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Fresh off the press: Firm relocation as adaptive response to climate change and weather extremes

Our newest publication titled ‘Firm relocation as adaptive response to climate change and weather extremes’ is now available from Global Environmental Change.  The paper suggests that climate change might create the necessity for firm relocation away from highly affected regions.  It develops a framework for assessing firm relocation due to climate change impacts and discusses the relocation framework in relation to two case examples, the Australian pastoral industry and electricity generation in Victoria, Australia, which is one of the most bushfire-prone regions of the world.

Organisations should invest in assessing climate vulnerability

Organisations that apply a “wait and see” approach to thinking about the impacts of climate change on their business might reach a point where it is too late to adapt, according to a University of Queensland (UQ) Business School researcher.

PhD researcher Martina Linnenluecke examined the relationship between business activities and expected changes in climate and weather conditions due to climate change in her thesis.

Ms Linnenluecke said those organisations and sectors that had large-scale infrastructure in disaster-prone regions or were reliant on stable climatic conditions should invest resources in assessing their own vulnerability to climate change and extreme weather events, and looking at what flow-on effects might exist.

“There’s a general awareness that climate change has emerged as a strategic issue but overall, organisations haven’t yet built up the capability to systematically consider the organisational implications of climate change and changes in trends of weather extremes,” she said.

“What organisations can do initially is to use the expertise and information that is already out there to try to identify hot spots and regions likely to be affected by climate change and to see if these regions in any way coincide with any organisational activity.”

Ms Linnenluecke said an organisation’s vulnerabilities might also extend to vulnerabilities in the organisation’s supplier base or value chain.

She said business needed to start thinking beyond climate change adaptation towards building up resilience.

“The issue with adaptation is it usually takes place in response to something that is known or expected — we adapt when we know it makes sense to adapt,” the UQ Business School researcher said.

“Climate change has the potential to affect organisations in ways that are unseen.”

Ms Linnenluecke recommends organisations use a resilience framework to thinking about their exposure and response to climate change and changes in the number and severity of weather extremes.

“Organisations should think about their ability to resist certain impacts and to recover from others, but also to ask ‘what is the amount of change we are able to withstand?’” she said.

“After an event, there’s a lot of pressure to quickly restore the status quo, to get the power on again for example, to get things happening, but this is not necessarily the best decision long-term.

“For example, what are the implications of an energy company putting power lines back in exact same location after an event? That might create more vulnerability if a similar event occurs there again, however moving the power lines or putting them underground might be a longer-term solution.”

Ms Linnenluecke said a major challenge to building organisational resilience was a trade off between slack resources and efficiency.

“Slack resources are excess resources and probably not needed on an operational, day-to-day basis, but a certain degree of slack can provide organisations with the flexibility to respond to any changes.”

Ms Linnenluecke’s dissertation research was supervised by Professor Andrew Griffiths, who is one of Australia’s leading experts in sustainable business strategy.

She and Professor Griffiths will have their paper “Beyond Adaptation: Resilience for  Business in Light of Climate Change and Weather Extremes” in a forthcoming edition of international journal Business & Society.

Researchers win all-Academy award

Two UQ Business School researchers have won the Carolyn Dexter Best International Paper Award at this year’s Academy of Management Conference in Anaheim.

PhD researcher Martina Linnenluecke and Professor Andrew Griffiths won the prestigious award for their paper entitled: “Organizational Adaptation and Resilience to Extreme Weather Events”, along with co-author Monika Winn from the University of Victoria.

The Carolyn Dexter Award is a prestigious all-Academy award given to the paper that best meets the objective of internationalizing the Academy of Management. According to the selection criteria for the award, it is essential that the paper “offers new insights, is rich in observation and employs creative methodologies”.

According to Ms Linnenluecke, the paper takes up the debate on the influences of human-induced climate change and global warming on business organizations.

“The paper examines the relationship between business activities and expected changes in climate and weather conditions,” she said.

“Organizations in several areas such as agriculture, fishery, forestry, and tourism or infrastructure management, do not currently possess suitable resources, capabilities and competencies for ongoing climate change adaptation and resilience to extreme weather events, despite having significant competitive environment adaptive capabilities.

“The paper develops a wider perspective, and lists particular challenges associated with, the organizational impacts of the natural environment.”

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