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Climate and environmental change in arid Central Asia: Impacts,vulnerability, and adaptations
Authors:E. Lioubimtseva  G.M. Henebry
Affiliation:1. GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Section 5.4 Hydrology, Telegrafenberg, 14473 Potsdam, Germany;2. Center for international Development and Environmental Research (ZEU) at Justus-Liebig University Giessen, Zeughaus, Senckenbergstr. 3, 35390 Giessen, Germany;1. State Key Laboratory of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi 830011, China;2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 10049, China;1. State Key Laboratory of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi 830011, China;2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100039, China;3. Department of Geography, Ghent University, Ghent 9000, Belgium;4. Sino-Belgian Joint Laboratory of Geo-information, Urumqi, China;5. Institute of Remote Sensing and Digital Earth, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100094, China;6. Faculty of Environmental Sciences, University of Lay Adventists of Kigali (UNILAK), P.O. 6392, Kigali, Rwanda;7. Sino-Belgian Joint Laboratory of Geo-information, Ghent, Belgium
Abstract:Vulnerability to climate change and other hazards constitutes a critical set of interactions between society and environment. As transitional economies emerging from the collapse of the Soviet Union, the republics of Central Asia are particularly vulnerable due to (1) physical geography (which dominated by temperate deserts and semi-deserts), (2) relative underdevelopment resulting from an economic focus on monoculture agricultural exports before 1991, and (3) traumatic social, economic, institutional upheavals following independence. Aridity is expected to increase across the entire Central Asian region, but especially in the western parts of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan. Temperature increases are projected to be particularly high in summer and fall, accompanied by decreases in precipitation. We examine the concepts of vulnerability, adaptation, and mitigation in the context of climate change in Central Asia. We explore three major aspects of human vulnerability—food security, water stress, and human health—and propose a set of indicators suitable for their assessment. Non-climatic stresses are likely to increase regional vulnerability to climate change and reduce adaptive capacity due to resource deployment to competing needs.
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