Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Day Five Photos and Reflections

On day five, the workshop reconvened in Huaraz. The focus of the day was on developing a better understanding of vulnerability and adaptation, followed by continued group meetings to address impacts and plans of action for water, agriculture, and biodiversity.


John Furlow: What is adaptation and vulnerability?
  • Vulnerability often relates to disease, water availability, agricultural productivity, damage to infrastructure, hazards, and glacial melt.
  • Developing countries are often more vulnerable because they have agriculturally-based economies and are very dependent on water availability and weather conditions.


  • Adaptation is an adjustment in systems in response to actual or expected stimulus
Valued asset approach to vulnerability:
  • Assets are those things that a community values
  • What makes those assets vulnerable?
  • What are the ways to reduce those vulnerabilities?
  • Assets can be biological/physical, material, or human.
  • Vulnerability is a function of exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity.
Possible adaptive responses:
  • Policy change
  • Capacity building
  • Implementing best practices
  • Building infrastructure to protect valued assets
  • The community is an excellent source of information on identifying local assets, vulnerability, and actions for addressing vulnerability.

John Furlow (left), Glen Anderson (center), and Daene McKinny (right)
  • Valued assets are very vulnerable to climate change.
  • Economic development is an important way to build adaptive capacity and resilience at the community level.
  • Vulnerability and adaptation is a continual process.

1 comment:

  1. I'd love to see some images and read about the fieldtrip to Pastoruri.

    The trip w/Mark Carey and Benjamin Morales to Yungay/Lake Llanganuco was terrific. Yungay was a sobering reminder of the deadly potential that lurks in Peru's glacier lakes and towering glacier peaks. 20,000 buried alive in just a few minutes. Can Peru afford not to put climate change adaptation at the top of its list of priorities?

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