Print

Climate Change-induced Water Stress and its Impacts on Natural and Managed Ecosystems

Publication
Citation

Anderson, Jason; Kathryn Arblaster; Justin Bartley et al. 2008: Climate change-induced water stress and its impacts on natural and managed ecosystems. Europäisches Parlament.

Impacts of climate change include increasing water scarcity and flood risk, along with decline in water quality. This study explores which ecosystems will be most impacted and analyses how the effects of climate change act as causes of additional emissions, thereby reinforcing global warming in a positive feedback loop. The paper was prepared for the European Parliament by Ecologic jointly with the Institute for European Environmental Policies (IEEP) and the Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE).

In the study, Ecologic contributed an assessment of potential changes in the water regime and their associated impact on land and soil resources. Furthermore, it provided insight into the interaction between deforestation, climate change and water availability. The analysis encompasses the complex ecological interconnections as well as a description of socio-economic drivers and consequences.

The study also highlights existing policy and management approaches, identifies gaps in the regime and concludes with sector-specific policy recommendations. The project is part of a framework contract with the European Parliament.

The study [pdf, 1.1 MB, English] is available online and is a result of the project "Consultancy for the European Parliament's Environment Committee".

More content from this project

Language
English
Authorship
Anna Leipprand
Cornelius Laaser
Katharina Umpfenbach
Jason Anderson (IEEP)
Kathryn Arblaster (IEEP)
Justin Bartley (IEEP)
Tamsin Cooper
Marianne Kettunen (IEEP)
Esko Kuusisto (SYKE)
Ahti Lepistö (SYKE)
Maria Holmberg (SYKE)
Funding
Published by
Year
Dimension
108 pp.
Project
Project ID
Table of contents
Keywords

Source URL: https://www.ecologic.eu/2333