Sustainable Urban Systems: Articulating a Long-term Convergence Research Agenda

In 1950, fewer than one-third of the world's people lived in cities. Today more than half do. By 2050, urban areas will be home to some two-thirds of Earth's human population. This scale and pace of urbanization has never been seen in human history.

The report provides a foundation for new scientific collaborations on how cities function, how they grow, and how they can be managed sustainably for decades to come.

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Scope
National
Global
Content
Adaptation Planning
Climate Mitigation
Published
January, 2018
State
All
Topic
Built Environment

The Global Risks Report 2018

Each year the Global Risks Report works with experts and decision makers across the world to identify and analyze the most pressing risks that we face. As the pace of change accelerates, and as risk interconnections deepen, this year’s report highlights the growing strain we are placing on many of the global systems we rely on. The top risks listed in this year's report, which reflect the concerns of global industry leaders, include extreme weather events, natural disasters, and failure of climate change mitigation and adaptation—ranked first, second, and fifth in likelihood and second, third, and fourth in impact, respectively.

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Report Cover
Scope
Global
Content
Climate Impacts
Published
January, 2018

Explaining Extreme Events from a Climate Perspective (2016)

This BAMS special report presents assessments of how human-caused climate change may have affected the strength and likelihood of individual extreme events. This sixth edition of explaining extreme events of the previous year (2016) from a climate perspective is the first of these reports to find that some extreme events were not possible in a pre-industrial climate. 

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Report cover
Scope
National
Global
Content
Climate Impacts
Published
December, 2017
Topic
Coasts
Ecosystems
Water
Marine
Built Environment
Region

Beyond Downscaling: A Bottom-Up Approach to Climate Adaptation for Water Resources Management

Climate change adds uncertainty to already complex global water challenges. Though no standard method has been adopted yet by the World Bank, common practice uses downscaled precipitation and temperature projections from Global Climate Models (GCMs) as input to hydrologic models. While this has been useful in some applications, they often give too wide a dispersion of readings to provide useful guidance for site-specific water resources management and infrastructure planning and design. Rather than design for an uncertain situation selected a priori, the so-called “bottom-up” approaches explore the sensitivity of a chosen project to the effects of uncertainties caused by climate change. Supported by the Water Partnership Program, this book summarizes alternatives explored by a group of organizations that belong to the Alliance for Global Water Adaptation (AGWA), to provide practitioners with the tools to adapt to the realities of climate change by following a decision-making process that incorporates bottom-up thinking.

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Report Cover
Scope
Global
Content
Vulnerability Assessments
Adaptation Planning
Published
December, 2014
State
All
Topic
Water
Energy
Built Environment

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