2013
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1222471110
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Multisectoral climate impact hotspots in a warming world

Abstract: The impacts of global climate change on different aspects of humanity's diverse life-support systems are complex and often difficult to predict. To facilitate policy decisions on mitigation and adaptation strategies, it is necessary to understand, quantify, and synthesize these climate-change impacts, taking into account their uncertainties. Crucial to these decisions is an understanding of how impacts in different sectors overlap, as overlapping impacts increase exposure, lead to interactions of impacts, and … Show more

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Cited by 157 publications
(145 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…In this article, the climate projections are bias corrected against observations (Hempel et al, 2013), and the value of them has also been well demonstrated in a number of recent studies (e.g. Dankers et al, 2014;Elliott et al, 2014;Haddeland et al, 2014;Leng and Tang, 2014;Piontek et al, 2014;Prudhomme et al, 2014;Schewe et al, 2014). Moreover, the impact model (i.e.…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…In this article, the climate projections are bias corrected against observations (Hempel et al, 2013), and the value of them has also been well demonstrated in a number of recent studies (e.g. Dankers et al, 2014;Elliott et al, 2014;Haddeland et al, 2014;Leng and Tang, 2014;Piontek et al, 2014;Prudhomme et al, 2014;Schewe et al, 2014). Moreover, the impact model (i.e.…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Needless to say, the effects of climate change are not likely to decrease in the near future. And with each degree of warming, the environmental repercussions are neither incremental nor linear, but exponential [29,48,49]. Impacts include volatile and increasingly intense precipitation events, lengthier droughts, sea level rise and decreasing water resources [29].…”
Section: Resource Stress: Climate Change and Our Soil Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These are often the areas, as Wheeler [53] points out, where individuals are already suffering from hunger [30]. More positively, many researchers agree that increased temperatures will have a positive effect on production potential at higher latitudes, although the accompanying soil limitations at these latitudes are rarely addressed [49,50]. In fact, the most recent IPCC Report notes that scientific publications assessing climate impacts, adaptation and vulnerability have "more than doubled" between 2005 and 2010, while studies that address the intersection of climate change and soil resources, particularly the increasing prevalence of degraded soils, are minimal [28,29].…”
Section: Resource Stress: Climate Change and Our Soil Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Climate change impacts in a broad range of physical, biological and human systems have already been attributed to the observed warming for most regions of the World and are projected to further intensify (IPCC 2014). Particular risk is being attributed to climate change impacts that interact across sectors and spatio-temporal scales and lead to a cascade of impacts threatening development endeavours (Schellnhuber et al 2012;Piontek et al 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%