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Home » Call for Abstracts: Join SPARCCLE, CROSSEU, and ACCREU at EGU 2026

Call for Abstracts: Join SPARCCLE, CROSSEU, and ACCREU at EGU 2026

Dec 11, 2025

The SPARCCLE project, together with sister projects CROSSEU and ACCREU and in collaboration with CARMINE, will convene a joint session at the EGU General Assembly 2026 conference. We invite researchers from across the international scientific community to submit abstracts and join us in Vienna, Austria, from 3–8 May 2026.


CL3.2.10 / 3–8 May 2026 / Vienna, Austria & Online
Beyond Physical Risk: Assessing Socio-Economic Vulnerability and Actions for Climate Resilience

  • Conveners: Sorin Cheval, Shreya Some, Emma J. S. Ferranti, Francesco Bosello, Edward A. Byers
  • Submission Deadline: 15 January 2026
  • Link: https://www.egu26.eu/session/56367


About the Session
Developing effective, efficient, and equitable climate adaptation strategies requires a deep understanding of how physical hazards translate into localised, human-centred impacts. While identifying areas of concentrated physical risk is a critical first step, achieving resilience demands more granular assessments of inequalities, socio-economic vulnerability and adaptive capacity. This session aims to bridge the gap between hazard-focused risk identification, detailed social and economic vulnerability and impact analyses, actionable, adaptation strategies at different levels of governance.

We place particular emphasis on the multifaceted human impacts of climate change – beyond traditional damage-cost metrics – encompassing health, livelihoods, well-being, and other critical dimensions of human life.

We invite contributions that:

  • Present innovative, interdisciplinary methods for assessing climate risk that integrate physical hazard data with socio-economic vulnerability and adaptive capacity analysis.
  • Explore equity-focused socio-economic evaluations, including capability-based approaches to understand how climate change affects what individuals and communities can do and be.
  • Investigate the role of Nature-Based Solutions in building resilience.
  • Examine cross-sectoral and cascading impacts of extreme events on human systems.
  • Showcase community-based and participatory methods (e.g., stakeholder consultations, Living Labs) for co-developing transformative adaptation strategies.
  • Demonstrate decision-support tools that translate complex risk assessments into actionable local adaptation and mitigation plans.

Examples from EU projects: Additionally, the session will showcase insights from European climate risk assessments which develop science-based, impact-driven decision-support tools to enhance local and regional adaptive capacity. These projects integrate physical and social sciences, promote Nature-Based Solutions, support multi-level climate governance, and employ participatory approaches to co-produce adaptation pathways aligned with the EU Mission on Adaptation to Climate Change by 2030, while also considering longer-term horizons.

Outcome: By bringing together diverse perspectives, empirical evidence, and methodological innovations, this session will advance the science–policy interface for climate adaptation, contributing to climate-resilient development pathways for metropolitan and regional contexts across Europe and beyond.