Transcript PPT, 76 KB

Relevance and utility of
AIACC PROJECT AF07
for stakeholders and decisionmakers and for
informing policy choices
George Green
Water Research Commission, South Africa
Development of Regional Climate
Change Scenarios for Sub-Sahara
Africa
seeks to:
(a) extend existing capacity among African
scientists with regard to selection and
implementation of methodologies for
constructing regional climate-change
scenarios from GCMs
(b) provide a comprehensive scenario base
for impact studies in Africa.
Project relevance and utility
Relevance of objectives
Relevance and utility of results and
outcomes
Relevance of objectives from water resources
perspective
Plausible, scientifically-founded scenarios of climate change at appropriate
scales are essential for meaningful assessments of:
– potential impacts of climate change
– adequacy/inadequacy of adaptation strategies, some of which may already have
been developed to cope with current climate variability,
especially when policy-making needs to be informed.
Conversely, decision-makers and policy-makers who are uncertain about
the reality or extent of projected changes in climate, would avoid thinking
and acting beyond the need to cope with current climate variability.
Greater confidence in ranges of probable climate changes at scales of
national and local interest will, however, engender greater willingness to
respond promptly and appropriately, even if the confidence bands are
initially fairly broad.
Therefore, Project AF07 objectives are of fundamental relevance both for
policy-makers as well as for more direct users (including AIACC
investigators currently engaged in assessment of impacts, vulnerabilities
and adaptation options).
Indicator of relevance of objectives AF07 has served as point of departure for a nationally-focused, multidisciplinary project on climate change for the RSA water sector. Key
questions relate to:
Scenario plausibility, closeness to reality, confidence intervals
Downscaling limits
Climate change-associated climate variability (frequency, magnitude, and
duration of extreme events)
Likely land-use, hydrological and water yield changes and interactions
(scenarios required to provide input to hydrological models sensitive to land
use changes)
Water-related socio-economic impacts and adaptation (relating to
sustainability of water-based livelihoods)
Detection and monitoring (signals, impacts, adaptation)
Project being undertaken by a team of climatologists, hydrologists and
social scientists from four South African universities. Objectives refined at an
inception workshop involving major stakeholders, who are encouraged to
interact with the project team on a continuous basis.
Relevance and utility of current AIACC
project
Progress reported suggests that Project AF07 is
succeeding well in meeting its stated objectives.
– There has been a dramatic increase in the capacity of
African scientists to get to grips with issues related to
the downscaling of climate change scenarios.
– Investigators are learning how best to exploit
strengths/ avoid weaknesses inherent in the GCM
projections to be used for downscaling to regional and
even to point scales.
– Development of downscaling methods has been
accomplished early enough for at least some of the
current AIACC impact studies to derive some benefit
from these methods.
Recommendation for increasing relevance/utility
Possibly too late for the current round of AIACC impact studies to
benefit fully from the sounder climate change scenarios made
possible through AF07
However, the relevance and utility of AF07 could still be enhanced:
– Through incorporating firmer climate-change
scenarios in follow-on projects, especially where this
is necessary for results to gain acceptance as a basis
for policy-making. Consider supporting such projects.
– In future projects, the generation of appropriate,
project-specific, climate-change scenarios should
preferably not happen outside the projects, but should
rather be done as an integral part of a multidisciplinary approach.