Climate change science is evolving toward adaptation and mitigation solutions

Author:

Khojasteh Danial12ORCID,Haghani Milad3,Shamsipour Abbas4,Zwack Clara C.5,Glamore William1,Nicholls Robert J.6,England Matthew H.78

Affiliation:

1. Water Research Laboratory, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering UNSW Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Water, Wetlands and Coastal Science, NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy the Environment and Water Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of New South Wales Sydney New South Wales Australia

4. School of Mechanical Engineering Shiraz University Shiraz Iran

5. Department of Nursing and Allied Health, School of Health Sciences Swinburne University of Technology Victoria Australia

6. Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research University of East Anglia (UEA) Norwich UK

7. Centre for Marine Science and Innovation University of New South Wales Sydney New South Wales Australia

8. ARC Australian Centre for Excellence in Antarctic Science University of New South Wales Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractSynthesizing the extensive and ever‐growing climate change literature is becoming increasingly challenging using conventional review processes, yet is crucial to understand key trends, including knowledge and policy related gaps, managing widespread impacts, and prioritizing future efforts. Here, we employ a systematic approach to interrogate ~130,000 international peer‐reviewed climate change articles published between 1990 and 2021. We examine the time–space evolution of research topics and international collaborations, providing insights into broad scale climate change research themes, how they are developed and/or are interconnected. Our analyses indicate that significant thematic adjustments have occurred over the past three decades. Whilst all major areas of climate research have grown in output metrics, there has been a relative shift from understanding the physical science basis toward evaluating climate change impacts, adaptation, and mitigation. There has also been a significant internationalization of climate research with the ratio of international over domestic research increasing from 0.05 in 1990 to nearly 0.60 in 2021. These findings reveal a growing need for collective and coupled adaptation‐mitigation actions to address climate change. The repeatable method and overall results presented herein can help to complement existing large‐scale literature assessments, such as future IPCC reports.This article is categorized under: Climate, History, Society, Culture > Disciplinary Perspectives Integrated Assessment of Climate Change > Methods of Integrated Assessment of Climate Change

Publisher

Wiley

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