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Water and Climate Change Adaptation

Policies to Navigate Uncharted Waters

image of Water and Climate Change Adaptation

This report sets out the challenge for freshwater in a changing climate and provides policy guidance on how to navigate this new “waterscape”. It highlights the range of expected changes in the water cycle and the challenge of making practical, on-site adaptation decisions for water. It offers policymakers a risk-based approach to better “know”, “target” and “manage” water risks and proposes policy guidelines to prioritise action and improve the efficiency, timeliness and equity of adaptation responses.

The report also highlights general trends and good practices drawn from the OECD Survey of Policies on Water and Climate Change Adaptation, covering all 34 member countries and the European Commission. Individual country profiles are available, which provide a snapshot of the challenges posed by climate change for freshwater and the emerging policy responses (on-line only).

Finally, the report highlights the benefits of well-designed economic instruments (e.g. insurance schemes, water trading, water pricing), ecosystem-based approaches and ‘real options’ approaches to financing. These approaches can improve the flexibility of water policy and investment, reducing the cost of adjusting to changing conditions.

English Also available in: French

Executive summary

Climate change is reshaping the future for freshwater. It aggravates existing strains and complicates future planning, management and investment in water infrastructures. Reducing the adverse consequences and costs of climate change and tapping into any opportunities will require adjusting to new circumstances – that is, adaptation. Adaptation requires flexibility in a domain characterised by long-lived infrastructure with high sunk costs. It requires foresight where there is low confidence in climate projections for key water parameters at local scale. It also calls for adaptive water governance where inertia and poor water governance are more often the norm than the exception. In response to this challenge, OECD countries are making progress tackling this issue and a number of lessons learned can be drawn from experience to date.

English Also available in: French

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