Over the past three decades, the international climate governance framework has evolved from the rigid, top-down structure of the Kyoto Protocol to the adaptive, country-driven mechanisms of the Paris Agreement. This transformation marks a decisive legal and political shift—from uniform emission obligations to differentiated yet cooperative action grounded in shared responsibilities. Within this evolution, adaptation has gained recognition as a legally grounded and indispensable pillar of the climate response. Article 7 of the Paris Agreement establishes a global goal on adaptation—to enhance adaptive capacity, strengthen resilience, and reduce vulnerability within the context of sustainable development and the Agreement's temperature goals.
This paper examines how the architecture of the Kyoto and Paris regimes can integrate emerging technologies to enable effective adaptation governance. Digital and data-driven innovations such as remote sensing, Internet of Things (IoT) systems, and geospatial mapping are discussed as instrumental in strengthening national adaptation planning, vulnerability assessment, and evidence-based policy formulation. Drawing on examples from climate-smart agriculture and natural resource management, the analysis highlights how these tools reinforce transparency, enhance cooperation, and expand adaptive capacity in line with the Enhanced Transparency Framework (Article 13).
By embedding technology transfer and digital cooperation within the evolving legal architecture of climate governance, the paper advocates a forward-looking interpretation of global climate law—one that links adaptation, equity, and innovation through shared responsibility and differentiated capability.