As the 2023 UN Climate Change Conference
(COP28) approaches, it is increasingly crucial to
understand and develop clear actions for not only
mitigation but also adaptation. Ahead of COP28, there is a need for conceptual clarity as to what exactly the Global Goal on
Adaptation (GGA) aims to achieve and how it can
be globally applicable when adaptation is so often
locally implemented.
One way to clarify the GGA is to adopt well-being as
the ultimate outcome toward which countries
should be working. While it is important to have a framework to give
more clarity and structure to the GGA, the focus of
this paper is on clarifying the high-level goal
itself—in other words, toward what end point the
framework should guide adaptation processes.
What will a state of enhanced adaptive capacity,
greater resilience, and reduced vulnerability look
like? In what areas is adaptation most crucial to ensure human and planetary survival and wellbeing in the face of climate change? This paper
presents non-exhaustive responses to these
questions based on analysis of available literature. We argue that at the most basic level, the Global
Goal on Adaptation should aim to achieve human
and planetary well-being even in the face of the
adverse impacts of climate change.
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- United States of America