The climate system provides the conditions for all living beings to thrive. Human actions during the last centuries though are increasingly disrupting the delicate balance of the climate system, threatening the survival of both humans and countless species. Consequently, also our local climate conditions are increasingly modified, resulting in ever more extreme weather events: droughts and related food scarcity, heat and related health risks, extreme precipitation and flooding.
Knowing the consequences of our actions for the climate system, we can define, explore, and adopt measures to reduce or even avoid the impacts of these actions. A holistic perspective is however needed to understand what adaptation measures we can “afford” without further harming the climate, as mitigation and adaptation measures do not take place in isolation. Rather, they are interconnected in various ways which may lead to new risks we need to manage without jeopardising our climate mitigation goals. KNOWING therefore aims to explore such “response risks” and how to avoid them, and to communicate this knowledge in a comprehensive and understandable way to all groups (policymakers, stakeholders, and civil society) in order to provide clear guidelines for creating a desirable future and selecting effective combinations of measures for four different types of regions: urban regions, coastal regions, river regions, and agroforestry regions. To achieve this, a systemic view is taken, modelling all relevant causal links and resulting feedback to analyse and optimise mitigation and adaptation pathways. This is considered as the main methodological novelty in KNOWING.