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Realizing need for adaptation.
As early as 1992, he says, the US National Academy of Science recognized
that adaptation needed to play a key role in humanity's response to global
warming.
Some analysts argue that demoting adaptation efforts to the status of "poorer
cousin" to emissions reductions in the public debate has cost precious
time.
"We've known for 100 years that if you pump enough CO2 into the atmosphere,
you're going to get global warming," says Daniel Sarewitz, a science-policy
specialist at Arizona State University in Tempe. Despite the conviction
that humans are warming the climate expressed in the report from the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, specific aspects of the science remain riddled
with uncertainties. This holds especially true for models trying to project
regional effects, he says.
"We spend all this effort trying to understand climate dynamics, but
the major variables are the interactions within society and between society
and climate," he says, referring to everything from populations exploding
along vulnerable coastlines to decisions about what types of crops to plant.
For example, Dr. Noble notes that in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh,
efforts to encourage growers to replace groundwater- gulping rice with grains
that grow better in a drier climate are hitting a wall. "Farmers know
that they'd be better off growing millet or sorghum," he says. "But
there's no market for millet. If they have to live on what they produce,
they'd rather produce rice than millet."
And while some of the highest-profile adaptation challenges may come from
severe weather events, Noble adds that "ordinary" weather events
can still pose enormous hardship, particularly in the developing world.
If "normal" rain comes in less-frequent but more-intense storms,
one storm "could wash away half your crop. That doesn't qualify as
a disaster, so you don't get disaster relief," Noble says. In that
case, adaptation measures could range from runoff control efforts to government
policies establishing crop insurance where it doesn't exist now. It also
means building roads and bridges far more resilient in the face of flooding.
Ironically, many measures needed to adapt to global warming come from the
same toolkit disaster planners and development agencies use today. "Adaptation
means doing the things you do now, but doing them much better," he
says.
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