Friday 18 April 2014

It's busy in research country


The BASE project is (off course) not the only research project currently operating in the field of climate change adaptation. I recently came across several other research activities in the field of governance for climate change adaptation in Europe, most of them also from a comparative view.

For example, colleagues from the VU University Amsterdam (Eric Massey and Dave Huitema), in cooperation with Wageningen University (Robbert Biesbroek) and University of East Anglia (Andrew Jordan), have recently analysed national adaptation strategies in 29 European countries (from a perspective of policy innovation and dissemination).

The Dutch research programmes ‘Knowledge for Climate’ and Climate changes Spatial Planninghave recently resulted into a special issue in the journal Regional Environmental Change on climate change adaptation, titled 'From climate research to climate compatible development: experiences and progress in the Netherlands' (http://www.kennisvoorklimaat.nl/publicaties/specialissueKvKKvR). In their editorial of this special issue, Veraart et al. (2014) observe that: “… a trend can be observed in which a ‘top-down’ climate impact assessment approach is increasingly combined with a ‘bottom-up’ approach”. And they observe:  “Climate adaptation research finds itself in between global systems knowledge on the one hand and practical needs and experiences at the local, regional and national level on the other. This demands the utmost from all actors involved to enable an efficient and constructive flow and use of knowledge and expertise.”.

Elsewhere in the Netherlands, comparative research of adaption to impacts of climate change is also interest. In Groningen they recently advertised a PhD position (at the department of Spatial Planning and Environment, under supervision of Johan Woltjer) on capacities to manage resilience to river floods and based on “… a comparative, qualitative case-study between the NL and the UK to investigate governance capacities to address these risks. The study would also point to opportunities for policy innovation and institutional design” (http://www.rug.nl/about-us/work-with-us/job-opportunities/overview?details=00347-0000005579).

Researchers in Austria (including Christoph Clar, at the Institute of Forest, Environmental, and Natural Resource Policy of the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna) are currently also working on a research project on climate change adaptation strategies. On behalf of the German Federal Environment Agency, they compare climate change adaptation strategies in 6 countries, 6 metropolitan regions, and 2 transnational regions. They indicate that they are particularly interested in factors that determine the success of adaptation strategies, to what extent and how these factors can be 'managed', and how/if the strategies are linked with adaptation strategies at different levels of government.

And I am sure there are more research activities currently undertaken to study adaptation policy and adaptation actions in and across European countries.

Although studying dynamics between different 'bottom-up initiatives' and 'top-down policies' was an initial starting point of the BASE project, the focus appears to shift towards studying participation, knowledge use, risk assessments, cost benefit analysis, and impact assessment modelling. In my perspective, the way for BASE to contribute to the various other research activities currently undertaken in the field of governance for climate change adaptation (and in line with the observation as mentioned above by Veraart et al. 2014), is by means of understanding the institutional dynamics between policy initiatives at different levels. That is, understanding in which way and why conflicts and synergies arise between the European adaptation strategy, the national level adaptation strategies, and various local initiatives. In which way do national adaptation policies help or hinder local initiatives for adaptation? The BASE project does have a good potential in that respect, as 8 national level adaptation strategies are researched, and about 25 empirical case studies in 9 countries (concerning coastal issues, ecosystem services, urban areas, health and agriculture); and all within the context of the EU.