Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:473Hits:20753215Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID187142
Title ProperPorts and climate uncertainty
Other Title Informationan economic imperative for India
LanguageENG
AuthorThakur, Saurabh
Summary / Abstract (Note)Seaports are an indispensable asset in interconnected and interdependent global supply chains. Their complex infrastructural and operational systems and critical foreland and hinterland networks make ports a vital nodal point in the economic progress of nations at large, and the coastal urban agglomerations in particular. These critical maritime assets are currently under threat from the disruptive impacts of anthropogenic climate change, such as sea-level rise and intensifying extreme weather events. The economic losses from these impacts will span a wide range, from hard infrastructural damages to operational delays in supply chain management. Incorporating climate resilience in existing and new port infrastructure remains a complex challenge that will require port authorities to confront the problem of climate uncertainty and its socio-economic implications. This article focuses on seaports in the Indian context to highlight the complex threats of climate change. It examines the main debates on climate uncertainty and policymaking, path dependencies in port planning, global best practices, knowledge gaps and strategies that will be critical for Indian ports to better confront climate change induced disruptions in the near future.
`In' analytical NoteMaritime Affairs Vol. 17, No.2; Winter 2021: p.91-106
Journal SourceMaritime Affairs 2021-12 17, 2
Key WordsClimate Change ;  Resilience ;  Policymaking ;  Seaports ;  Port Infrastructure and Operations