CARAVAN - Climate change: a regional assessment of vulnerability and adaptive capacity for the Nordic countries
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The primary objective of the project “Climate change: a regional assessment of vulnerability and adaptive capacity for the Nordic countries” involves comparing and contrasting alternative methods of quantifying regional vulnerability to climate change in Nordic countries. Detailed vulnerability assessments will be produced in subsequent national and Nordic studies.
Objectives:
Various scenarios from various sources will be used.
Regions, sectors and communities to be studied will be identified during the project. For example, a pilot project will concentrate on analysing the agricultural sector in the Nordic countries. As the work is closely linked to ongoing or planned studies of vulnerability in individual partner countries, CARAVAN may be in a position to refine experiences from these projects and to extend the analysis.
The primary objective of CARAVAN is to perform a comparison of methods for estimating regional vulnerability to climate change in Nordic countries. Vulnerability is a function of the burden of climate change, sensitivity to its effects and adaptive capacity to overcome these effects. These elements will be studied in the project, and indicators will be developed in collaboration with regional stakeholders for future periods up to 2050. These indicators will then be combined in different ways to define vulnerability. Vulnerability indices will be calculated at city level and mapped over the Nordic region.
The central result is the “Online Mapping Tool” for evaluating the “relative vulnerability”
The budget is €148,000 and is funded by national resources: Academy of Finland, Norwegian Research Council and Swedish Environmental Protection Agency.
CARAVAN is made up of cooperation between three organisations with interdisciplinary research team:
Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE), Helsinki, Finland;
University of Oslo, Faculty of Sociology and Human Geography, Oslo, Norway;
University of Linköping, Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research, Linköping, Sweden;
Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE)
Mechelininkatu 34a
FI-00251 Helsinki
Finland