, and seasonal fluctuations in satellite-derived vegetation indices in Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso.  Price and NDVI function at different time scales, making direct determination of the influence of NDVI on price difficult.  This research uses a new time series decomposition technique, Empirical Mode Decomposition (EMD), to split the price and NDVI time series into components of different temporal scales.  Although Sahelian NDVI has 80% of its variance in an annual (12 month oscillation) component, only 7% of the variance of the price was accounted for by this component.  Using these EMD components instead of the raw time series in a multilinear model, the errors in the estimation of price per kilogram were reduced from an average RMSE of 13.2 CFA/kg to 7.9 CFA/kg.  By building on the new information generated from the decomposition and modelling effort, historical and future price movements were estimated.  Images of vegetation condition were integrated with known historical behavior of prices in Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso in order to derive maps of annual anomalies from mean millet prices.  To estimate the impact on prices by extreme climatic events, the model was forced using the driest and wettest years on record for each location and the impact on price examined.  Analysis will be presented on the ability of price-NDVI models to forecast extreme events and the use of such information by organizations such as the Famine Early Warning System.
 
 
Nives Dolsak, University of Washington- Bothell
 
Click Here for Presentation
 
Abstract:
This paper analyzes factors affecting countries' international commitment to international cooperation in mitigating global climate change and relates it to the actual domestic implementation of the negotiated agreements.  The commitment level is operationalized as an ordinal variable expressing commitment with ever increasing requirements of the international community. Implementation is operationalized as an ordinal variable ranging from implementation of the internationally negotiated modes of behavior (enactment of domestic environmental policies) to actual emission reductions.  A theoretical model of governments' decision making is presented and tested for 91 countries at different levels of economic development with different domestic institutions.  A given national government selects its level of cooperation depending on its: (a) incentives and (b) ability to affect global emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG).  An ordered logistic regression model is employed to analyze the factors affecting the levels of national commitment and actual implementation.
 
 
Hadi Dowlatabadi
 
Click Here for Presentation
 
 
Itay Fischhendler
Department of Geography; The Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Email: fishi30@hotmail.com
 
Title: Legal and Institutional Adaptation to Climate Uncertainty: A Study of International Rivers
 
Under review in Water Policy
 
 
This study seeks to understand why nations find it difficult to include climate-uncertainty mechanisms in treaties regulating international rivers. It also aims to examine the implications of not adopting these mechanisms, particularly during a crisis. The study focuses on the negotiation process of three water treaties, and seeks to identify the underlying reasons behind the inclusion – or exclusion – of such mechanisms. Second, it review how the treaties performed and evolved during drought. The first case study is the current drought along the lower Rio Grande and the 1944 water treaty between Mexico and the U.S; the second is the 1961-1964 drought along the Great Lakes and the 1909 water treaty between Canada and the U.S. and, finally, it examines the 1997-2000 water shortage in the Jordan Basin and the 1994 treaty between Israel and Jordan. It was found that issues of sovereignty, water stress, power asymmetry, optimistic water scenarios, and the nature of the treaties as “package deals” impede riparians from adopting some of these mechanisms. Among them is a joint institution with wide scope and geographical jurisdiction, escape clause, allocating water according to percentage of flow, balance mechanism and a binding arbitration procedure. By excluding these mechanisms the anticipated political cost of an agreement decreases. However, this exclusion process limits the ability of these treaties and their institutions to manage a crisis situation, which may in turn engender controversy between the riparians as to how to divide the water in such a situation. Yet, it was found that during crisis treaties tend to evolve as the different parties supplement them with new legal and institutional measures that provide only partial immediate remedy to the crisis at hand.  This stress the need to incorporate the mechanisms that are simultaneously politically feasible and hydrologically effective.
 
 
Roger Kasperson
 
Keynote Speaker
 
 
H. H. Kohls, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee; hhkohls@uwm.edu
 
Title: Controlling Externalities in Firms with Market Power (presentation file one)/(presentation file two)
 
This paper investigates the case of a polluting firm with market power in both its product and factor markets.   As multinational firms get larger, regulators are left to choose between jobs and the environment.  New ideas for dealing with these firms must be investigated.  Furthermore, as recent publications in labor economics suggest, factor markets are in fact far from competitive, making the options available to the regulator less appealing.
 
By extending a model originally presented by Paul Burrows in 1981, the model reveals that a combination of tax and offsetting subsidy implemented by the regulator would alleviate two of the three externalities present in a scenario of pollution, under production and under employment.  Thus, assuming a preferable production process exists, the regulator could initially tax the polluting portion of the firm’s process and offer to the firm a subsidy to increase the use of other factors.  As long as the tax and subsidy are offsetting, the cost structures for the firm would remain, allowing the firm to switch processes.
 
Once the equilibrium outcome is established, the question of information available to the regulator is investigated.   The significance of the model, linked to the prevalence of firms with imperfect factor markets is presented in the context of some current theory and examples.
 
 
Barbara Koremenos, UCLA
 
Title: “International Environmental Cooperation: Learning through Flexibility”
 
International agreements and institutions are consequential and their specific design features are, in great part, what make them stable and hence consequential.  These features vary in systematic ways and are deserving of focused research.  Like scholars in international law, I take seriously the actual provisions and details of international agreements and organizations.  Importantly, however, I go beyond the descriptive work that characterizes much of international law to show theoretically that the careful choice of these provisions makes international cooperation both more likely and more robust.
 
My sole-authored work shows that uncertainty in the international environment – uncertainty that is of varying forms and degrees across issue contexts – leads states to choose particular flexibility provisions.  For example, in “Loosening the Ties that Bind: A Learning Model of Agreement Flexibility” (International Organization, Spring 2001), I explain why many non-nuclear weapon states made a limited duration a necessary condition for their participation in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.  The uncertainty in this context was related to what the true division of security, economic, and political gains under the agreement would turn out to be.  By incorporating flexibility into the agreement, the parties gave themselves a chance to resolve this uncertainty over time as they gained experience with the agreement.  Unlike the conventional wisdom, I argue that credible commitments require a tradeoff between hand-tying and flexibility.
 
In this paper, I propose to address international environmental cooperation.  This particular issue area is characterized by various kinds of uncertainty – including scientific.  Can cooperation proceed despite this?  I argue that it can if the terms of cooperation incorporate learning and flexibility.  Provisions that call for systematic information collection, reviews, planned renegotiation, and the possibility of amendment allow countries to learn what works and what doesn’t, and thereby adapt the terms of an cooperation to take such information into account.  These provisions also allow agreements to be adapted as various kinds of uncertainties are lessened or even resolved.  Hence they represent a very important tool that states use to build and then manage effective cooperation.  My project will help us to understand when states choose to make their environmental agreements flexible and what types of flexibility they choose in particular circumstances.  Such an understanding aids in the design of new international agreements and in the modification of existing ones.
 
I will also present original data collected with the support of a National Science Foundation CAREER award.  I have developed a coding instrument to record the characteristics of both a random sample of environmental agreements as well as the 20 most important environmental agreements.  Among the provisions coded are flexibility provisions (e.g., Does the agreement have a limited duration and/or a renegotiation provision?  Can a subset of states amend the agreement?  If so, is it binding on all members?  Can states temporarily opt out of their commitments?  Must they seek permission?)
 
 
Steven Manson
Department of Geography, University of Minnesota, manson@umn.edu, http://www.umn.edu/~manson
 
Title: Adaptive integrated assessment of land use in Mexico
 
This paper describes the development and use of innovative computer simulation methods to integrate multidisciplinary perspectives of land-use and land-cover change in Mexico.  This work is an example of integrated assessment methods that support adaptive management in the face of global change.
 
While much attention is paid to global warming and climate change, it is increasingly apparent that humanity confronts a more broadly defined global environmental change that is occurring at a rate and magnitude unprecedented in human experience (NRC 2001).  The wild card in the game of global warming, and the trump in almost all other global environmental change, is human activity that impinges on land-use systems and surficial features, known collectively as land-use and land-cover change(LUCC).  In addition to contributing roughly a quarter of anthropogenic carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, LUCC effects biodiversity, changes ecosystem services, and governs the vulnerability of hundreds of millions of people.  The NRC has deemed understanding land change one of the most pressing scientific “grand challenges” (2001: 4).
 
Central to meeting this challenge is integrated assessment, the development and use of policy-oriented computational tools that advance understanding of human decision-making in environmental contexts through identification of interrelationships among socioeconomic and biophysical factors (Morgan and Dowlatabadi 1993).  This paper presents an application of an integrated assessment model that projects land-change trajectories for the southern Yucatán peninsular region of Mexico. Global change issues are writ large in this area because deforestation and attendant cultivation threaten one of the largest remaining subhumid tropical forests and its associated socioeconomic systems. The region is also the locus of international policy regimes, national neoliberal transformation, and potentially conflicting regional goals of development and conservation centered on the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve.
 
The proposed paper reports on initial results of the SYPR Integrated Assessment (SYPRIA) with a special focus on the relationship between household decision making and institutions. The model marries a three component “actor-institution-environment” conceptual framework to a computational simulacrum of the region. The SYPRIA model represents the decision making of actors, subsistence farming households that are the proximate source of change, with a computational intelligence technique termed agent-based modeling that draws on agrarian decision making theory and is specified by household interviews. Actors engage in activities including, but not limited to, land use, communication, and movement. The agentbased model also represents actor participation in socioeconomic institutions such as marketing cooperatives and land tenure that serve to influence actor decision making. Actors are also influenced by, and in turn directly affect, the environment as defined by phenomena such as vegetation, soils, and infrastructure. The environment is represented by a method termed cellular modeling that encapsulates ecological research on natural endogenous transitions and exogenous effects of household actions.
 
SYPRIA is innovative in that it moves away from more traditional equilibrium-oriented mathematic and statistical methods of modeling human-environment relationships. It instead uses computational techniques that explicitly accommodate the dynamic, feedback-laden, and cross-scalar nature of relationships between actors, institutions, and the environment. As such, it can be used in a research driven
policy context to help a variety of stakeholders consider alternate scenarios of development and sustainability.
 
Literature Cited
Morgan, M. G. and H. Dowlatabadi (1993). "Learning from integrated assessment of climate change." Climatic Change 34: 3-4.
NRC (2001). Grand Challenges in Environmental Sciences. Washington, D.C., National Academy Press.
 
 
Robert Mendelsohn
 
Click Here for Presentation
 
 
Ronald Mitchell
 
Click Here for Presentation
 
 
Michael Obersteiner, Zuzanna Chladna, Fabio Dercole, Ulf Dickmann, Elena Molchanova, Sergio Rinaldi, IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria.
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA); IHS Institute for Advanced Studies
 
Michael Obersteiner: International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA);A-2361; Laxenburg, Austria; E-Mail: oberstei@iiasa.ac.at
 
Title: Adaptive Dynamics - Technology, Institutions and Global Change
 
Technological change and the feedback mechanisms with its social correlates, such as economic performance, are still poorly understood. In this paper we develop a stylized model for the dynamic interaction between technology, the environment and the market. We develop an analytical framework that explicitly models the emergence of product diversity through technological branching, which creates higher resilience. We also give a theoretical foundation for certain patterns of technological change, such as the occurrence of innovation clusters. By combining analytical tools from the theories of population dynamics and adaptive dynamics the model bridges the scales of micro- and macro- development. We model processes at multiple levels of aggregation that are separated along different time scales. In particular, in the model we distinguish between processes along the market, the innovation, institutional time scale. Due to its analytical structure and versatility, the model could potentially provide an integrative platform for various branches of the social sciences and natural sciences providing new insights into global governance issues that are consistent along different scale of aggregation and time.
 
The general theory is then applied to a specific case of strategic interaction in a multiple stage cooperate game structure mimicking the ToC problem of global climate change given fat tailed endogenous impact functions. Preliminary results indicate that anticipation and early commitment to mitigation are necessary conditions supplementing adaptation options.
 
 
Philippa Shepherd, James Tansey and Hadi Dowlatabadi
 
Title: Adaptation in response to multiple stressors in the Okanagan region of British Columbia
 
This paper examines the process of adaptation in the context of water management in a semi-arid region of British Columbia.  Four “early adopter” case studies of water management practises at the local authority level were selected for the study. Each has adopted a different water efficiency approach: domestic metering, irrigation metering, wastewater reclamation and regionalisation. The ecology, quality and quantity of water resources in the Okanagan are under growing stress from many pressures, including population growth, intensification of irrigated agriculture, tourism/recreation activities, logging at higher elevations and in the foreseeable future climatic change.
 
While the goal is to inform the literature on climate change adaptation, the study assumes firstly that local practices emerge in response to multiple stressors and secondly that action and inaction in response to currently identified problems can affect vulnerability to more long-term climate change and variability.  The study utilised a key informant approach to examine the factors influencing the initiation, implementation and outcome of untapped water efficiency management interventions, such as demand-side management, at the municipal scale within the region.  The objectives were:
 
To explore the adaptation process under multiple stresses in order to understand what adaptation involves, what triggers adaptive action and influences success and failure, and whether current institutional structures and values are adequate to allow for adaptation to occur effectively.  Secondary objectives include analysing the effectiveness of the four management practises and exploring the role of learning in the adaptation process.  Building on the results of this study, we outline the critical linkages to the wider literature on climate change adaptation and social learning.
 
 
Barry Smit              
Department of Geography, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ont., Canada, N1G 2W1
 
Title: Adaptation to Climate-related Risks in the Context of Development
 
The vulnerability of communities to climate change is related both to their exposure to climatic and other stimuli and to the capacity of the communities to cope with hazardous conditions. This conceptualization of vulnerability is consistent with much work on hazards, disaster management, community resilience and sustainable community development. This model leads to an approach to enhancing adaptive capacity that starts with community-based assessments of vulnerability. This approach is illustrated for the case of southwest Bangladesh, Aitutaki in the South Pacific, and Canadian agriculture. Climate change is seen as directly relevant to the communities, and adaptation is "mainstreamed" as part of on-going resource management, risk management, and sustainabale development activities.
 
 
Eric Taylor
C-CIARN National Coordinator; Natural Resources Canada; Ottawa, Ontario
K1A OE8 Eric.Taylor@NRCan.gc.ca
 
Title: The Government of Canada's Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation Program
 
The issues of impacts and adaptation are relatively new to both the scientific and stakeholder communities in Canada.  Because of this, relevant impacts and adaptation research findings are often not well communicated to stakeholders, even though they are making decisions that have long-term implications.  Conversely, stakeholders have limited input into defining impacts and adaptation research questions that are relevant to their field.  This research must also, of necessity, draw upon information generated from stakeholders both locally and on larger scales to provide useful results. To help address these concerns, the Canadian Climate Impacts and Adaptation Research Network (C-CIARN) has recently been developed.  C-CIARN helps to build communication links between researchers and decision makers.  It strives to identify impacts and adaptation research questions of importance to stakeholders.  It encourages collaborative research projects that cross disciplines and include stakeholder involvement.  Increasing awareness of impacts and adaptation issues is a key priority of the network.  C-CIARN uses an innovative approach to do this work.  It distributes its workload through a set of thirteen coordinating offices across Canada that represent six Regions and seven Sectors or themes.
 
 
David S G Thomas and Chasca Twyman
Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN UK,
and the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research
d.s.thomas@shef.ac.uk, c.twyman@shef.ac.uk, http://www.shef.ac.uk/adaptive
 
Title: Equity in climate change adaptation amongst natural-resource dependant societies
 
Issues of equity and justice are high on international agendas dealing with the impacts of global climate change. But what are the implications of climate change for equity and justice amongst vulnerable groups at local and sub-national levels? We ask this question for three reasons: a) there is a considerable literature suggesting that the poorest and most vulnerable groups will disproportionately experience the negative effects of 21st century climate change; b) such changes are likely to impact significantly on developing world countries, where natural-resource dependency is high; and c) international conventions increasingly recognise the need to centrally engage resource stakeholders in agendas in order to achieve their desired aims, as part of more holistic approaches to sustainable development. These issues however have implications for distributive and procedural justice, particularly when considered within the efforts of the UNFCCC.
 
We explore these issues first through looking, via case studies, at ways in which livelihoods are differentially impacted by i) inequitable natural resource use policies and ii) community-based natural resource management programmes in southern Africa. The central elements of these policy and programme inputs to natural resource use and their outcomes lead us to consider issues of who benefits, who loses, and why. Second, we consider new research investigating how natural resource dependant communities cope with and manage the stresses of climate change and variability, and how formal and informal institutions may facilitate or hinder proactive and reactive coping strategies. Finally we consider the placement of climate change amongst the package of factors affecting equity in natural resource use, and whether this placement creates a case for considering climate change as ‘special’ amongst livelihood disturbing factors in the developing world.
 
 
Alexander Thompson
Department of Political Science- Ohio State University
 
Title: A Climate for Change: Uncertainty and Flexibility in the Kyoto Regime
 
Working from the premise that states rationally design international institutions, recent international relations scholarship has sought to explain important institutional features as responses to specific cooperation problems.  This paper looks at the use of flexibility in the Kyoto regime as a mechanism for overcoming the most important barrier to cooperation in the area of climate change, uncertainty.  It links specific aspects of uncertainty to specific sources of flexibility.  One conclusion is that many of the perceived weaknesses of the regime are in fact reasonable solutions to difficult cooperation challenges.  The empirical approach improves on rationalist studies of institutions that look only at the institutional outcome as evidence that their theory is correct (the features of the institution are assumed to have been rationally chosen as the models predict).  The paper offers evidence on the actual decision making and negotiations—during meetings in The Hague, Bonn, Marrakesh and New Delhi—that led to the institution’s creation, thus directly linking hypotheses regarding institutional design to the choices made by its creators.
 
 
B. L. Turner
 
Click Here for Presentation
 
 
Kenneth R. Young and Jennifer Lipton
Department of Geography, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712.
kryoung@mail.utexas.edu, jenlipton@mail.utexas.edu
 
Title: Tropical Andean Climate Change: Implications for Agriculture, Biodiversity, and their Respective Institutions
 
            Many decisions must be made in relation to ongoing and future climate change in the highlands of the tropical Andes.  Mountain glaciers there have been retreating the last two decades and it is now apparent that ecological zones are shifting altitudinally.  This presents challenges for biodiversity conservation because plant and animal species will likely shift their distributions and the national park and nature reserve systems will need to be reevaluated accordingly.  Protected areas with little elevational variation would need to be increased in size or connected to others using conservation corridors.  Similarly, as ecological zonation and precipitation regimes alter, the agricultural and pastoral systems in the Andes will be affected.  For example, the location and nature of hazard-prone areas will change.  Crop mixes, yields, preferred varieties, and planting and harvesting dates might all need to shift.  Increased conflicts over use of resources such as water derived from glaciers are predictable.  In addition, there are complex feedbacks to be expected between land use and changes in biophysical factors.  For example, greater productivity of high elevation vegetation due to warmer temperatures and increased atmospheric carbon dioxide might convince local people to increase stocking and extraction rates.  Institutional flexibility to deal with these changes already exists in some Andean land use systems, especially for those that self-moderate their extractive pressures through social mechanisms.  This may not be the case for the national institutions working on agriculture and for biodiversity conservation, which tend to take regional, agglomerative approaches not attuned to local nuances.  Perhaps the increasingly global way that local and national institutions interact with their peers elsewhere offers one possible solution by facilitating more and better interchange of information and ideas.

 

[1] C. Carraro, R. Gerlagh, and B. van der Zwaan (2003) “Endogenous technical change in environmental macroeconomics,” Resource and Energy Economics, 25(1), 1-10.