A business case for climate change adaptation by forest industry in central Canada: Presented at the CIF/IFC 2020 National Conference and 112th Annual General Meeting held 15–17 Sept. 2020
Extreme weather events and increasing climatic uncertainty are already affecting the Canadian forest sector. Climate change projections indicate impacts will likely worsen with increasing risk to forest operations and resources. Despite the calls for adaptation, there is little evidence that adaptat...
| 出版年: | The Forestry Chronicle |
|---|---|
| 主要な著者: | , , |
| フォーマット: | 論文 |
| 言語: | 英語 |
| 出版事項: |
Canadian Institute of Forestry
2021-06-01
|
| 主題: | |
| オンライン・アクセス: | https://pubs.cif-ifc.org/doi/10.5558/tfc2021-016 |
| _version_ | 1849512789855436800 |
|---|---|
| author | Sheri A. Andrews-Key Paul A. LeBlanc Harry W. Nelson |
| author_facet | Sheri A. Andrews-Key Paul A. LeBlanc Harry W. Nelson |
| author_sort | Sheri A. Andrews-Key |
| collection | DOAJ |
| container_title | The Forestry Chronicle |
| description | Extreme weather events and increasing climatic uncertainty are already affecting the Canadian forest sector. Climate change projections indicate impacts will likely worsen with increasing risk to forest operations and resources. Despite the calls for adaptation, there is little evidence that adaptation is taking place, whether in terms of planning or practices. Much of the forest industry response to date has been ad hoc and reactive. In contrast, Louisiana-Pacific Canada Ltd. (LP) in Swan Valley, MB decided to proactively address climate impacts and risks. A Climate Vulnerability Assessment (CVA) was completed to review past weather-related disruptions, identify their vulnerabilities to both the current weather extremes and to future climates. Through the help of an independent facilitator, the Canadian Council of Forest Ministers’ guidebook was tailored to meet LP’s context and needs. The CVA team identified a wide range of possible adaptation options and created business cases for short-listed adaption priorities that LP is beginning to pursue and implement. The outcomes from this effort show what is necessary to support an adaptation process that is mainstreamed into company decision-making procedures and can be applied more broadly across the Canadian forest sector. One key innovation was the incorporation of business cases into the assessment. Identifying and quantifying the expected benefits helped support vulnerability implementation in several different ways. Furthermore, at a more systemic level, the experience identifies the importance local knowledge plays in advancing adaptation action and how these local efforts can contribute towards supporting more effective climate adaptation action across the entire forest management system. This work also contributes to laying the groundwork for future policy focus, integrating science, and management into forest management systems. |
| format | Article |
| id | doaj-art-95d3b419fc6e4839a15fd41c4f94b09d |
| institution | Directory of Open Access Journals |
| issn | 0015-7546 1499-9315 |
| language | English |
| publishDate | 2021-06-01 |
| publisher | Canadian Institute of Forestry |
| record_format | Article |
| spelling | doaj-art-95d3b419fc6e4839a15fd41c4f94b09d2025-08-20T02:56:51ZengCanadian Institute of ForestryThe Forestry Chronicle0015-75461499-93152021-06-01970214815710.5558/tfc2021-016A business case for climate change adaptation by forest industry in central Canada: Presented at the CIF/IFC 2020 National Conference and 112th Annual General Meeting held 15–17 Sept. 2020Sheri A. Andrews-Key0Paul A. LeBlanc1Harry W. Nelson2Innovative Climate Strategies, Saskatoon, SK, Canada S7H 0B2Louisiana-Pacific Canada Ltd., Forest Resources Division, Swan River, MB, Canada R0L 1Z0University of British Columbia, Faculty of Forestry, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z4Extreme weather events and increasing climatic uncertainty are already affecting the Canadian forest sector. Climate change projections indicate impacts will likely worsen with increasing risk to forest operations and resources. Despite the calls for adaptation, there is little evidence that adaptation is taking place, whether in terms of planning or practices. Much of the forest industry response to date has been ad hoc and reactive. In contrast, Louisiana-Pacific Canada Ltd. (LP) in Swan Valley, MB decided to proactively address climate impacts and risks. A Climate Vulnerability Assessment (CVA) was completed to review past weather-related disruptions, identify their vulnerabilities to both the current weather extremes and to future climates. Through the help of an independent facilitator, the Canadian Council of Forest Ministers’ guidebook was tailored to meet LP’s context and needs. The CVA team identified a wide range of possible adaptation options and created business cases for short-listed adaption priorities that LP is beginning to pursue and implement. The outcomes from this effort show what is necessary to support an adaptation process that is mainstreamed into company decision-making procedures and can be applied more broadly across the Canadian forest sector. One key innovation was the incorporation of business cases into the assessment. Identifying and quantifying the expected benefits helped support vulnerability implementation in several different ways. Furthermore, at a more systemic level, the experience identifies the importance local knowledge plays in advancing adaptation action and how these local efforts can contribute towards supporting more effective climate adaptation action across the entire forest management system. This work also contributes to laying the groundwork for future policy focus, integrating science, and management into forest management systems.https://pubs.cif-ifc.org/doi/10.5558/tfc2021-016climate vulnerability assessmentcase studyvulnerability adaptationbusiness caseextreme weatherclimate change |
| spellingShingle | Sheri A. Andrews-Key Paul A. LeBlanc Harry W. Nelson A business case for climate change adaptation by forest industry in central Canada: Presented at the CIF/IFC 2020 National Conference and 112th Annual General Meeting held 15–17 Sept. 2020 climate vulnerability assessment case study vulnerability adaptation business case extreme weather climate change |
| title | A business case for climate change adaptation by forest industry in central Canada: Presented at the CIF/IFC 2020 National Conference and 112th Annual General Meeting held 15–17 Sept. 2020 |
| title_full | A business case for climate change adaptation by forest industry in central Canada: Presented at the CIF/IFC 2020 National Conference and 112th Annual General Meeting held 15–17 Sept. 2020 |
| title_fullStr | A business case for climate change adaptation by forest industry in central Canada: Presented at the CIF/IFC 2020 National Conference and 112th Annual General Meeting held 15–17 Sept. 2020 |
| title_full_unstemmed | A business case for climate change adaptation by forest industry in central Canada: Presented at the CIF/IFC 2020 National Conference and 112th Annual General Meeting held 15–17 Sept. 2020 |
| title_short | A business case for climate change adaptation by forest industry in central Canada: Presented at the CIF/IFC 2020 National Conference and 112th Annual General Meeting held 15–17 Sept. 2020 |
| title_sort | business case for climate change adaptation by forest industry in central canada presented at the cif ifc 2020 national conference and 112th annual general meeting held 15 17 sept 2020 |
| topic | climate vulnerability assessment case study vulnerability adaptation business case extreme weather climate change |
| url | https://pubs.cif-ifc.org/doi/10.5558/tfc2021-016 |
| work_keys_str_mv | AT sheriaandrewskey abusinesscaseforclimatechangeadaptationbyforestindustryincentralcanadapresentedatthecififc2020nationalconferenceand112thannualgeneralmeetingheld1517sept2020 AT paulaleblanc abusinesscaseforclimatechangeadaptationbyforestindustryincentralcanadapresentedatthecififc2020nationalconferenceand112thannualgeneralmeetingheld1517sept2020 AT harrywnelson abusinesscaseforclimatechangeadaptationbyforestindustryincentralcanadapresentedatthecififc2020nationalconferenceand112thannualgeneralmeetingheld1517sept2020 AT sheriaandrewskey businesscaseforclimatechangeadaptationbyforestindustryincentralcanadapresentedatthecififc2020nationalconferenceand112thannualgeneralmeetingheld1517sept2020 AT paulaleblanc businesscaseforclimatechangeadaptationbyforestindustryincentralcanadapresentedatthecififc2020nationalconferenceand112thannualgeneralmeetingheld1517sept2020 AT harrywnelson businesscaseforclimatechangeadaptationbyforestindustryincentralcanadapresentedatthecififc2020nationalconferenceand112thannualgeneralmeetingheld1517sept2020 |
