Climate Change Adaptation: Operational Taxonomy and Metrics

The development of adaptation indicators and metrics that can be aggregated and compared to support environmental management is a key challenge for climate experts, finance institutions, and decision-makers. To provide an operational ex-ante evaluation of alternative adaptation strategies, statistical evaluation was conducted on 1562 adaptation projects contained in the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) submitted by almost all parties who signed the Paris Agreement in 2015. As a preliminary stage, we are suggesting a physical risk taxonomy derived from climate model databases and an adaptation project taxonomy using a text analysis. The second stage, consisting of an evaluation metric using a correspondence analysis between adaptation projects and risk classes, was inspired by the analogy with adaptation mechanisms in living organisms—assessing the correct correspondence between threats from the environment and adaptive solutions. It allowed us to develop a coefficient ranging from 0 to 1, expressing the degree of correspondence between adaptive measures’ categories and hazard levels, which we refer to as fitness. Our coefficient would make it possible to compare project classes with each other ex-ante or, conversely, to deduce the most relevant adaptation solutions from climate-change-related hazards. The fitness coefficient could also be used as a preliminary stage of assessment to create a short-list of adaptation projects that are relevant to address a given physical hazard with a given intensity.


Introduction
Adaptation to climate change has been difficult and is likely to persist as a major challenge in the future. Global warming, as well as the resulting extreme fluctuation in temperature and precipitation, creates many difficulties in various sectors, such as energy, agriculture, health, security, etc. [1][2][3][4]. Global organizations such as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, created in 1988) and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC, adopted by 154 Parties in 1992 at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro) were created to document climate change impacts and to develop and evaluate possible mitigation and adaptation strategies.
Mitigation should not be the only lever for action. Indeed, insufficient mitigation makes adaptation necessary. Thus, the idea that synergies between mitigation and adaptation should be promoted is now widely accepted [5,6]. In 2014, the IPCC stated that: "Adaptation and mitigation are complementary strategies to reduce and control the risks associated with climate change" [7]. In 2015, Article 7 of the Paris Agreement stated that: "The Parties shall establish the global objective on adaptation to enhance adaptive capacity, increase resilience to climate change, and reduce vulnerability to climate change ( . . . )". However, before this recent acknowledgement, adaptation to climate change has long Decision-makers, project leaders, and funders agree on the usefulness of creating classes or categories for both climate vulnerabilities and adaptation measures, as described below. A taxonomy on which everyone would agree would allow, among other uses, the prioritization of actions in relation to the issues at stake and, above all, the comparison of projects' relevance, efficacy, or efficiency with each other.
In 2014, the IPCC [7] released a comprehensive report on future climate changes, risks, and impacts, as well as on possible pathways for adaptation and mitigation. More recently, Mora et al. [21] studied the risks related to climate change as an expression of hazards and their frequency by highlighting already existing risks and their possible amplification in the future. As the necessity for adaptation actions is clearer, the foundations of a framework for assessing the relevance and the monitoring and evaluation (M&E) of adaptation projects have been laid [22]. The IDDRI (the French Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations) proposed an approach that consists of assessing progress on adaptation directly at the global level so as to avoid being locked into the political and diplomatic barriers inherent to any country-level reporting system. Training tools and modules for Parties to the UNFCCC have been proposed, such as those of the Consultative Group of Experts [23], and others from international bodies such as the EU Climate support tool, the UK Climate Wizard, the US Agency for International Development (USAID) framework, and Climate Risk Informed Decision Analysis (CRIDA). These are adaptive project planning methods, based partly on vulnerability and needs assessments, which belong to the broader category of "adaptive management". Adaptive management considers decisions as an iterative process [24], and "uses management actions as experiments to provide data supporting, or failing to support, competing hypotheses when there is uncertainty regarding the response of ecological systems to management activities, to better meet management objectives over time" [25]. However, adaptive management is applied as the project is developing, and uses a deductive method to increase the resilience of the system [26], but not to predict the best solution ex-ante. In this article, we are working exclusively ex-ante, and we use the deductive approach based on the NDCs and their successive revisions in order to describe classes of adaptation projects.
Bosello et al. established several criteria for classifying adaptation projects based on an early work from Smit et al.: purposefulness (autonomous to planned), timing (anticipatory to reactive), temporal scope (short term to long term), spatial scope (localized to widespread), function (protect, retreat, accommodate, or prevent), form (structural, legal, or institutional), and valuation of performance (effectiveness, efficiency, equity, feasibility) [27]. More recently, Biagini et al. [28] classified 92 adaptation projects into 10 categories according to their own framework. This taxonomy was then applied to the coastal sector, for example [29]. Other sectors have been analyzed according to Smit et al.'s framework, such as agriculture or transport [11,30]. In addition, an attempt has been made to classify projects according to four modes of governance [31]. It appears, however, that most of the analyses involve specific sectors or places without real prospects of more global applications. Our aim is to statistically identify constants and common features among climate situations and adaptation actions observed at the global level and recorded in countries' NDCs.
In addition to being designed at very local levels, adaptation projects address a wide variety of sectors and ecosystem sub-levels. They are also projects with uncertain results, as they are developed over long time frames during which the social and scientific contexts evolve [12,22,32]. The choice of an adaptation option depends on and influences the vulnerability of the environment to which it applies, i.e., "the degree to which a system is susceptible to, and unable to cope with, adverse effects of climate change, including climate variability and extremes" [13]. Recent scientific literature has attempted to define a taxonomy of vulnerabilities [15]; however, such a taxonomy also presents difficulties, as perceptions of vulnerability also vary according to the socio-economic context [33]. Although it is difficult to establish a universal classification of adaptation projects and to find relevant indicators [34,35], a more comprehensive approach to evaluating adaptation projects is recommended [9,36]. According to Berrang-Ford [37], an intergovernmental comparison is possible through transferable and scalable concepts that are evaluated by governments themselves. Similarly, the report of the French Economic Council for Sustainable Development [8] shows that for specific projects, it is possible to find similarities that allow a comparison. For the sake of an overall synthesis, indicators must be able to be aggregated and, therefore, have common points [38,39].

Materials and Methods
The evaluation of NDCs' adaptation projects has so far been carried out mainly from the point of view of the technical or financial support needed to implement the announced measures [40,41]. Here, we are building a new metric to assess a project category's relevance depending on the risk it is addressing. We therefore grouped the adaptation projects of the NDCs into risk categories and then adaptation project categories, and conducted a correspondence analysis to quantify the vectoral distance (fitness) of a project category to the targeted level of vulnerability in a specific category of risk. The process of work is displayed in Figure 1. The intention to simplify in our analysis, was to be non-systemic, voluntarily ignoring the possible interactions between stakes and between adaptation actions at this stage of the study, as physical hazards and intensities were only characterized at the national level due to the lack of regional data for the whole world. In addition, the precise geographic area where the project is meant to be implemented is rarely mentioned in NDCs or NAPs, making it difficult to conduct analysis at the regional level. This modeling of a few variables explaining the issues and choices is intended to describe reality to obtain a quick but nevertheless significant result. The intuition tested in this contribution came from an analogy using the adaptive biological mechanisms observed in the living: "The 'adaptations' of an animal, its anatomical details, instincts, and internal biochemistry, are a series of keys that exquisitely fit the locks that constituted its ancestral environments" (Richard Dawkins, www.edge.com). Our project is thus to quantify some correspondence, affinity, distance, or relevance between a class of adaptive solutions ("keys") and a class of vulnerabilities related to climate change ("locks").

Step 1: NDC Plus NAP Database Building
Our database of projects focused on climate change adaptation uses two main sources. The first includes 1562 adaptation projects contained in the NDCs submitted to the Paris Accord in 2015. The second includes 547 High-Priority Projects (HPPs) from the National Adaptation Plans (NAPs) provided since 2011 to the UNFCCC by the fifty least-developed countries, which need adaptation the most [42][43][44]. When a project consigned in the NDC of one of the least-developed countries was not explicit enough, we used the NAP description of the same project.
The database is thus composed of 1562 lines, each presenting an adaptation project and its country of adoption.

Step 2: Physical Risk Categories
Adaptation cannot be detached from the climate-change-induced hazard's impacts that it claims to reduce, which is why authors have focused a great deal of attention on articulating vulnerability assessment in relation to the challenges posed locally by climate change [45,46]. However, while vulnerability is defined for a specific system, sector, or region (as a degree of sensitivity to a risk), physical risk applies to all system, sectors, and regions. Therefore, we chose to associate the projects in the NDCs with physical risks, which are external threats.
We drew up a list of eight physical risks that adaptation projects were designed to mitigate, drawn from Mirza [15], with addition of the "Unknown hazard" category, since many projects are not necessarily focused on specific threat types: Each of the 1562 adaptation projects was reviewed by the authors, and assignment to a category was made; the categories of risk are specified in our database for each project. The same project can be associated with several risk categories for future analyses.

Step 3: Level of Vulnerability for Risk-Country Combinations
We associated a level of vulnerability with each country-risk pair for each of the projects using the Climate Vulnerability Monitor developed by the DARA organization and the Climate Vulnerable Forum. DARA is a non-profit organization aiming at improving humanitarian aid performance by conducting evaluations, research, and policy studies. We chose to work with DARA's Vulnerability Monitor instead of the vulnerabilities sometimes described within NDC documents in order to preserve the independence from national or supranational interests, and because the vulnerabilities were better documented. Our calculations can be run again using other databases, or when DARA issues an updated version of countries' vulnerabilities. No vulnerability is assigned to "Unknown hazard" and "Precipitation" in this repertory, as information was not available. We therefore did not calculate the coefficients for these categories. Because the adaptation projects are designed to be implemented at national scales and the precise locations of the implementations of these projects are rarely given in the NDCs, our reference vulnerability is that of the national level, despite potential significant variations within countries.
The estimates of the levels of vulnerability (in the sense of the hazard, excluding social and economic issues) are available in the selected bases for 2010 and 2030. We have chosen to work with 2010 data, with the assumption that a country tends to base its measures on its "current" situation (i.e., the situation in 2011 for NAPs and 2015 for NDCs), given that the stakes related to adaptation actions are often already a reality. Thus, each project is no longer associated with a risk, but with one of the following four levels of vulnerability to this risk: LowModerate, High, Severe, and Acute, which allows their quantitative comparison.

Step 4: Taxonomy of Adaptive Solutions for Each Type of Vulnerability
A code for an automated text analysis was developed in R by the authors and was used as part of a three-step method analysis. The code is available as supplementary material.
First, the code analyzed the frequency of words describing the projects associated with a certain type of risk that were gathered in our database, the classification of these occurrences, and links from the most important to the weakest, which allowed the creation of project categories.
Then, the analyzed projects were manually distributed in the created categories. One project can correspond to several categories; in this case, they were each attributed to one of these classes. The text analysis process was restarted in a more detailed way on the projects not assigned at this stage, and this step was repeated until all the projects were classified (or only a few remained to be assigned manually).
The number of categories created for each risk is given in Table 1. The names of the categories and the number of projects per category are available in the results section and in Appendix A. Finally, an expert (and manual) interpretation of the stakes of each risk class and each adaptation solution class led to the construction of a tree structure.

Step 5: Contingency Tables
For each type of risk, we constructed contingency tables with the classes of adaptation projects determined in the previous step in columns, and the four levels of vulnerability in rows.
Our ambition is to use as much information as possible from the contingency tables. The variables' distribution across columns is one important feature to utilize. That is the reason for why we chose to carry out a correspondence analysis (CA). Indeed, a CA makes it possible to study the statistical correspondence between several qualitative variables as well as the dynamics between different variables that could not be identified solely based on the contingency table. A CA also allows the study of the possible relationship between the items considered in the rows (adaptation project categories) and the items considered in the columns (hazard intensities).

Step 6: Correspondence Analysis (CA)
This statistical method has been used occasionally in the literature to guide the choice of adaptation decision-makers. For example, Hajer et al. [47] use the multiple correspondence method in the livestock sector with respect to their relative adaptation strategies for increasing water capacity for livestock and crop production and improving livestock and housing conditions. However, such analyses are rare due to the singular, local, and, at first glance, incomparable nature of the impacts, vulnerabilities, and adaptive responses.
Here, we applied the CA method to each of our contingency tables (one for each hazard). The CA allowed us to define a new vectoral space, composed of as many dimensions as there are variables (hazard vulnerabilities) in the contingency table. These dimensions were constructed from the values contained in the contingency table. Thus, each project category contributed to a certain degree to the construction of each dimension.
Our correspondence analysis is the result of two principal component analyses (PCAs). One PCA was carried out on the rows (adaptation project categories) and another PCA on the columns (vulnerability levels). The PCA allows a large part of the sample's variance to be expressed in a reduced number of dimensions, thus facilitating the graphical representation of the data. Indeed, as each dimension in the newly formed vectoral space contains a part of the variance (i.e., information) of the original contingency table, one can obtain a simplified vision of reality while preserving a certain level of information (by keeping a large percentage of the variance explained). In our analysis, we kept the first three dimensions (instead of the initial four levels of vulnerability), which define at least 80% of the variance for the different vulnerabilities. For each dimension, the variables (levels of vulnerability) and individuals (project classes) have coordinates, allowing us to position each of them in the vectoral space.

Step 7: Adaptation Fitness Coefficient Calculation
The method consisted of calculating the vectoral distance obtained via the CA between all categories of projects and all levels of vulnerability within a single risk class, and then constructing a score between 0 and 1 using the minimum and maximum distances observed in the entire sample to normalize the distances. As each hazard intensity and each project class have coordinates in the three-dimensional vectoral space, we can compute a distance between each project class and each hazard intensity. The vectoral distance between an environmental key and hazard intensity is calculated as follows: where I 1 is the coordinate of environmental key i for the first dimension, and J 1 is the coordinate of hazard intensity j for the first dimension. At this point, we have vectoral distances that are expressed numerically. The smaller the distance, the greater the link between project class and hazard intensity.
Vectoral distances are then normalized between zero and one, with the following transformation: where X ij is the vectoral distance between environmental key i and hazard intensity j. The maximum (X Max ) and minimum (X Min ) vectoral distances are taken for one hazard, with the four intensity features characterizing it. Hence, we can define the fitness coefficient, expressed between zero and one, with the following transformation: The closer the coefficient is to the value of "one", the smaller the vectoral distance between the project class and the vulnerability level is, and, thus, the more the adaptive action is statistically "attracted" to this vulnerability level. By "statistical attraction" between classes of projects and vulnerability levels, we mean that these classes share similarities in their construction, as their coordinates in the different dimensions are close. As those choices are supposed to be rational and because we are comparing all projects described in the NDC documents, we assume that the smaller the distance between adaptation project class and hazard intensity, the higher the relevance of an adaptation project choice.
This calculation was made for each hazard in the taxonomy. The value obtained for the fitness coefficient is obviously dependent on the width of the categories. These classes have been constructed wide enough to group together a satisfactory number of solutions to be compared, without, however, losing the unambiguous meaning of the class.

Results
As a significant example, below, we only present the results of the analysis of projects assigned to the "Flood" risk. Similar analyses were conducted for the other seven risk categories and are presented in Appendix A.
The text analysis of adaptation projects assigned to the "Flood" class allowed us to construct a taxonomy in 27 categories, as shown in Figure 2. The projects in each class were then assigned to the level of vulnerability to flooding in their country of adoption, resulting in the construction of a contingency table (see Table 2).  Table 2 already provides us with information on the distribution of project types. For example, 52% of "Warning system" measures are taken for a LowModerate vulnerability level. A total of 31 of the "Health service" measures are taken for a LowModerate vulnerability level, which represents more than 30% for the entire meta-category.
We then conducted a statistical analysis to obtain a quantification of the relevance of a class of projects to address a given level of vulnerability. A CA carried out on this table allowed us to calculate the fitness coefficients of the different project categories (see Tables 3 and 4).
Sub-and meta-categories were analyzed separately. The calculation of fitness coefficients considering all twenty-seven categories was also carried out (see Appendix A). For this risk class, the sub-category "Land management" was analyzed together with the meta-categories as well, since this is an important category, which here includes sixty-eight projects.
Here, we can see that the "Health service" measures have a high fitness for a LowModerate vulnerability level, which is consistent with what we noted earlier in the contingency table. However, this new analysis tells us that these measures are even more relevant for a High vulnerability level, with a fitness of 1. In addition, the meta-categories "Water supply" and "Flood protection" appear to be relevant (fitness of 0.94 and 0.90, respectively) with respect to an Acute vulnerability, which was not obvious at first glance on the contingency table. This result can be refined by the sub-category analysis: In the "Water supply" category, it is the "Watershed" class that presents the highest score for an Acute vulnerability.

Discussion
Each step of the method is debatable. In this section, we detail the limitations of our approach and justify our decisions. We also discuss the future of the fitness coefficient and how it can be improved.

The Taxonomic Approach
The database of adaptation projects was built from two heterogeneous sources; the number of projects differs and the HPPs are much more detailed. This led us to look for more information in the NAPs when the NDCs were too succinct, and may lead, overall, to an overweighting of the least-developed countries. However, without ruling out any risk of bias, countries that have adopted NAPs have been able to benefit from a financial fund for least-developed countries set up by the Conference of the Parties (COP). It can therefore be assumed that differences in resources did not significantly affect the choices of countries that submitted their NAPs compared to those that submitted only their NDCs.
Regarding the universality of the database, a review of the consultation and bidding process undertaken in 2014 and 2015 by multilateral development banks for the benefit of the Parties to the UNFCCC led us to formulate the hypothesis that the adaptation measures recorded in the NDCs were very often designed by independent experts, recommending specific actions for each country, and were designed in a rational manner with regard to climate issues and available knowledge (climate models, knowledge of ecosystems, etc.), even if they were sometimes merely sketching well-documented climate planning. Thus, for the sake of the argument, we considered this 2015 database from the UNFCCC repertory representative of an independent position of each country. When this was not the case (application of routines or mimicry between several countries, interventions of the same consultants, crude cross-cutting recipes, etc.), national choices should become more specific and independent each time as the successive revisions of national adaptation documents are submitted (with two major stages in 2020 and 2025). We acknowledge the biases that may arise from potential common decision-makers across countries and the lack of a "bottom-up" type of process in the development of most of these NDCs without this contradicting our hypothesis of independence as a first approximation.
The risk allocation stage (step 2) is questionable on several points-the categories selected (it would have been possible to add others), but also the subjectivity of the association, which makes errors and inconsistencies possible. In fact, the association is not based on any previously documented method. Moreover, some projects addressing multiple risks have been attributed to a specific risk if it is dominant. The ranking, in general, does not capture the effects of projects on different risks at the same time.
In the third step of the method, we used a characterization of vulnerability levels at the national level to allow an initial analysis. Vulnerability assessment at a national scale is not new in the literature. Studies have shown that it is possible to construct an exposure score for a given climate risk [48]. We used the Climate Vulnerability Monitor developed by DARA and the Climate Vulnerability Forum because they appeared to be independent of national or supranational interests and well-informed. However, other baseline choices would have been possible. Regional climate downscaling could also be more accurate.
Finally, the project taxonomy was constructed depending on the prior step of risk assignment. However, we believe that the possible mistakes are too few in relation to the sample size to have an impact on the result of the statistical analysis. Nevertheless, the assignment of projects to a category was also subjective and depended on the correct interpretation of the descriptive terms of the categories. Since one project can belong to several categories, it will be accounted for several times in the contingency table. We do not believe it is a problem, however, as it allows for broader projects to have more weight. Moreover, such a taxonomy does not allow for the precision of the projects to be taken into account: A very detailed project may find itself isolated if it is alone in a category, or, on the contrary, drowned among fuzzier projects if it is attributed to a broader category. This justifies the importance of taxonomic construction into meta-categories and sub-categories.

The Adaptation Fitness Coefficient
Based on a statistical analysis, the value of this coefficient depends on the initial sample and the number of projects related to a level of vulnerability: The fewer the projects, the more the score will be influenced by a small variation in the sample. In addition, CA is a method that is very interested in the sample variation; distribution across intensities is very important in the construction of the new vectoral space. Hence, a rather even distribution, such as that for "Warning system" below (see Table 5), will display lower fitness coefficients than a more concentrated distribution (such as for "Monitor system"), even if the number of occurrences is lower. Six times out of eight, a "Monitor system" was chosen for a LowModerate vulnerability to "Flood". On the other hand, "Warning system" was chosen 13 times out 28 for LowModerate situations. "Monitor system" scored a higher fitness than "Warning system" for LowModerate vulnerability to "Flood", even though the number of occurrences is lower for this pair.
Here, a project category will have a high fitness for a given level of vulnerability if several countries have used an adaptation project of this category to provide an answer to this specific level of vulnerability.
In addition, the significance of the fitness score depends on our hypothesis about independence discussed in the preceding section.
Finally, it is important to mention that the coefficient is normalized between 0 and 1; however, this normalization is done within the whole risk class, and not for only one level of vulnerability, allowing us to compare solutions between intensities. For weighting purposes, it was also possible to construct a score in relation to the variation from the mean, which would have made it possible to put the many extreme scores we obtained into perspective.

Prospects and Further Work
The overall approach of the study is not challenged by the limitations discussed above. Indeed, changes to the margin remain possible for the attribution of risks (or the attribution of projects to a category) during a reviewing process. Ideally, countries should more clearly indicate the risks that their projects claim to address in their NAPs or NDCs.
The progressive increase in the number of adaptation projects and their improvement-notably, by raising the objectives, strengthening national climate teams, and improving regional climate models in predictive analysis, all within a new transparent framework-should make it possible to consider a renewed statistical treatment of the model developed here based on the successive revisions of the NDCs planned in the Paris Agreement. Article 4 of this Agreement calls for these documents to be updated every five years, starting with a new submission of updated targets and means in 2020-2021. The new NDC database "version II" could be screened using our statistical method. It would allow us, on the one hand, to validate the taxonomies: As the transparency increases and the choices of solutions to address a specific risk converge, the taxonomy should be more precise and robust to changes. On the other hand, it would help validate the values of the fitness coefficients. A similar exercise could be carried out in 2025, with new NDCs displaying raised targets in the context of increased transparency. As the objectives and transparency of adaptation actions are progressively updated and strengthened, the NDCs in their successive versions would constitute an example of mankind's reference system for adaptation choices, often in relation to cross-cutting issues. The comparison of one version with another of the NDCs and NAPs, as well as between stakes, intensities of vulnerabilities, and fitness values for each level of vulnerability, will be rich in lessons.
We are aware that a characterization of vulnerabilities at a finer level (regional, for example) would allow a more precise analysis of the correspondence between "keys" (solutions) and "locks" (risks). A complementary analysis using hazard projections from regional climate models could be undertaken on this same 2015 database and, thus, constitute a more accurate version of a reference frame of climate solutions and challenges.
It would also be relevant to renew the statistical analysis according to risks projected for 2030 or 2050 in order to complete this analysis of national risks in 2010. This year, which belongs to the past, is, of course, better described than a projection, but does not contain all the elements for assessing adaptation choices.

Conclusions
A statistical analysis of 1562 adaptation projects recorded in the NDCs submitted by Parties to the UNFCCC in 2015, cross-referenced with national climate hazards, enabled us to develop a fitness coefficient. Its values, evolving between 0 and 1, indicate the mathematical correspondence between adaptation solutions and climate challenges. We believe that this new metric provides useful ex-ante evaluation of the relevance of national adaptation choices given the issues at stake within the reference framework that was set for humanity's choices. The usefulness of the fitness coefficient relates to the evolution of this fitness value thanks to successive versions of the NDCs and the evolution of climate hazard projections over time. This new metric also allows international comparisons for classes of solutions and classes of risks. To enable these comparisons between projects and between vulnerabilities, we propose a taxonomy of risks and adaptation choices with a universal vocation. Our medium-term ambition is to be able to refine those statistical estimates by using improved regional climate models and by screening more transparent and more documented adaptation projects through successive versions of NDCs and NAPs. Such ex-ante metrics will provide finance institutions with additional information on the projects submitted for funding in a comparative manner, allowing them to keep only the most relevant ones for further consideration.   Figure A1. Taxonomy of adaptive projects associated with the "Drought" class. The number of projects associated with each category is specified in brackets.  Table A3. Adaptive fitness coefficient (between 0 and 1) calculated for adaptive project meta-categories associated with "Drought" risk.  Table A4. Adaptive fitness coefficient (between 0 and 1) calculated for adaptive project sub-categories associated with "Drought" risk.  Figure A2. Taxonomy of adaptive projects associated with the "Heatwaves" class. The number of projects associated with each category is specified in brackets. Appendix A.5. Sea Level Rise Figure A4. Taxonomy of adaptive projects associated with the "Sea level rise" class. The number of projects associated with each category is specified in brackets. Appendix A.6. Storm Figure A5. Taxonomy of adaptive projects associated with the "Storm" class. The number of projects associated with each category is specified in brackets.  Appendix A.7. Temperature Increase Figure A6. Taxonomy of adaptive projects associated with the "Temperature increase" class. The number of projects associated with each category is specified in brackets.   Table A18. Adaptive fitness coefficient (between 0 and 1) calculated for adaptive project sub-categories associated with "Temperature increase" risk.  Figure A7. Taxonomy of adaptive projects associated with the "Unknown hazard" class. The number of projects associated with each category is specified in brackets.