Rapid assessment of future impacts on marine assets in Milne … · 2018. 10. 12. · Rapid...

Preview:

Citation preview

Rapid assessment of future impacts on marine assets in Milne Bay, Papua New Guinea

Tim Skewes, James Butler, Vincent Lyne, David Brewer Climate Adaptation Flagship 30th June 2010

Melanesia challenge

•  Context •  Rapid rate of change in drivers (human population growth,

climate change, deforestation) •  Livelihood dependence on marine assets •  High global marine biodiversity values •  Complex marine systems •  Limited data and capacity in government •  Little integrated natural resource and livelihoods planning •  Coral Triangle Initiative

•  Urgent need for rapid vulnerability assessments •  Based on limited data •  Appropriate resolution for government

Melanesian coastal and marine ecosystem assets

Case study in Milne Bay, PNG

Milne Bay

•  250,000 people •  High population growth (2.7% p.a.) •  85% customary land ownership •  Low per capita income •  Heavy reliance on marine and coastal environment

Asset-threat interaction

Exposure + Sensitivity

Potential impact

Threat profile Asset profile

Adaptation options

Interaction model

Residual impact

Weighted impact

Participatory

Expert driven

Climate threats

Applying regional A1 projection data:

•  Temperature, SST •  2030: +1 deg C; 2100: +3 deg C

•  Ocean acidification •  2030: very small; 2100: -0.25 pH

•  Sea level rise •  2030: +10 cm; 2100: +40 cm

•  Currents patterns •  2030: +5%; 2100: +10%

•  Storms and Cyclones •  2030: small increase; 2100: moderate increase

•  Phytoplankton productivity •  2030: +50%-100%; 2100: +100%-150%

•  Rainfall •  2030: ?; 2100: overall +30% but dryer winters

Melanesian coastal and marine ecosystem assets: AusAID

Potential impacts for Milne Bay, 2030

Melanesian coastal and marine ecosystem assets: AusAID

Potential impacts for Milne Bay, 2100

Sustainable Futures for Milne Bay

Milne Bay subregions

Melanesian coastal and marine ecosystem assets

Downscaling future SST changes - Bluelink

Melanesian coastal and marine ecosystem assets

Coral reefs: interaction map

Spatial results: subregions

Sustainable Futures for Milne Bay

Subregion name

Potential impact 2030

Weighted impact 2030

Potential impact 2100

Weighted impact 2100

Milne Bay -0.28 -0.24 -0.47 -0.42 Misima -0.23 -0.19 -0.42 -0.34 Dawson -0.22 -0.22 -0.41 -0.41 Trobriand -0.20 -0.20 -0.42 -0.42 Northern Owen-Stanley -0.19 -0.15 -0.35 -0.29 Collingwood Bay -0.19 -0.13 -0.37 -0.26 Southern Owen-Stanley -0.18 -0.15 -0.36 -0.29 Samarai -0.18 -0.18 -0.35 -0.35 Woodlark -0.18 -0.18 -0.37 -0.37 Louisiade Archipelago -0.16 -0.18 -0.33 -0.39 Pocklington -0.10 -0.10 -0.20 -0.20 Coral Sea -0.01 -0.01 -0.02 -0.02 Louisiade Basin -0.01 -0.01 -0.02 -0.02 Trobriand Trough -0.01 -0.01 -0.02 -0.02 Woodlark Basin -0.01 -0.01 -0.02 -0.02

Applications for integrated planning

•  Catalyst for integrated natural resource management, livelihoods and adaptation planning

•  Support tool for scenario planning

•  Options for validating model with local knowledge of marine assets and their weighted values

Contact Us Phone: 1300 363 400 or +61 3 9545 2176

Email: enquiries@csiro.au Web: www.csiro.au

Thank you

CSIRO Wealth from Oceans Flagship

Timothy Skewes

James Butler

Phone: (07) 38267181 Email: tim.skewes@csiro.au Web: www.csiro.au/science/MCBM.html