Why mitigation is bad
So, from this short review of risk response strategies, I hope that you can go beyond mitigating everything in site and can propose some other ways to deal with risks on your project. Mitigation is nice but it should get a day off once in a while especially if other responses are available and applicable. She has worked with one of the top five consulting firm, where she led projects in the information technology, banking, government, and securities sectors as well as being a manager in the risk management practice.
Sylvie writes about risk management , communication , and PMO. Your email address will not be published. Sylvie Edwards. Read Next Portfolio Management November 8, Risk Management November 4, Program Management November 1, November 8, November 4, November 3, November 2, November 1, October 28, These U. The CMS is improving the monitoring of global carbon stocks where carbon is stored around the planet and fluxes how carbon is cycled from one stock to the next.
The work will also help inform near-term policy development and planning. About three-quarters of fossil-fuel carbon dioxide emissions come from about 2 percent of the land surface — the cities and the power plants that feed them. At present the focus is on pilot projects in Los Angeles and Paris that sample the air there. The goal is to add other cities around the world and to ultimately deploy a worldwide urban carbon monitoring system that will enable local policymakers to fully account for the many sources and sinks of carbon and how they change over time.
These sources of energy include the wind, waves, the Sun and biofuels. Images of Change. Explore a stunning gallery of before-and-after images of Earth from land and space that reveal our home planet in a state of flux.
Climate Mobile Apps. Keep track of Earth's vital signs, see the planet in a state of flux and slow the pace of global warming with NASA's free mobile apps. Climate Time Machine. Travel through Earth's recent climate history and see how increasing carbon dioxide, global temperature and sea ice have changed over time.
Eyes on the Earth. Global Ice Viewer. Especially when we know that the worst climate impacts hit poor families and people of color the hardest. And on and on. Potential climate adaptations span a variety of sectors, from agricultural, to coastal, to urban, and many more.
Some strategies include:. Truly solving the climate crisis calls for mitigation. If adaptation is pouring water out to stay afloat in the moment, sealing the leak to halt more water coming in is mitigation. These are just four examples, but we have dozens of tried-and-tested ways to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions. So, given those two choices, how do we decide which way to go? Effective implementation depends on policies and cooperation at all scales and can be enhanced through integrated responses that link mitigation and adaptation.
The scientists are right — we need all hands and solutions on deck. These two solution paths are far from equal. Both may protect people from a changing climate, but they have very different outcomes. Ultimately, all countries around the world, regardless of their size or wealth, have limited resources they can use to respond to the climate crisis.
On the other, mitigation is a global, public good with far-away benefits. Which leads most nations — from an economic perspective — to choose the former option. The reality, as he explains, is that wealthy countries have the power of choice. They can bear the cost of reducing their emissions to the benefit of the world, or they can just choose to adapt, ensuring their short-term security while leaving everyone else behind. This is not just a problem for today, though.
This triggers intricate questions of intergenerational justice … Our lack of success to curb greenhouse gas emissions seems to be compromising the right to life, liberty and security of person. Failing to mitigate our emissions today is leaving this problem — or really, a worse version of it — for our children and grandchildren to deal with.
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