Urban ecosystem-based adaptation to climate change

Project: Research

Project Details

Description

The full project title is ‘Ecosystem services as a tool for climate change adaptations in coastal municipalities’ which is Working Package 2 (WP2) of a broader project titled ‘Implementing the Ecosystem Services Approach at the municipal level’ (ECOSIMP).

The overall objective of the research project (WP1 and WP2) is to analyse past decisions, current planning and future challenges for municipal planning and management from the perspective of ecosystem services, with the aim of increasing our understanding of the ecosystem concept as a tool for sustainable development. In this context, WP2 focuses on ecosystem-based adaptation and, more specifically, on the analysis of how ecosystem services are, and/or can be incorporated into urban planning for climate change adaptation.

Ecosystem-based adaptation is receiving increasing interest worldwide. Whilst its importance is increasingly recognised there is a lack of related research and a need for systematic reviews and collation of concrete examples (as, for instance, highlighted in a 2013 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change report on ecosystem-based approaches for adaptation to climate change).

Against this background, this research examines how the ecosystem services approach relates to current adaptation planning, and evaluates the conditions for using ecosystem services as a tool for designing municipal adaptation strategies. More specifically, the following aspects will be assessed: (a) current municipal adaptation measures and their relation to ecosystem services; (b) obstacles to the implementation of ecosystem-based adaptation; (c) individual ecosystem-based adaptation measures and their performance under different decision conditions (historically, at present and in the future).

The expected outcome is to generate operational knowledge on what, where, how and when an ecosystem service approach is suitable for adaptation planning.

Project-related news:

New tool for mainstreaming ecosystem-based adaptation.
In the context of the project, a tool for integrating ecosystem-based adaptation into municipal governance and planning was developed together with Swedish and German cities.

Ecosystem-based adaptation – joint education research project between LUCSUS and Leuphana University, Germany.
This research project, carried out in 2014 and 2015, assessed research on ecosystem-based adaptation. Students enrolled either in the Lund University International Masters Programme in Environmental Studies and Sustainability Science (LUMES) or the Sustainability Science Master Program conducted a systematic review of the role of ecosystem services for sustainable adaptation planning. The project was supervised by Christine Wamsler (LUCSUS), David Abson and Henrik von Wehrden (Leuphana University).

Urban ecosystem services – joint education research project between LUCSUS and Leuphana University, Germany.
This research project, carried out in 2013 and 2014, provided some initial inputs into research on ecosystem-based adaptation. Students enrolled either in the Lund University International Masters Programme in Environmental Studies and Sustainability Science (LUMES) or the Sustainability Science Master Program will conduct a systematic review of the role of ecosystem services for sustainable urban development. The project was supervised by Christine Wamsler (LUCSUS), Christopher Luederitz (LUMES), Daniel Lang, David Abson and Henrik von Wehrden (Leuphana University).
Short titleEcosystem and Adaptation
AcronymECOSIMP
StatusFinished
Effective start/end date2013/12/012017/03/31

Collaborative partners

  • Lund University (lead)
  • Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
  • Kristianstad University
  • Kristianstad Municipality
  • City of Malmö
  • Lomma Municipality
  • City of Helsingborg
  • Trelleborg Municipality
  • Båstads kommun
  • Malmö University
  • Scania’s Association of Local Authorities (Kommunförbundet Skåne)

Funding

  • Swedish Environmental Protection Agency

UN Sustainable Development Goals

In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This project contributes towards the following SDG(s):

  • SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities
  • SDG 13 - Climate Action

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Climate Science

Free keywords

  • Adaptation, adaptive capacity, climate change, disaster, disaster risk, disaster management, cities, city authorities, climatic extremes, climate variability, ecosystem services, ecosystem-based adaptation, extreme temperatures, floods, risk governance, risk reduction, sea-level rise, sustainable transformation, people-oriented planning, urban planning, urban resilience, urban risk, urban transformation, vulnerability, windstorms.