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Table 1.

Key questions in establishing a local evidence-based framework for implementing robust adaptation targets.

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Fig 1.

Key Principles in Practice for the development of local adaptation targets.

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Table 2.

An example of outcomes using the guiding principles set out in this article for tree planting. Tree planting and/or the creation of green spaces is an objective within many nations’ climate policies due to their coupled climate mitigation- adaptation co-benefit potential, e.g., as a carbon sink, providing shade during heatwaves and flood risk attenuation. Without such principles, a target could be created for a single benefit that is focused solely on the number of trees planted, raising the likelihood of maladaptation. With the guiding principles, a target for multiple benefits will also consider the variety of trees planted and how this can meet biodiversity, health, mitigation and adaptation goals; processes for how organisations and communities within a place could collaborate on the goal and consider the location of tree planting to reduce vulnerability and clarify the ownership of unevenly distributed risks.

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