Climate change response in Europe: What's the reality? Analysis of mitigation and adaptation plans from 200 urban areas in 11 countries.
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2014
abstract:
Urban areas are pivotal to global adaptation and mitigation efforts. But how do
cities actually perform in terms of climate change response? This study sheds light on the state
of urban climate change adaptation and mitigation planning across Europe. Europe is an
excellent test case given its advanced environmental policies and high urbanization. We
performed a detailed analysis of 200 large and medium-sized cities across 11 European
countries and analysed the cities' climate change adaptation and mitigation plans. We investigate the regional distribution of plans, adaptation and mitigation foci and the extent to
which planned greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions contribute to national and international
climate objectives. To our knowledge, it is the first study of its kind as it does not rely on
self-assessment (questionnaires or social surveys). Our results show that 35 % of European
cities studied have no dedicated mitigation plan and 72 % have no adaptation plan. No city has
an adaptation plan without a mitigation plan. One quarter of the cities have both an adaptation
and a mitigation plan and set quantitative GHG reduction targets, but those vary extensively in
scope and ambition. Furthermore, we show that if the planned actions within cities are
nationally representative the 11 countries investigated would achieve a 37 % reduction in
GHG emissions by 2050, translating into a 27 % reduction in GHG emissions for the EU as a
whole. However, the actions would often be insufficient to reach national targets and fall short
of the 80 % reduction in GHG emissions recommended to avoid global mean temperature
rising by 2 °C above pre-industrial levels.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Salvia, Monica; Pietrapertosa, Filomena
Published in: