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March 11, 2024

Europe is not prepared for rapidly growing climate risks, researchers say

Observed and projected temperature increase over European land area. Temperatures are expressed relative to pre-industrial levels. The model projections show the mean and uncertainty interval. The two scenarios assessed are SSP1-2.6: low warming, and SSP3-7.0: high warming. Credit: European climate risk assessment: Executive summary (2024).
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Observed and projected temperature increase over European land area. Temperatures are expressed relative to pre-industrial levels. The model projections show the mean and uncertainty interval. The two scenarios assessed are SSP1-2.6: low warming, and SSP3-7.0: high warming. Credit: European climate risk assessment: Executive summary (2024).

Europe is the fastest-warming continent in the world and governments are too slow in taking action to reduce these climate risks. According to co-authors Robbert Biesbroek and Simona Pedde of Wageningen University & Research, many of these risks, which threaten our food security and financial stability, among other things, have already reached critical levels and could become catastrophic without a change of mindset towards urgent and decisive action.

Extreme heat, drought, wildfires, and flooding, as experienced in recent years, will worsen in Europe even under optimistic global warming scenarios and affect living conditions throughout the continent. The European Environment Agency (EEA) has published the first-ever to help identify policy priorities for and for climate-sensitive sectors.

According to the assessment, Europe's policies and adaptation actions are not keeping pace with the rapidly growing risks. In many cases, incremental adaptation will not be sufficient, and as many measures to improve climate resilience require a long time, may be needed even for risks that are not yet critical.

Change in mindset is needed

Simona Pedde of the Department of Environmental Sciences says, "EUCRA is the first risk assessment to acknowledge that all key climatic risks Europe is facing are driven not only by increases in climatic hazards but also by how prepared societies are for them. Climatic projections are fundamental to understanding what could happen. But planning for future adaptation should look into the fact that many risks are already at a critical level."

She adds, "Why wait for the materialization of future climatic projections? With possibilities of tipping points and wildcards, and examples of cascading effects throughout the report, decision-makers need to move from reacting to catastrophic impacts happening after severe floods or drought events to embracing a precautionary approach to climate adaptation. That's the mindset shift we urgently need."

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More cooperation is key

The EU and its Member States have made considerable progress in understanding the they face and in preparing for them. National climate risk assessments are increasingly used to inform adaptation policy development. However, societal preparedness is insufficient, as policy implementation is lagging behind the rapid increase in risk levels.

As Robbert Biesbroek of the Department of Social Sciences notes, "The growing gap between the risks of climate change and the slow rate of adaptation action is alarming. Most sectoral policies and plans are not explicit enough when considering future climate risks."

"We often see high policy ambitions to reduce risks, but these hardly materialize in practice due to lacking political willingness to invest time and resources today to create a sustainable future. Two years ago, we showed in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report that risks for Europe are widespread, accelerating and impacting every sector and region in Europe."

"The upcoming European elections in June will be crucially important if and how the recommendations from the European Climate Risk Assessment will be implemented."

Risks

The EEA's EUCRA report builds on and complements the existing knowledge base on climate impacts and risks for Europe, including recent reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) and the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission (JRC), as well as outcomes of EU research and development projects and national climate risk assessments.

The knowledge in this first-of-its-kind assessment is synthesized with the aim to support strategic policymaking.

More information: Report:

Provided by Wageningen University

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