Background and Goals
The project aims to bring together spatial and landscape planners, politicians, stakeholders and academics to develop an improved understanding of the response of flora and fauna to climate change. Spatial planning options and tools for adaptation to climate change are produced. The project analyses changes in spatial planning and land use that will enable flora and fauna to adapt to climate change. This will be achieved in the following ways:
- Review of existing spatial planning policies and development of new general conditions for policy to preserve biodiversity;
- Modelling the response of European flora and fauna to climate change;
- Development of planning options and tools to overcome climate effects in coastal regions;
- Evaluation of climate effects for inland ecosystems and ecosystem networks;
- Encouraging stakeholders to integrate adaptation to climate change into all planning levels.
The objective is to identify, develop and recommend spatial planning measures for adaptation to climate change that can contribute to preserving biological diversity of terrestrial and coastal ecosystems. This involves studying how flora and fauna respond to climate change. Analysis of the risks and opportunities of planning options and measures as a response to change is a key component of the project.
Content time
toResearch area/region
- Europe
- Baden-Württemberg
- Bavaria
- Hesse
- Northrhine-Westphalia
- Rhineland Palatinate
- Saarland
Steps in the process of adaptation to climate change
Step 1: Understand and describe climate change
The HADCM3A2 and PCMA2 climate models and the IPCC emission scenarios are used.
- Higher average temperatures
- Sea level rise und storm surges
- Storm
2020s, 2050s, 2080s
Step 2a: Identify and assess risks - climate effects and impact
Climate effects on land are already influencing flora and fauna and their habitats. Along coastlines, rising sea levels and increasing storm activity are resulting in changes to the landscape and impairing habitats. This leads to a loss of species, ecosystems and habitats. Other consequences for flora and fauna include changes in seasonal behaviour (e.g. for migrating birds), changes in ranges and loss of habitats (e.g. erosion of salt marshes on the coasts).
Step 2b: Identify and assess risks - Vulnerability, risks and chances
Transferable methods are developed at a European level to identify terrestrial and coastal areas that are particularly susceptible to climate change. These methods use a vulnerability index that represents a simple quantitative measure of the sensitivity of species and habitats. Therefore, in this case vulnerability relates to the exposure of ecosystems and species and their natural adaptation capacity (propagation capacity), but not to social adaptation capacity. The susceptibility is greater the more significantly the climate changes.
Implementing existing adaptation strategies and guidelines in spatial plans to allow flora and fauna to adapt to climate change is viewed as an urgent requirement.
Step 3: Develop and compare measures
Climate change will advance even if all of the proposed international climate protection measures are implemented. Therefore, it is extremely important to draw attention to the necessity of adaptation to climate change. For the planning process, this means that:
- Objectives and strategies need to be set and developed that take account of adaptation to climate change,
- These strategies for sustainability need to be integrated into strategic environmental assessments, and
- Existing measures need to be implemented.
The objective is to develop spatial planning mechanisms and measures for adaptation to climate change and integration of adaptation methods into spatial planning and conservation area management. This is to be achieved by identifying good adaptation practices in case study areas and convincing stakeholders to integrate these adaptation options into all levels of planning processes. These adaptation options could involve establishment of dynamic conservation area management or networking of habitat mosaics.
- 2011–2040 (near future)
- 2036–2065
- 2051–2080 (far future)
Participants
EU: Interreg IIIB Programme, North West Europe and European Fund for Regional Development (EFRD)
Natural England
Alterra (Netherlands), Conservatoire de l'espace littoral et des ravages lacustres (France), Environment Agency (Great Britain), Environmental Change Institute (Great Britain), Hampshire County Council (Great Britain), Kent County Council (Great Britain), Province of Limburg (Netherlands), Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, University of East Anglia, University of Southampton (Great Britain)
Natural England
Phoenix House, 33 North Street
UK-BN7 2PH East Sussex
United Kingdom
enquiries @ branchproject.org