. Earth Science News .
Most US Organizations Not Adapting To Climate Change

New York City's 40-year-old building codes that require structures to withstand only 110 mph winds, when climate change is causing more intense hurricanes that could bring speeds of up to 135 mph, and its flood maps that are based on historical data and not on climate change modeling data. Increases in sea levels and surges associated with severe storms would likely inundate Kennedy Airport and lower Manhattan, including the subway entrances and tunnels into Manhattan.
by Staff Writers
New Haven CT (SPX) Dec 09, 2008
Organizations in the United States that are at the highest risk of sustaining damage from climate change are not adapting enough to the dangers posed by rising temperatures, according to a Yale report.

"Despite a half century of climate change that has already significantly affected temperature and precipitation patterns and has already had widespread ecological and hydrological impacts, and despite a near certainty that the United States will experience at least as much climate change in the coming decades just as a result of current atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases, little adaptation has occurred," says Robert Repetto, author of "The Climate Crisis and the Adaptation Myth" and a senior fellow of the United Nations Foundation.

Repetto says that private- and public-sector organizations face significant obstacles to adaptation because of uncertainties over the occurrence of climate change at the regional and local levels, over the future frequency of extreme weather events, and over the ecological, economic and other impacts of climate change.

In addition, organizations lack relevant data for planning and forecasting, and the data that are available are typically outdated and unrepresentative of future conditions.

Other institutional barriers to adaptation are overcoming or revising codes, rules and regulations that impede change; the lack of clear directions and mandates to take action; political or ideological resistance to the need for responsiveness to climate change; the preoccupation with near-term challenges and priorities and the lingering perception that climate change is a concern only for sometime in the future; and the inertia created by a business-as-usual assumption that future conditions will be like those of the past.

"Those organizations in the public and private sectors that are most at risk, that are making long-term investments and commitments and that have the planning, forecasting and institutional capacity to adapt, have not yet done so," says Repetto, who until recently was a professor in the practice of economics and sustainable development at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.

"There have been very few changes in forecasts, plans, investment decisions, budgets or staffing patterns in response to climate risks."

The report cites:

+ New York City's 40-year-old building codes that require structures to withstand only 110 mph winds, when climate change is causing more intense hurricanes that could bring speeds of up to 135 mph, and its flood maps that are based on historical data and not on climate change modeling data. Increases in sea levels and surges associated with severe storms would likely inundate Kennedy Airport and lower Manhattan, including the subway entrances and tunnels into Manhattan.

+ Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Texas, where water supply is critical and climate change is not factored into state agencies' current water management plans.

+ A 2007 GAO report that land and resource managers for the Forest Service, Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Land Management and the National Park Service have ignored a directive by the Interior Department to consider climate change in their management plans.

+ Federal planning guidelines that states and municipalities must follow to receive funding for transportation investments that do not require consideration of climate change in the design and siting of highways and rail lines.

Municipal public health agencies in Los Angeles, Chicago and Philadelphia, among others, that have not factored climate change into plans for confronting public health risks, despite the belief that climate change will increase the incidence and severity of vector-borne diseases and respiratory illnesses.

"To say that the United States has the technological, economic and human capacity to adapt to climate change does not imply that the United States will adapt," said Repetto. "Without national leadership and concerted efforts to remove these barriers and obstacles, adaptation to climate change is likely to continue to lag."

Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
The Climate Crisis and the Adaptation Myth
Yale University
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


UN climate talks in search of leadership and ideas, say delegates
Poznan, Poland (AFP) Dec 8, 2008
With slim results so far, UN climate talks in Poland enter the home stretch this week haunted by Europe's splintering resolve over its own climate package and the void created by a lame-duck negotiating team from the United States.







  • Armenians remember devastating quake as consequences linger
  • Malaysia bans hillside developments after landslide: report
  • Eastern Caribbean to get early warning weather system
  • Disasters: Bangladesh, NKorea most hit in 2007

  • Foretelling A Major Meltdown
  • UN climate talks in search of leadership and ideas, say delegates
  • Most US Organizations Not Adapting To Climate Change
  • Sarkozy cites limited progress with eastern EU climate refuseniks

  • Seafood Industry To Benefit From Oceansat-2
  • Making Sense Of The World From High Above
  • UNESCO Signs Partnership With JAXA
  • GIS Development Gives Award To Institute Of Photogrammetry

  • Analysis: Iraq Drilling Co. in joint deal
  • Japan protests intrusion by Chinese survey ships
  • EU agrees to switch off old-style light bulbs by Sept. 2012
  • DOE, TVA Partners In Groundbreaking Energy Efficiency Project

  • WFP warns food crisis adds to difficulty in fighting AIDS
  • Zimbabwe pleads for help amid growing cholera epidemic
  • Indonesia's vast Papua in the grip of Asia's worst AIDS crisis
  • Study checks toll of S. Africa's AIDS plan

  • Dogs Chase Efficiently, But Cats Skulk Counterintuitively
  • Lab Mice That Exercise Control May Be More Normal
  • Study: Dinosaurs had big head air cavities
  • Scientists get closer to creating artificial life: study

  • Chlorine leak at Siberian chemical factory: report
  • Vo Quy, father of Vietnam's environmental movement
  • 'Cancer village' the dark side of Vietnam's industrial boom
  • Light Pollution Offers New Global Measure Of Coral Reef Health

  • Scientists create body swapping illusion
  • Ecological Impact Of African Cities
  • Gene found to protect against lung cancer
  • Sleep Helps People Learn Complicated Tasks

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement