ClimChAlp - Climate Change, Impacts and Adaptation Strategies in the Alpine Space
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The project is a Bavarian initiative for a community approach of the alpine countries to the challenges of the climate change in the Alpine region, including the development of adaptation strategies. An "Action Plan" for the Alps will be developed, in which the adaptation to the inevitable consequences of the climate change is seen as the primary objective. For this, a scientific foundation needs to be laid, and adaptation strategies for adapting to the climate change in the Alpine region need to be developed in various areas.
Adaptation to climate change is one of the most important fields of action in the Alps, as the region is affected in two ways: For one thing, the temperature in the Alps has risen by twice the global average, and all the climate models predict a continued, high temperature increase in the future. For another, the Alps are a highly sensitive ecosystem, so the impacts of the climate change are being felt particularly strongly here, and sometimes have unpredictable consequences.
The ClimChAlp project has produced a valuable methodological basis for adaptation to climate change, as well as recommendations for the further development of effective transnational cooperation. Specific recommendations have been developed. The ways in which the climate change manifests itself in the Alpine region are as heterogeneous as the region itself. For this reason, step by step over the coming years, the results and recommendations developed in ClimChAlp need to be implemented in an adaptation plan for local and regional adaptation strategies. Further case studies at a regional and local level are needed to improve?the knowledge of climate change impacts and to transfer new findings into adequate and applicable adaptation measures in the Alpine region.
The aim of the project is to supply concrete evidence for a future "Alpine Space Program", focused on the climate change and the associated potential effects, as well as providing a support for political decisions on prevention of and protection against natural disasters caused by climate changes in the Alps. The Bavarian state government counts on a "dual principle" for climate protection issues: CO2 prevention on the one hand, and adapting to the unavoidable consequences of climate change on the other. The project is part of this strategy. The focus is on the search for suitable adaptation strategies, with which the negative effects of the climate change in the alpine region can be minimised. The definition of these strategies requires a basic understanding of the Alps as a holistic ecosystem, that reacts highly sensitively to global and regional changes. However, there are still significant knowledge gaps in this respect, which can only be reduced through a large-scale trans-Alpine cooperation across disciplines and national boundaries.
The analysis of historical climate data and current climate models will allow future scenarios to be developed, so that the influence of the climate change on the natural hazards in the Alpine region can be better understood and predicted. The climate models used are the global model ECHAM5 and the regional model REMO ( Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg).
wind patterns
The effects of natural disasters, risks and hazards on spatial development and key economic sectors will be identified through an assessment of climate models in combination with historical data on climate changes. In general, the climate change is posing serious challenges for the social and economic development. Special attention will be given to floods, rock falls and the increased hazard of mudslides resulting from permafrost thaws. Other consequences are the reduction of the snow cover in low altitudes and the withdrawal of the glaciers. These effects have an impact on economic sectors such as tourism and lead to an altered species distribution of plants and animals. The consequences for regional planning will be investigated in the project. The Alps are considered to be a particularly sensitive region.
The climate change places additional burdens on the economy and ecology in the Alpine region. These systems are already exposed to natural hazards and demographic changes, as well as increased environmental stresses that increase both the risks and the vulnerability.
In project recommendation is that the first step of risk analysis should build the basis for detailed vulnerability assessments covering the factors of exposure, sensitivity and adaptive capacity. The assessment procedures especially need to identify highly endangered and vulnerable areas. As an analysis and assessment outcome, the creation of spatial vulnerability maps would be desirable. These should visualise the vulnerability of the area concerned to climate change impacts. The assessment and mapping methodology, which has yet to be developed, tested and adapted, needs to be transferable to the whole Alpine region.
Background and aims: The focus is on the search for suitable adaptation strategies, with which the negative effects of the climate change in the alpine region can be minimised. With the development of a "Flexible Response Network" the strategies in the fight against natural hazards will be harmonized and adjusted across national borders. These strategies for crisis management and risk prevention will be considered jointly in more detail. In addition, international agreements on the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions are essential. In the Alpine region, these need to be integrated into sectoral and economic policies, in order to reduce the consequences of the climate change and pronounce recommendations for administrative and political action.
The aim of the project is to raise awareness of the different impacts of climate change in the Alpine region with well-researched information, and to offer proposals to political and administrative policy-makers on how to deal with the future challenges while ensuring a sustainable development in the affected areas. Based on the results of the project, the project developed the following select recommendations for policy makers, administration and stakeholders:
European Union, Interreg IIIB Alpine Space and European Fund for Regional Development (EFRD)
Bavarian State Ministry of the Environment and Public Health (StMUGV), Department Climate Protection
altogether 22 partners from Alpine states
Bayerisches Staatsministerium für Umwelt und Gesundheit
Rosenkavalierplatz 2
D-81925 München