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Losses and damages connected to glacier retreat in the Cordillera Blanca, Peru

Alina Motschmann (), Christian Huggel, Mark Carey, Holly Moulton, Noah Walker-Crawford and Randy Muñoz
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Alina Motschmann: University of Zurich
Christian Huggel: University of Zurich
Mark Carey: University of Oregon
Holly Moulton: University of Oregon
Noah Walker-Crawford: University of Manchester
Randy Muñoz: University of Zurich

Climatic Change, 2020, vol. 162, issue 2, No 39, 837-858

Abstract: Abstract The mountain cryosphere is one of the strongest affected systems by climate change. Glacier shrinkage leads to cascading impacts, including changes in river flow regimes, availability of water resources for downstream populations and economy, changes in the occurrence and severity of natural hazards, and cultural changes associated with landscape character and identity. In this study, we analyze impacts of mountain cryosphere change through a lens of Loss and Damage (L&D), a mechanism of international climate policy that tries to evaluate and reduce negative consequences of climate change for societies. We analyze the effects of climate change on glacier change, glacier lake formation and growth, hydrological regimes, and associated impacts on human societies in the Cordillera Blanca in the Peruvian Andes, now and under future scenarios. We use various methods such as literature review, glacial lake outburst flood, and hydrologic modeling to examine three major dimensions of cryospheric change and associated human impacts: (i) ice loss; (ii) glacial hazards; and (iii) variability of water availability. We identify the damage and losses in terms of the number of people affected by glacial hazards, monetized agricultural crop loss due to water loss, and non-economic values local people attribute to glacier loss. We find that different levels of warming have important negative but differentiated effects on natural and human systems. We also contend that the extent of loss and damage will largely be determined by governance and adaptation decisions such as water resource management and disaster risk management. We suggest that these lines of evidence are more explicitly taken into account in L&D policies.

Keywords: Cordillera Blanca; Peru; Mountain cryosphere; Glacier shrinkage; Loss and Damage (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)

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DOI: 10.1007/s10584-020-02770-x

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