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  2. How Cities Are Using Nature-Based Solutions to Tackle Floods

    www.aol.com/cities-using-nature-based-solutions...

    Nature-based solutions can create more sponge-like conditions to help absorb run-off. Yet, cities have long depended on so-called gray solutions—engineered infrastructure made of materials ...

  3. Nature-based solutions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nature-based_solutions

    The term nature-based solutions was put forward by practitioners in the late 2000s. At that time it was used by international organisations such as the International Union for Conservation of Nature and the World Bank in the context of finding new solutions to mitigate and adapt to climate change effects by working with natural ecosystems rather than relying purely on engineering interventions.

  4. Nature-positive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nature-positive

    Nature-positive is a concept and goal to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030, and to achieve full nature recovery by 2050. [1] According to the World Wide Fund for Nature , the aim is to achieve this through "measurable gains in the health , abundance , diversity, and resilience of species , ecosystems , and natural processes."

  5. Ecosystem-based adaptation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosystem-based_adaptation

    Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) describes a variety of approaches for adapting to climate change, all of which involve the management of ecosystems to reduce the vulnerability of human communities to the impacts of climate change such as storm and flood damage to physical assets, coastal erosion, salinisation of freshwater resources, and loss of agricultural productivity.

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  7. Climate resilience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_resilience

    Climate resilience is generally considered to be the ability to recover from, or to mitigate vulnerability to, climate-related shocks such as floods and droughts. [7] It is a political process that strengthens the ability of all to mitigate vulnerability to risks from, and adapt to changing patterns in, climate hazards and variability.

  8. Removal Units - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Removal_Units

    Under Article 3.3 of the Kyoto Protocol, Annex I Parties could recognise the biosequestration, the removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by carbon sinks, created by direct human-induced afforestation, reforestation and deforestation since 1990, in determining whether they met their emission reduction commitments under the Protocol.

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