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Major international, interdisciplinary research programmes are now
underway to increase our understanding of how the Earth System
operates and how it is changing through the effects of human
activities. Although understanding and predictive capacity are
still limited, scientists already agree that significant global
changes must be expected in the next 50 years that will affect the
capacity of the Earth to sustain life. Governments, business and
industry have, therefore, come to recognize that scientific
knowledge about the changing global environment - as yet incomplete
but rapidly evolving - is becoming indispensable for wise long-term
policy making, the goal being to design preventive, adaptive and
remedial measures. Thus global change science and policy making are
engaged in a process of forming a new partnership that is taking
shape as further insights evolve. Effective continuous interactions
between the partners requires mutual understanding: decision-makers
need to understand the unique potential but also the limitations of
the results of scientific research in progress while scientists
must take into account the priorities and constraints of
policy-makers in designing and implementing policies that will
promote long-term sustainability of life on this planet. This book
contributes in a unique manner to this mutual understanding: It
gives an overview of the ongoing relevant research focusing on the
two major international programmes, the International
Geosphere-Biosphere Programme and the World Climate Research
Programme. These are described in terms understandable to the
interested lay reader. The results of the latest review of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) are included. This
is followed by an analysis of the response process that is in
progress with respect to governments - singly and multilaterally -
by business and industry and by public interest groups. This
process is leading to interactive structures, assessment procedures
and legislation, nationally and internationally. Business and
industry are changing from mere watchfulness to recognition of new
opportunities for products and processes. Six interviews with
prominent figures from business and government circles in the
Netherlands provide a vivid illustration of the questions at issue.
The appendices provide overviews of methods for incorporating the
results of global change science into policy-making and development
of long lasting projects. Adaptation to climate change serves as an
example. Thus, for the first time, one book describes both ongoing
research work in global change and the response processes that the
research results are evoking. It is of interest to all
stake-holders in the scientific community as well as to
decision-makers in industry, business and government.
Will major global environmental change take place in the 21st
century? How much is known about the change? Can we find out more?
Must we take it seriously? Should we do something now, or can we
wait a decade or so? This book seeks to answer these questions.
Scientists are reaching consensus that rates of change in many of
the environmental indicators are already increasing in some cases,
and are likely to increase even more rapidly in the 21st century.
Although there are still uncertainties, the case is made that the
consequences of not taking action are too great to take a chance
that the scientists' expectations are wrong. The book leads to the
admonition - Think long term, act now Signs of Change (Chapter 1)
Chapter 1 provides a definition of global change and some examples
of changes already taking place in the driving forces
(demographics, energy consumption, deforestation, 'mining of
groundwater', etc. ) and in some of the environmental variables
(increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, depletion of
stratospheric ozone, desert ification, decreasing biodiversity,
etc. ) The chapter raises some important questions for science and
society, and concludes that global environmental change is both a
scientific and a political issue."
Major international, interdisciplinary research programmes are now
underway to increase our understanding of how the Earth System
operates and how it is changing through the effects of human
activities. Although understanding and predictive capacity are
still limited, scientists already agree that significant global
changes must be expected in the next 50 years that will affect the
capacity of the Earth to sustain life. Governments, business and
industry have, therefore, come to recognize that scientific
knowledge about the changing global environment - as yet incomplete
but rapidly evolving - is becoming indispensable for wise long-term
policy making, the goal being to design preventive, adaptive and
remedial measures. Thus global change science and policy making are
engaged in a process of forming a new partnership that is taking
shape as further insights evolve. Effective continuous interactions
between the partners requires mutual understanding: decision-makers
need to understand the unique potential but also the limitations of
the results of scientific research in progress while scientists
must take into account the priorities and constraints of
policy-makers in designing and implementing policies that will
promote long-term sustainability of life on this planet. This book
contributes in a unique manner to this mutual understanding: It
gives an overview of the ongoing relevant research focusing on the
two major international programmes, the International
Geosphere-Biosphere Programme and the World Climate Research
Programme. These are described in terms understandable to the
interested lay reader. The results of the latest review of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) are included. This
is followed by an analysis of the response process that is in
progress with respect to governments - singly and multilaterally -
by business and industry and by public interest groups. This
process is leading to interactive structures, assessment procedures
and legislation, nationally and internationally. Business and
industry are changing from mere watchfulness to recognition of new
opportunities for products and processes. Six interviews with
prominent figures from business and government circles in the
Netherlands provide a vivid illustration of the questions at issue.
The appendices provide overviews of methods for incorporating the
results of global change science into policy-making and development
of long lasting projects. Adaptation to climate change serves as an
example. Thus, for the first time, one book describes both ongoing
research work in global change and the response processes that the
research results are evoking. It is of interest to all
stake-holders in the scientific community as well as to
decision-makers in industry, business and government.
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