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Climate Adaptation Summit outlines priorities for an inclusive and coordinated national approach
admin
2021-04-29
发布年2021
语种英语
国家澳大利亚
领域资源环境
正文(英文)

A summit featuring community and political leaders has outlined critical priorities for future frameworks and collaboration for Australia to adapt to climate change.

Future Earth Australia, hosted by the Australian Academy of Science, held the Reimagining Climate Adaptation Summit from 19-21 April.

The summit attracted over 440 attendees and had 36 speakers and 4 keynotes. With speakers and attendees from all states and territories, and across government, business, not-profits and community organisations, the event was able to gather diverse perspectives on adaptation as Australia mitigates its emissions.

The summit was underpinned by a comprehensive national consultation and is the latest milestone in an ongoing dialogue led by Future Earth Australia and its members about Australia’s climate adaptation agenda and action. Emerging from an increased national attention to community resilience and adaptation following the horrific 2019–20 bushfire season, the outcomes of the summit are particularly pertinent as the Australian Government refreshes its National Climate Adaptation Strategy.

As well as defining priorities, the event acknowledged the pervasive nature of climate change effects on livelihoods, wellbeing, health, social life, economic and industry activities and our relationship with nature.

Climate adaptation manifests as a rich tapestry of priorities. While it might be adapting to the hotter, drier conditions which give rise to megafires, it also looks like having a plan to tackle intense heat waves, prolonged drought, coastal erosion, and floods. There are follow on repercussions such as impacts on mental and physical health, damage and loss of property, significant changes to major industries like agriculture and tourism, and endangerment of culturally sacred and ecologically significant flora and fauna.

“Aboriginal people have proven that cooperation can underpin human survival”, stated Bruce Pascoe, author of Dark Emu and Yuin, Bunurong and Tasmanian man. Traditional methods for managing for bushfires after the 2019/20 summer, for example, have garnered attention in the national discourse. Speakers on Day 1, which centred on the importance of diverse knowledge approaches to adaptation, highlighted the need to create space and structure for First Nations people to define the conceptual basis for climate adaptation and define their priorities for how their knowledge is used.

“Addressing climate change, building resilience and social equality is the growth story of the 21st Century”, stated Dr Marcelo Mena (Chilean Minister for Environment 2014-2018 and founder of the Coalition of Finance Ministers for Climate Action at the World Bank) in his keynote address. Day 2 went on to define key aspects of enabling practical adaptation through advancing frameworks which empower local communities to pursue their own vision and resilience in a warming world, collaboration across sectors and initiatives and adapting business and finance to use a climate-lens across their portfolios. Zoe Whitton, Executive Director of Pollination Group, contributed that “investors are building the governance infrastructure themselves... at a point they need policy to enable the right decisions everyday across portfolios.”

 “In a time where so much is defined by urgency and emergency, we can't lose sight of the thriving future we are working for,” stated the Hon. Lily D’Ambrosio, Victorian Minister for Environment, Climate Change and Energy. Day 3 focused on transforming sectors and systems like agriculture, coastal and marine systems, and cities and towns to prepare and adapt. Proper valuing natural and social capital associated with healthy ecosystems and resilient communities in our governance and business planning is as a major priority. Building the capacity of practitioners across sectors to work with uncertain and constantly changing conditions, which can be informed by quality research, is also a central step. Russ Wise, economist and adaptation specialist at CSIRO, underlined the point that, “our research, development, investment and strategies need to be based on an assessment of what we value, what we can’t stand to lose, and being aware of who is defining those priorities.”

Future Earth Australia would like to sincerely thank all speakers, chairs and attendees for their invaluable contributions to advancing an inclusive, evidence-based and effective climate change adaptation agenda. Future Earth Australia was delighted to work with FEA members, the Sydney Environment Institute at the University of Sydney and the Institute for Culture and Society at Western Sydney University to deliver this Summit, and with 3M who sponsored our ‘Emerging Leaders’ forum for early career researchers and professionals.

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来源平台Australian Academy of Science
文献类型新闻
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/324179
专题资源环境科学
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