National Interdisciplinary Climate Risk Assessment


Publisher: Metis Institute for Strategy and Foresight, adelphi research, Bundesnachrichtendienst, and Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research

Author(s): Jakob Gomolka, Benjamin Pohl, Frank Sauer, Fanny Thornton, and Konstantinos Tsetsos

Date: 2024

Topics: Assessment, Climate Change, Governance

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This National Interdisciplinary Climate Risk Assessment outlines the risks to Germany’s national security resulting from climate change up until 2040. Ensuring national security means protecting the population, the territory and the free democratic basic order of the Federal Republic of Germany. The National Security Strategy specifies peace, security, prosperity and stability, as well as a sustainable use of natural resources, as German interests. In this respect, climate change entails security risks.

 

This assessment is based on climate science as well as interdisciplinary knowledge from the social sciences. Thanks to large empirical databases and efficient models, climate researchers are now able to create forecasts and risk analyses that are backed by quantitative data. Strategic foresight, in contrast, involves imagining plausible future scenarios based on qualitative data. Both approaches are ways of “thinking ahead”, i.e. the systematic analysis of the genesis and implications of anticipated future scenarios in order to identify needs, alternatives and options for action.