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When decision-making processes fail: an argument for robust climate adaptation planning in the face of uncertainty

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Abstract

Adverse climate-related pressures and shocks pose uncertain risks to communities and society at large. These uncertainties require strategies that will perform well regardless of circumstances, necessitating robust rather than optimal planning strategies. Robust planning requires reliable up-to-date information. The data available regarding regional risk, however, especially in developing countries, are often insecure, inadequate, or nonexistent. In addition to this, climate change poses deep uncertainty in when, where, and how extreme a given climate-related pressure or shock will occur. In order to include the full breadth of perspectives and consider all possible future scenarios, robust strategies require input from myriad affected stakeholders. Incorporating multiple perspectives, collecting and analyzing risk-related information and selecting a robust strategy, calls for substantial planning and management. When a pressure or shock occurs, without ex-ante action promoting best practices for resilience, governance structures often fail, leading to actions that may favor a single stakeholder agenda and avoidable losses. In contrast, this paper will provide a practical framework for collecting relevant information at the local level, using that information to analyze related risk, and creating robust strategies that incorporate and promote resilience.

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Notes

  1. A degree of freedom is “the number of observation minus the number of necessary relations among these observations.” Walker (1940), i.e., the less degrees of freedom the more certainty.

  2. Optimal decision-making is considered by some to be obsolete in that it is a prescriptive decision-making approach rather than a tool that enables decision makers to make an informed decision.

  3. This story has been conveyed by Prof. Miranda Schreurs—director of the Environmental Policy Research Center (Freie Universität Berlin) and Japan specialist—during the Policy Forum on “Risk and Resilience Assessment Methodologies in Transportation and Energy Policy” organized by the Embassy of Canada in Berlin on February 4, 2014.

  4. Green and Blue Space Adaptation (GRaBS) for Urban Areas and Eco Towns.

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Acknowledgments

Special thanks to Camille Raillon of Resilience Center Global for her contribution to the design of the aforementioned framework presented in section six. Thanks to Tim Maher of AON for his insight into the information required for resilience planning.

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Correspondence to Annika Styczynski.

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Styczynski, A., Wolf, J., Tah, S. et al. When decision-making processes fail: an argument for robust climate adaptation planning in the face of uncertainty. Environ Syst Decis 34, 478–491 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10669-014-9528-z

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