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Integrating Technical, Nature-Based, and Social Solutions: A Stakeholder-driven Approach to Climate Adaptation-Mitigation Synergies

Dookie, Denyse S.; Dallo, Federico; Liu, Hai-Ying; Wezenberg, Sebastiaan; Jacobs, Piet; Khoury, Eliane; Marcheggiani, Stefania; Beaumet, Julien; Leone, Mattia; Cao, Tuan-Vu

As climate change impacts intensify across Europe and globally, societies are confronted with increasingly frequent and severe hazards that challenge public health, urban livability, and environmental sustainability. While adaptation measures are urgently needed to cope with current and near-term climate risks, it is becoming increasingly evident that mitigation efforts are essential to ensure a resilient and sustainable future. Too often, however, adaptation and mitigation strategies are planned and implemented in isolation, within sectoral silos, overlooking their potential interdependencies, synergies, and co-benefits. This contribution draws on the on-going experience and perspectives of the EU-funded healthRiskADAPT project, which addresses climate-related health risks by explicitly linking adaptation and mitigation pathways across multiple hazards.The project adopts a broad and integrated perspective that combines existing technical solutions, nature-based interventions, and engagement strategies, with a strong emphasis on co-benefits for health and well-being in the face of climate hazards namely heatwaves, air pollution including wildfire emission, and pollen. Central to this framework is the use of cost–benefit and co-benefit analyses to support decision-makers in identifying, prioritizing, and implementing measures that maximize societal resilience while delivering climate resilience solutions, considering natural based solutions (e.g., greening) as well as technical solutions (e.g., smart-buildings, do-it-yourself air purifier devices, evaporative cooling, high efficiency filtering). Beyond technical assessments, the healthRiskADAPT project recognizes that increasing resilience requires engagement beyond institutional actors. Social solutions such as education, awareness-raising, and capacity building at the stakeholder level are considered essential components of effective climate strategies. The contribution therefore also explores participatory formats and stakeholder engagement approaches designed to enhance understanding of climate-related health risks and support the co-design of locally relevant policies and interventions.By presenting the project’s methodological pathways, tools, and engagement strategies, this contribution illustrates how integrated adaptation–mitigation planning can be operationalized in practice. It highlights the value of moving beyond sector-specific solutions toward systemic approaches that acknowledge complex interdependencies between climate, environment, health, and society. Ultimately, the contribution aims to demonstrate how such integrated frameworks can support cities and regions in developing more coherent, evidence-based, and socially inclusive climate policies, strengthening resilience in the face of a changing climate.

2026

Atmospheric microplastics in the Arctic and mainland Norway: Occurrence, composition, and sources

Schmidt, Natascha; Davie-Martin, Cleo Lisa; Schulze, Dorothea; Celentano, Samuel; Bäcklund, Are; Evangeliou, Nikolaos; Eckhardt, Sabine; Herzke, Dorte

2025

Assessing the disease burden from air pollution in Europe 2022 - Insights from the ETC HE and EEA

Kienzler, Sarah; Wintermeyer, Dirk; Soares, Joana; Ortiz, Alberto González; Gsella, Artur; Horálek, Jan; Plass, Dietrich

2025

Evaluating the Combined Effect of Land and Marine CDR

Sathyanadh, Anusha; Muri, Helene

With the global annual mean temperature in 2024 exceeding 1.5°C above preindustrial levels, the world faces increasing risks from climate impacts. Achieving the long-term temperature goals of the Paris Agreement will require not only deep emission reductions but likely also large-scale deployment of carbon dioxide removal (CDR). However, major uncertainties remain regarding the Earth system’s response to CDR, its efficacy under overshoot conditions, and the potential of CDR to reverse warming beyond net-zero emissions.
Here, we use emission-driven simulations with activity-driven implementation of CDR in the Norwegian Earth System Model (NorESM2-LM) to assess the carbon sequestration efficacy and climate response of two CDR methods, Bioenergy with Carbon Capture and Storage (BECCS) and Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement (OAE), deployed individually and in combination. Our scenarios follow a high-overshoot trajectory (SSP5-3.4-OS) combined with ramped-up deployment of CDR. Additional CDR amounted to 5.2 million km² of bioenergy feedstock for BECCS in addition to the BECCS already present in the SSP5-3.4-OS and a CaO deployment rate of 2.7 Gt/year for OAE, derived from life cycle analysis. OAE is applied across the exclusive economic zones of Europe, the United States, and China. BECCS alone accounts for a 16 ppm reduction using 5.2 million km² of bioenergy crops, while OAE contributes 7 ppm reduction with a cumulative addition of 82.3 Gt of CaO, yielding a CDR effectiveness of 0.08 ppm per Gt of CaO. During the overshoot phase (2050–2060), the combined simulation shows a gross atmospheric CO₂ reduction of 2-4 ppm, increasing to a reduction of 23 ppm by 2100, indicating nearly additive contributions from the two methods.
Despite the substantial CO₂ drawdown and a net reduction of anthropogenic emissions by 5.4 GtCO₂/year by 2100 through additional CDR, the global temperature response remains modest and indistinguishable from internal variability. This highlights the importance of designing robust, scalable CDR portfolios along with ambitious emission cuts. Our results also call for better integration of CDR pathways into IAMs scenarios so that we can have them in ESMs to fully capture biogeophysical feedback and Earth system constraints in overshoot scenarios.

2025

2025

Estimating CRM loss in WEEE recycling process using MFA

Bourgé, Émilien; Abbasi, Golnoush

2025

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