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Key Message

Preparing for and responding to the projected impacts of climate change by all countries—developed and developing—will require integration of adaptation considerations into core decision- and policy-making processes at the international, national, sectoral and local level.

Vulnerability and Adaptation

Understanding how to cope with the impacts of climate change

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As the impacts of climate change become more noticeable, international, national and local awareness of the need to prepare for, and respond to, the impacts of climate change has grown. Although human societies have always dealt with climatic variations and fluctuations, climate change poses new challenges due to the expected pace of change and the pervasiveness of projected impacts. The ability of communities to respond to these impacts will depend upon their ability to access the economic resources, technology, information, skills and infrastructure appropriate to their specific context. It will also require an enabling environment facilitated by suitable policies and programs at the national level.

While all countries will be affected by climate change, developing countries, particularly the least developed countries, are expected to be among those most heavily impacted. Limited financial, institutional and human resources, high dependency on ecosystem-dependent economic and livelihood activities (e.g., agriculture), and existing stressors such as HIV/AIDS leave the poor most vulnerable and least able to adapt to projected impacts. Climate change will make it even more difficult for developing countries to break out of poverty and achieve their sustainable development objectives. (These ideas are explored further in the accompanying backgrounder on vulnerability and adaptation (PDF - 124 kb) in developing countries.)

IISD works within Canada and internationally to increase understanding of effective responds to the complex socio-economic and environmental impacts of climate change; to develop tools and processes to facilitate these responses; and to encourage integration of adaptation considerations into routine decision-making.

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