28 results
Search Results
2. Perception du changement climatique et identité religieuse du Dagara du Sud-Ouest (Burkina Faso).
- Author
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MEDA, Mouoboum Marc and PALE, Augustin
- Subjects
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CLIMATE change , *TEACHING of controversial topics , *WATER supply , *AGRICULTURAL productivity , *RELIGIOUS life , *DAGAARE language , *RELIGIOUS identity - Abstract
The issue of climate change in southwestern Burkina Faso remains poorly documented and even sometimes controversial in discourse. For some, the South-west region remains one of the most watered regions of the country, based on the quantities of water measured globally. This may seem true because it is based on objective measurements, but the 'real' discourse of the Dagara of Dano and Dissihn refers to disturbances in the agricultural production system due to climate change. Using a socioanthropological approach, including quantitative data, observation data, focus groups and in-depth interviews, this paper seeks to understand the perception and experience of climate change by the Dagara of Dano and Dissihn in the light of the 'basic forms' of their religious life. The study reveals that the construction of climate changes in the Dagara language, the explanation of its causes and the description of its manifestations are intimately linked to the religious identity of the Dagara. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
3. Désinvestir le paradigme des investissements verts.
- Author
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Magalhães, Nelo
- Subjects
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SUSTAINABLE investing , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
In this paper we shed light and analyze a very broad consensus that exists among economists regarding green investments. Beyond some divergences, mainstream and heterodox economists present green investments as a necessary and first condition to solve the ecological crisis. The main part of our research focuses on the pitfalls of what we call the Green Investment Paradigm. We highlight the reductionist, normative, ahistorical and depoliticizing vision, a consequence of a problem-solving framework. We finally discuss what is outside of the box and highlight some of the debates that need to be invested to contribute to a serious assessment of the causes of ecological crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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4. Dossier « Politiques locales de l'énergie : un renouveau sous contraintes » – Potentialité et réalisations des politiques climatiques locales : vers l'institutionnalisation des plans climat territoriaux dans les villes moyennes françaises
- Author
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Arnauld de Sartre, Xavier, Baggioni, Vincent, and Bouisset, Christine
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change - Abstract
Academic research, policy reports and many agencies and organizations have focused on the role of cities in contributing to implement climate policies designed to mitigate, and adapt to, climate change. This led the French government to compel all local authorities responsible for over 20,000 inhabitants to adopt the so-called PCAETs (plans climat-air-énergie territorial/local climate, air and energy plans) by 2018. The purpose of our paper was to understand how these local plans seize on climate issues, by highlighting both the objectives they claim to achieve and the main ways used to reach them. First, we identified in the scientific literature the main levers available that enable cities to have an effect regarding climate change. Then, we compared these possibilities to the governance objectives of three middle-sized French cities assumed to have adopted ambitious PCAETs. We show that all three cities have energy saving and local coordination objectives, but that they act on only one of the three other levers they could theoretically mobilize (energy production, changes in infrastructure and modification of the urban structure). We also demonstrate that these cities implement their plan by attempting to extend the climate issues to the whole city council services and that they use labelling distinctions to motivate policy actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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5. Le climat « par procuration ». De l'usage des proxys pour relier les savoirs.
- Author
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Petit, Sandrine, Vergote, Marie-Hélène, Castel, Thierry, and Richard, Yves
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LOCAL knowledge , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Our paper is a reflexive return on an interdisciplinary and participative research program on climate change and its impacts in Burgundy. This work involved the joint participation of researchers in social sciences and in climatology and is also based on exchanges with stakeholders of water resources. To gain knowledge on past climate, scientists use proxies such as tree rings, CO2 levels in ice, dates of grape harvest, etc. We suggest that proxies may find a new place in knowledge construction on current climate change. Climate science can discover in other disciplines such as ecology evidence of recent changes, which represent proxies of climate change. Regular notes on changes recorded by citizens in their daily life environment are also a rich source of proxy indices on climate change; they contribute to knowledge on daily life and practice. Empirical and scientific knowledge, usually reputed to be wide apart, converge on the fact that climate is mainly appraised by proxy indicators. We suggest that connecting knowledges at a local scale will help give insight into climate change. To closely associate the global climate model to local knowledge and real-life experiences is a lever to adapt locally to climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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6. Racines citoyennes: la communauté locale au coeur de la transition écologique L'impact des initiatives climatiques locales et citoyennes à Montréal.
- Author
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Nadeau, Alexandra, Cloutier, Geneviève, Poitras, Claire, and Aylett, Alexander
- Abstract
Within urban areas, a growing number of citizens independently set up initiatives to face climate change, such as greening, urban agriculture or alternative energy projects. This paper seeks to understand how local citizens'actors contribute to urban climate governance through small-scale social and environmental experiments. Based on a Montreal (Canada) neighbourhood Rosemont-La Petite-Patrie case study of eight initiatives, the research is based on a theoretical framework combining climate governance experiments and sociotechnical transition theory. The accumulation and influence of such initiatives can contribute to redefine urban issues and demonstrate the feasibility and acceptability of simple solutions in order to implement an urban transition in face of climate change. Using their social network but also their objectives and know-how, urban activists establish their legitimacy as stakeholders who can propose alternatives to the municipal government. Results of the study also show that such local experiments reflect the growing power of informal collective modes of action. Indeed, through local "green" actions, citizens produce impacts that are immediate, concrete, simple and "personal-benefit-oriented." By doing so, they build new ecosystems made of various partnerships. This offers an innovative alternative model in the face of the current ways of consuming resources and about how we socially deal with the climate crisis under a paradigm shaped by capitalism and neoliberalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
7. Les systèmes aquacoles face au changement climatique.
- Author
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Lazard, Jérôme
- Abstract
Aquaculture accounts today for approximately 50% of total aquatic products for human consumption. This contribution is expected to increase in the future taking into account the fact that capture fisheries are estimated to have reached their maximum level of catches. While some research has been carried out concerning the impact of climate change on capture fisheries, only very few has been done yet dealing with aquaculture. The present review paper aims at identifying the challenges aquaculture will need to face in this new context of climate change and at suggesting ways in order to forecast and overcome them. Six main components of the aquatic environment are investigated in view of their potential direct impact on aquaculture: sea level rise, changes in temperature, rainfall, river floods and droughts, water availability, water quality deterioration and ocean acidification. Indirect impact of climate change on aquaculture concerns mainly fish meal and oil as strategic inputs for feed manufacture, coming from pelagic fisheries whose catches are affected by climate change. Two strategies may be developed to address climate change challenges. The first one consists in developing solutions enabling to deal with the environmental changes induced by climate change (high salinity tolerant strain, site selection); the second consists in developing systems where all the environmental parameters are strictly monitored and controlled. Reciprocally, the impact of aquaculture on climate change is briefly mentioned. At the end of this paper, a comprehensive worldwide survey carried out by FAO in 2016 shows clearly that measures have already started to be implemented to deal with climate change in the field of aquaculture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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8. Le boom de l'anacarde en Côte d'Ivoire : transition écologique et sociale des systèmes à base de coton et de cacao.
- Author
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Ruf, François, Kone, Siaka, and Bebo, Boniface
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FOOD security , *CLIMATE change , *DEFORESTATION , *AGROFORESTRY - Abstract
Côte d'Ivoire's agricultural dynamism continues to surprise commodity markets, especially those of cocoa and rubber. The country has also become the world's leading producer of cashew nuts. How to understand this boom? It is partly driven by markets (stagnation of cotton and cocoa prices versus rising prices of cashew nuts over two periods) but its determining factors are much more complex. The global hypothesis of this study is that the adoption of cashew tree is an adaptation to the loss of forest rent and to climate change, to the increasing cost of chemical inputs for cotton and cocoa, but also responds to land insecurity. An in-depth study was conducted in 2016–2017 in 6 sites chosen along a north-south gradient: Mankono, Konahiri, Bonon, Yamoussoukro, Bayota-Gagnoa and Soubré, with 40 to 100 farms per site, with partial updates in 2018. The survey confirms the hypothesis. Cashew tree, a robust, drought-tolerant tree, for the time being avoids planters relying on chemical inputs and credit, rebuilds a kind of forest canopy, but is also a land marker (it brings an informal land security in the home villages of the migrants but also in their cocoa villages). It becomes the tool of a social and ecological transition. That transition includes significant information, labour and investment flows between the two economic spaces. It is essentially a smallholders' innovation. In the cocoa regions, in its agroforestry version made of cocoa and cashew intercropping, the cashew tree reduces the mortality of cocoa seedlings, and its adoption takes its full dimension of agro-ecological transition. Is family farming alone achieving what the chocolate industry promises on paper: a "zero-deforestation" and sustainable cocoa farming? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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9. Colonisations et végétation en Afrique.
- Author
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Yengué, Jean-Louis
- Subjects
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PUBLIC administration , *HUMAN capital , *CLIMATE change , *COLONIZATION , *BUREAUCRACY - Abstract
This paper provides new insights into the vegetation of the black continent (Cameroon, Chad, Gabon, Gabon, Nigeria, Mali and Burkina Faso). It particularly explores the relationship between Africans and trees through the prism of colonization. The regions studied have suffered successive waves of occupation. Each newcomer had a specific relationship with the tree. Today, the result is an unstable balance between the environmental constraints that shape the background of the plant capital, the needs and means of the populations, all guided by cultural habits and pre-colonial and colonial heritage. These inheritances, which are diametrically opposed, are under tension in African societies, with the public administration acting as moderator. With little financial and human resources, it tries to preserve the wooded heritage, especially since we now know it is important in times of climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
10. Transposabilité temporelle des paramètres de modèles hydrologiques dans un contexte de changement climatique en Afrique de l’Ouest et Centrale.
- Author
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Ouermi, S., Paturel, J.-E., and Karambiri, H.
- Abstract
This paper investigates whether the calibrated parameter values for two rainfall–runoff models based on historical observed data can be used to reliably predict runoff responses to changes in future climate inputs. Analyses are carried out using historical monthly climate and runoff data from 27 catchments in West and Central Africa. Better performances are obtained when the models are calibrated on a dry period to predict runoff in a wet period. Similarly, it is easier for the models calibrated on a period of large hydroclimatic variability to predict runoff in a period of small hydroclimatic variability than the contrary. This paper tests also the assumption that transferability of rainfall–runoff models, variable hydroclimatic conditions, and local sensitivity of the model parameters can be linked. The inconclusive results still show variability according to the chosen efficiency criteria and selected periods. All these results indicate that the transfer of model parameters from one period to another can introduce a significant error in runoff simulations, which means increased uncertainty in the assessment of impact of climate and environmental changes, an essential question for West and Central Africa.Editeur M.C. Acreman; Editeur associé Gil Mahé [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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11. Du savoir vers le savoir-faire : évolution de la conception de la REDD+ et contraintes à sa mise en oeuvre en Afrique centrale.
- Author
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Demaze, Moïse Tsayem, Ngoufo, Roger, and Tchawa, Paul
- Abstract
From knowledge to know-how: evolution of REDD+ design and constraints to its implementation in central Africa. This paper describes the genesis of REDD + in order to analyze the relationship between the evolution of its design and the scientific literature published about it between 1997 and 2014. An analytical framework, involving the study of interactions between science and environmental public policy, and the discursive institutional analysis, is used. Three main phases are outlined. The Pre-RED phase, between 1997 and 2004, is that of the emergence of the concept of "compensated reduction" of emissions. Phase 2, between 2005 and 2009, is that of the effective development of REDD +, with a rich scientific production. The third phase, which began in 2010, focused on REDD+ readiness, with an abundant scientific production that has started to evaluate REDD+ procedures and pilots initiatives in developing countries. The paper then reports on the preparation for REDD+ in Central Africa countries, from a comparative reading of the readiness preparation proposals. Although this preparation is stepped, the necessary or specific know-how which can help avoid or reduce deforestation is not clearly stated. This highligts the diffuse nature of REDD+ even in its operational phase. The know-how is focused more on technical aspects related to monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV). It reveals inconsistencies between economic development and forest protection, as well as practical difficulties stressing the need for land reform and land planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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12. L'action des collectivités territoriales face au « problème climat » en France : une caractérisation par les politiques environnementales.
- Author
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Bertrand, François and Richard, Elsa
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE research , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy research , *CLIMATE change research , *POLICY science research , *COLLECTIVE behavior - Abstract
Our paper analyses the construction and implementation processes of local climate policies taking environmental policies as an analytical framework. Climate change, currently designated as "the climate problem", is considered as a new object for collective action. The analysis makes a distinction between mitigation actions that aim to reduce identified causes of the problem (control and reduction of greenhouse gas emissions) and adaptive actions designed to anticipate the consequences and effects of climate change. Based on an analysis of institutional and scientific literature and on observations collected since 2005 via several research projects on the integration of climate issues into regional and local actions (Bertrand et Larrue, 2007; Bertrand et Rocher, 2007; Bertrand et al. 2012), the paper focusses on two characteristic dimensions of local environmental action : first the territorialization of climate action considered through two periods of institutionalization -- the time of pioneers and the time of generalization --, and second the terms of operationalization of local climate policies analysed in terms of co-construction, consultation and evaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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13. Mise en place d'une démarche de développement durable au sein d'un institut public d'expertise.
- Author
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Merad, Myriam, Dechy, Nicolas, Guionnet, Dominique, and Marcel, Frédéric
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SUSTAINABLE development , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *ORGANIZATIONAL change , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
In 2007, the French government organized a series of meetings dealing with environment and sustainable development problematics under the title ⪡ Grenelle de l'Environnement ⪢. The conclusions of these meetings were introduced in a new law published in August 2009 (Law N° 2009-967) known as "Grenelle 1". Article 1 requires that the State designs a so-called Sustainable Development National Strategy (SDNS) structured around 9 targets. Target 1 consists in fighting against climate change. The SDNS is used as a basis for the involvement of public and private agencies in this perspective. The struggle against climate change and implementation of sustainable development principles within the agency framework raises a number of practical questions: how are adaptive methods and tools to be developed to help the agency reach a new balance given the environmental, economic and social risks induced by these broad targets? Are there any standards of reference and if not can an innovative approach be developed to support decision-making in situations of uncertainty? How can a management dashboard be developed for a proportional allocation of resources adapted to the various stakeholders and decision levels within the agency? How does one compare actions that can have different impacts in different sub-systems and with different time frameworks? Following a brief historical review of the origin of the challenges of sustainable development and climate change in the introduction part of the paper, we discuss the methodological approach selected and the investigator's intervention program in the first part of the paper. In the second part, we address practical issues for an agency facing the challenges of sustainable development and climate change. To this end we relate the experience of designing a sustainable development framework within a public agency using an organizational approach and a multiple criteria decision aid methodology. Finally, we discuss the decision-makers' choices and the lessons learned by implementing an innovative approach which we set up to face these new challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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14. Cette ambiguö adaptation au changement climatique.
- Author
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Godard, Olivier
- Subjects
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INTERNATIONAL cooperation on climate change , *PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation , *SYSTEMS theory , *NEGOTIATION , *CLIMATE change mitigation , *SOCIAL skills - Abstract
Adaptation to climate change: so ambiguous. The paper consiçlers the meaning of the increasing importance given to adaptation to climate change. First it examines the theoretical challenge of the concept from the systems theory standpoint. Paradoxically this leads to focussing attention on the values and structural features specific of the system considered rather than on the features of its environment. This outcome justifies the introduction of a key distinction between those features and components touching the identity of the system and those that are purely instrumental. The status of adaptation is then scrutinized both in the discourse of economic experts and in international negotiations that aim to set up a new climate agreement. Beyond the need to take account of the inescapable part of climate change over the next thirty years, the paper shows how in the past the notion of adaptation has been mobilized to downsize the pressing need to take immediate vigorous mitigation policies. At present, its seems that the rise of adaptation is the sign and vector of an implicit abandonment of the goal of containing climate change within the 2°C increase range from pre-industrial levels. This meaning finds an appropriate vehicle in the economic mode of representation that considers mitigation and adaptation as two alternative means towards the same end, i.e. maximization of an intertemporal social utility function. Several objections are raised against the current assumptions made in that context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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15. Étude de la répartition ancienne du hêtre à travers ses traces toponymiques.
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Tamine, Michel, Tarze, Dimitri, Mustière, Sébastien, Badeau, Vincent, and Dupouey, Jean-Luc
- Abstract
In this paper we evaluate the feasibility of estimating the previous distribution of a tree species, the beech, from the analysis of toponyms presently in use and referring to this species. Specialists from toponymy, agromomy and geometics have been involved. Toponyms are a precious source of information about past distribution: more than 6100 toponyms referring to beech have been detected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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16. Une brève histoire de l'adaptation : l'évolution conceptuelle au fil des rapports du GIEC (1990-2014).
- Author
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Simonet, Guillaume
- Abstract
A brief history of adaptation: conceptual evolution across the IPCC reports (1990-2014). In the past decade, work on the concepts of vulnerability, resilience and adaptation became central in climate change literature. At the same time a growing number of studies have focussed on the influence of cognitive factors on decision-making processes, such as interpreting elusive concepts such as adaptation. Comprehension of adaptation has evolved considerably since its recognition as a response to climate change in the 90s by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Currently protecting systems from weather events (the "adjustment adaptation" approach) is still the prevailing view in climate policies. Nevertheless, a shift toward a "transformation adaptation" approach is being observed. This position would take better account of the complexity of existing systems and allow reexamining their mechanisms (institutional, technical, financial). This paper aims to analyze conceptual advances on adaptation across the five IPCC reports from 1990 to 2014. This contribution attempts to show that the prominence given to adaptation in the latest report (2014) reflects the cognitive difficulty of conceiving this concept, responds to the growing demand to facilitate its operationalization and confirms its relevance for a better understanding of the underlying complexity of climate change and the global environmental change issue. Pursuing reflection on the adaptation concept should certainly contribute to the emergence of a promising and interdisciplinary field of research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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17. Les cobénéfices des politiques climatiques : un concept opérant pour les négociations climat ?
- Author
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Cassen, Christophe, Guivarch, Céline, and Lecocq, Franck
- Abstract
Co-benefits of climate policies: a potential keystone of climate negotiations? This paper analyzes the challenges related to the assessment of co-benefits of climate policies underpinned by the implementation of multi-objective policies which seek synergies between climate policies and other development objectives (poverty alleviation, employment, health etc.). The analysis highlights the increasing interest in co-benefits in the latest 5th IPCC report, in particular by integrated models. Nevertheless, the quantified evaluation of co-benefits is still confronted to several methodological limitations which reduce the scope of co-benefits, particularly at the global level. In a growing context of climate-development approaches in climate negotiations, this article insists on the need to also assess cobenefits of other policies which induce a significant part of GHG emissions. Considering climate policies focused only on Greehouse Gases emissions reduction limits the range of policy instruments to carbon taxation, tradable carbon emissions permits or dedicated mitigation and adaptation funds. This also hinders the integration of climate objectives in non-climate policies. Analyzing impacts of development policies on Green Gases emissions in the form of co-benefits requires to broaden the range of policy instruments and to take into account other drivers of emissions such as land dynamics. Including these mechanisms in integrated models therefore represents new scientific frontiers for integrated models in the coming years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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18. Les relations entre science et politique dans le régime climatique : à la recherche d'un nouveau modèle d'expertise ?
- Author
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Dahan, Amy and Guillemot, Hélène
- Abstract
Relations between science and politics in the climate regime: In search of a new model of expertise? Over the past 25 years, anthropogenic climate change has been addressed as a global environmental problem, which must be resolved by reducing human greenhouse gas emissions through a global agreement negotiated under the auspices of the UN. The role of sciences in the construction of the problem is essential and is aptly summarized by the claim that "science speaks truth to power," with science and politics assumed to be hermetically separated. Although this "linear model" is in fact largely inadequate to account for the much more complex links between climate science and politics, notably within the IPCC, it has long been hegemonic, leading to debates focused on science rather than political responses. This dominant approach has been undermined by the failure of international negotiations: it is now clear that scientific consensus does not suffice to produce significant global political decisions. It is now evident that climate change is a geopolitical, economic, and development problem as much as an environmental one. As the Paris CoP approaches, in a phase of political uncertainties and discussions around the need for a change of paradigm in negotiations, our paper examines critically the evolving relationship between science and politics in the climate regime, revisiting the role of science and discussing emerging critiques, proposals, and perspectives on models of expertise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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19. Les désaccords sur le changement climatique en France : au-delà d’un climat bipolaire.
- Author
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Guillemot, Hélène
- Abstract
Climate change controversies in France are often reduced to popular scientists denying human responsibility in global warming. Such polarization overshadows, however, a wide range of problems, actors and positions. In this paper, we show first that the visibility of these controversies is closely linked to the evolution of the climate issue as a public problem, which has moved through several stages over the past twenty years. The most recent period is characterized by an increase in the diversity of controversies and of “dissonant voices”. Part of the disagreements are about climate sciences (especially climate models) and involve the recognition and stabilization of a new disciplinary field and new relationships between science and politics. Another kind of controversy concerns the domain and boundaries of climate sciences, as climate change issues reshape neighbouring scientific fields and confront different epistemic cultures. Finally, political and philosophical disagreements sparked by anthropogenic climate change go beyond the usual conflict between pro and anti- environmentalism, and also concern the very definition of the climate issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Les conditions de référence de la directive cadre européenne sur l'eau face à la dynamique des hydrosystèmes et des usages.
- Author
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Bouleau, Gabrielle and Pont, Didier
- Subjects
- *
WATER supply , *BIOSAFETY , *BIOTIC communities , *RIVER ecology , *BODIES of water - Abstract
The reference conditions are a key concept of the European Water Framework Directive (WFD). This directive holds that the ecological status of a particular water body shall be assessed by quantifying the deviation from the typical reference conditions which refer to a stable state of an ecosystem in the absence of significant human disturbance. This concept is subject to criticism from several authors, all the more since global change will deeply modify the functioning of aquatic ecosystems and their associated biocenosis, whatever the impacts of human activities at local scale. In this paper, an ecologist and a sociologist reconsider the social and scientific construction of the reference conditions concept and associated rules ("one out - all out"). We explain its origin, success and limits, as well as the questions it raises. We point out aspects not considered in this concept and why it challenges the WFD implementation and future management of rivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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21. Perceptions du risque de submersion marine par la population du littoral languedocien : contribution à l'analyse de la vulnérabilité côtière.
- Author
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Hellequin, Anne-Peggy, Flanquart, Hervé, Meur-Ferec, Catherine, and Rulleau, Bénédicte
- Subjects
- *
FLOODS , *TERRITORIAL waters , *CLIMATE change , *GEOMORPHOLOGY , *RISK perception , *XYNTHIA Storm, 2010 - Abstract
Our research approach to vulnerability is based on four main components: hazards (marine-meteorological factors and climate change, geomorphological processes, etc.), assets at stake (identifica-tion and valuation, market and non market goods, damage valuation, etc.), management (public preven-tion and restoration policies), and perception of risk. Risk perception is a central feature in systemic vulnerability evaluation as it provides invaluable information on the diversity of stakeholder viewpoints, the degree of awareness and susceptibility of the exposed inhabitants, their attachment to the territory, their response to the hazard, etc. and thus gives indications on their adaptation capacity. Our paper ana-lyzes the results of a wide survey of 563 inhabitants of a low and very urbanized stretch of the French Mediterranean coast (Palavas zone, Hérault) conducted in 2009, before the Xynthia storm. Results show, for example, that when respondents were asked to choose from a wide range of risks of all types, they expressed greater fears regarding non-environmental risks. When we concentrated on environmental risks and asked the respondents to choose the three they considered to be the most important for their coastal area, "sea and pond pollution" was most often selected followed by "water or air pollution". The modalities related to an increase in sea level (45.5%) and flooding by the sea or ponds (43%) came last. This relative indifference to the danger of coastal flooding is not without consequence for home planning throughout the area considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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22. Le concept d'adaptation : polysémie interdisciplinaire et implication pour les changements climatiques.
- Author
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Simonet, Guillaume
- Subjects
- *
BIOLOGICAL adaptation , *NATURE & nurture , *INTERDISCIPLINARY research , *SEMANTICS , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Adaptation refers both to a process and its outcome, leading to much interpretation and debate. The origin of this semantic duality is related to the epistemological rupture occurred during the 19th Century from the collision between an emerging Theory of Evolution and the established Creationism. The temporal scale of Evolution is an abstract concept outside the realm of immediate human perception which makes the adaptation debate more complex. Though, adaptation became a central concept in several major disciplines of social as psychology, anthropology or geography as well as many fields of biology. In each discipline, environment is strongly linked to the concept of adaptation. Environmental sciences are in the intersection of natural and social sciences and have a strong interdisciplinary feature as adaptation does. That's why, because of the acceleration of global environmental and socioeconomic change, there is a growing interest in adaptation in the environmental science. Climate change is one of the major topics concerned by adaptation, since the theme became a priority in research and politic agenda. But implementation of adaptation to climate change faces to barriers, in particular due to its unclear definition. The objective of this paper is to contribute to greater understanding of the interdisciplinary nature of the concept of adaptation in the climate change through a comprehensive and interdisciplinary review of the literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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23. MISE EN EVIDENCE DE L'IMPACT DES CHAGEMENTS CLIMATIQUES SUR LES RESSOURCES EN EAUX SOUTERRAINES A L'ECHELLE DU BASSIN ERSANT: CAS DU BASSIN VERSANT N'FIS (Haouz - Marrakech Maroc).
- Author
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Saad, A., Laftouhi, N., and Taj-Eddine, K.
- Subjects
- *
GROUNDWATER & the environment , *WATERSHEDS , *PRECIPITATION anomalies , *CLIMATOLOGY - Abstract
This paper presents the work undertaken to study impacts of climatic changes on the groundwater recharge at the watershed N'Fis (Haouz Marrakech-Maroc). The data from 13 piezometric stations and 4 meteorological stations spanning from 16 to 37 year periods database with other spatial data (soil occupation, DEM etc.) were integrated in a user-friendly environment through GIS. The objective is to make a preliminary assessment of potential impacts of climate change on groundwater resources .The result shows that the piezometric fluctuations are not influenced by these variations, but they depend mainly on irrigation return. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
24. Changement climatique : faut-il récompenser la « déforestation évitée » ?
- Author
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Karsenty, Alain and Pirard, Romain
- Subjects
- *
DEFORESTATION , *CLIMATE change , *LABOR incentives , *POLITICAL planning ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Should "avoided tropical deforestation" be used to alleviate climate change? It is hotly debated today whether the reduction of tropical deforestation should be encouraged by means of a mechanism within the Convention on Climate Change. This mechanism ("avoided deforestation") would benefit developing countries which voluntarily reduce their deforestation rates, thereby generating at least two positive impacts: (i) an increase in the financial resources available to curb tropical deforestation, with expected positive side-effects on biodiversity conservation, the environmental services provided by these forests, and sustainable development as a whole, (ii) improved effectiveness of the global fight against climate change since tropical deforestation contributes extensively to world carbon emissions. Several proposals were designed for such a mechanism, yet their implementation poses significant methodological problems: (i) baselines calculated ex ante lack accuracy due to insufficient knowledge concerning the direct and underlying causes of deforestation, (ii) baselines calculated ex post lack legitimacy as they only refer to past trends, and (iii) uncertainty as to the actual possibility of relating a reduction in the deforestation rate to public policy options in the host country. Drawing lessons from our analysis, we recommend not promoting mechanisms based on financial rewards for an assumed voluntary reduction of national tropical deforestation rates. Two reasons justify our standpoint: the mechanism would probably generate fake reductions ("hot air") and undesirable side-effects would appear that are detailed in this paper. Rather, we encourage industrialized countries to better use already existing multi- and bilateral instruments, which focus on bettering governance deficiencies in countries hosting tropical forests. Besides, "perverse incentives" should be suppressed from public policies in tropical countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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25. Retrait séculaire des glaciers locaux de montagne : un exemple dans les Alpes occidentales françaises
- Author
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Deroin, Jean-Paul and Condom, Thomas
- Subjects
- *
GLACIERS , *REMOTE sensing , *METEOROLOGICAL precipitation , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Abstract: This paper reports on small mountain glacier variations in the northern Belledonne region (French Alps). Between 1926 and 2006, the evolution is surveyed using remote-sensing techniques. Then, it is correlated with climate data for the same period. In the late 1920s and in 1980, there was a maximum extent of the glaciers. The 1980 surge is due to high precipitations during the late 1970s, a similar trend being punctually observed in 1993. Between 1980 and 2003, the Rocher Blanc glaciers have strongly receded, their total surface being divided by ten. From 1997 onward, the large retreat can be explained by the increase of the mean daily temperature, especially the minimum daily temperature. Moreover, unusually high temperatures have been registered during the summer 2003 heat wave. Small mountain glaciers appear to be more sensitive to climate change than larger ones. Their surfaces change within 6 to 12 months. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Changement climatique et évolution du contenu pollinique de l’air dans sept pays européens : exemple du bouleau
- Author
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Emberlin, J., Laaidi, M., Detandt, M., Gehrig, R., Jaeger, S., Myszkowska, D., Nolard, N., Rantio-Lehtimäki, A., and Stach, A.
- Subjects
- *
BIRCH , *POLLINATION , *CLIMATE change , *ALLERGENS - Abstract
Abstract: The aim of this paper is to study the relation between climate change and the earliness of Birch pollination, a tree that produces allergenic pollen, which is of particular importance in north-western Europe. The study allowed us to make projections for the next few years in order to evaluate the evolution of Birch pollination starting date according to spring temperatures. It has been done in ten European locations, Kevo and Turku (Finland), London (United Kingdom), Paris and Lyon (France), Brussels (Belgium), Zürich (Switzerland), Vienna (Austria), Poznan and Cracow (Poland). The study period ranged from six to twenty-eight years depending on the city. Pollens were recorded daily thanks to volumetric Hirst traps, and the data were compared to monthly temperatures from January to May using correlations and multiple regressions. Except in Kevo where the trend is towards colder springs and a later pollination, in the other cities the results showed a spring warming associated with an earlier starting date of pollination: this trend is very well marked in Turku, Zürich, London, Vienna and Brussels, less evident in France while there is no trend in Poland. The results of this work should lead to an updating of the pollen calendars and the pollen forecast models, in the cities where there is a pronounced trend. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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27. The impact of climate change and integrated modelling: the share of uncertainty.
- Author
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Ambrosi, Philippe and Courtois, Pierre
- Subjects
- *
GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *GREENHOUSE gases , *POLLUTION prevention , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *AIR pollution , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
To what extent should States curb current and future greenhouse gas emissions? Integrated assessment models are commonly used to build or at least legitimize policy making. Although these models should not be viewed automatically as black boxes, they are particularly complex and are built on restrictive assumptions. Hence results derived from such models need to be taken with caution and on no account as "scientific truth". The aim of this paper is to provide a deeper insight into some of the key methods and assumptions these models are based on. We focused our work on climate change response functions. Assumptions and methods selected to evaluate the influence of climate change impacts will indeed strongly orientate the results derived from integrated assessment models based on cost-benefit concepts. It is therefore essential to point out their chief characteristics and limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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28. The role of CO2 capture and sequestration in mitigation of climate change
- Author
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Jean-Baptiste, Philippe and Ducroux, René
- Subjects
- *
GREENHOUSE gases , *SEQUESTRATION (Chemistry) , *GLOBAL warming , *CLIMATE change , *CARBON dioxide - Abstract
Increasing atmospheric level of greenhouse gases are causing global warming and putting at risk the global climate system. The main anthropogenic greenhouse gas is CO2. Technical solutions exist to reduce CO2 emission and stabilise atmospheric CO2 concentration, including energy saving and energy efficiency, switch to lower carbon content fuels like natural gas and to energy sources that operate with zero CO2 emissions such as renewable or nuclear energy, enhance the natural sinks for CO2 (forests, soils, etc.), and last but not least, sequester CO2 from fossil fuels combustion. The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the technology and cost for capture and storage of CO2. Some of the factors that will influence application, including environmental impact, cost and efficiency, are also discussed. Capturing CO2 and storing it in underground geological reservoirs appears as the best environmentally acceptable option. It can be done with existing technology; however, substantial R&D is needed to improve available technology and to lower the cost. Applicable to large CO2 emitting industrial facilities such as power plants, cement factories, steel industry, etc., which amount to more than 30% of the global anthropogenic CO2 emission, it represents a valuable tool in the battle against global warming. To cite this article: P. Jean-Baptiste, R. Ducroux, C. R. Geoscience 335 (2003). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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