Climate change poses accelerating and intensifying threats to cultural heritage worldwide, necessitating urgent and coordinated state-level responses. This study critically examines China’s governance framework for climate adaptation of cultural heritage, identifying a critical policy misalignment: although relevant legal and governance instruments—spanning cultural heritage protection, environmental governance, disaster risk reduction, territorial spatial planning, and climate action systems—are nominally in place, they remain profoundly fragmented in practice, resulting in operational inefficiency that severely constrains effective adaptation. To address this, the paper argues for a fundamental paradigm shift from static preservation to dynamic adaptation. It proposes a reform pathway centered on three pillars: reconceptualizing heritage from static preservation to dynamic adaptation, institutionalizing cross-departmental cooperation, and integrating systemic adaptation tools into planning and decision-making. The ultimate objective is to establish an adaptive governance system capable of responding flexibly to climate impacts through interdisciplinary coordination. This transformation is framed as a critical strategic imperative, essential for ensuring the long-term resilience of cultural heritage and civilizational continuity in a warming world.
Hui Zhong (Sun,) studied this question.