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Regional Approaches to Climate Resilience

Regional Approaches to Climate Resilience. Scale, Governance & Function. Climate Resilience & Adaptation Strategies Symposium - September 2013. Steve Adams, Director US Adaptation Programs. CEQ Adaptation Task Force – Final Report to the President (Oct 2010). Policy Goals & Recommendations:

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Regional Approaches to Climate Resilience

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  1. Regional Approaches to Climate Resilience Scale, Governance & Function Climate Resilience & Adaptation Strategies Symposium - September 2013 Steve Adams, Director US Adaptation Programs

  2. CEQ Adaptation Task Force – Final Report to the President (Oct 2010) • Policy Goals & Recommendations: • Encourage & Mainstream Adaptation Planning Across Federal Agencies • Improve Integration of Science Into Decision-Making • Address Key Cross-Cutting Issues • Enhance Efforts to Lead & Support International Adaptation • Coordinate Capabilities of Federal Government to Support Adaptation • “[a]daptation requires coordination across multiple sectors, geographical scales, and levels of government . . . Because impacts, vulnerability, and needs vary by region and locale, adaptation will be most effective when driven by local or regional risks and needs.”

  3. Key Adaptation Governance Questions for the US Context • How to localize? 50 states, 3K Counties, 19,500+ municipalities • what is the appropriate scale for various approaches to adaptation planning & strategy development? • What approaches enable multi-sectoral collaboration (to manage trade-offs and synergies), multi-jurisdictional collaboration (both horizontal across equivalent adjoining jurisdictions and vertical across local-state/provincial-national-international governments? • What mechanisms enable long-term initiatives to flourish beyond the terms in office of particular elected officials?

  4. On Scale – Nested Context of Local/Regional Strategy Formation Regional Collaborations and Learning Networks Typical City or County Climate Action Plan Leadership by Example Model – Internal Only Single Agency Planning & Strategy Development

  5. The Western Adaptation Alliance • Arizona • Flagstaff • Phoenix • Tucson • Colorado: • Aspen • Boulder (City & County) • Denver • Fort Collins • Nevada • Las Vegas • New Mexico • Santa Fe • Utah • Salt Lake City • Park City Collectively, these 11 cities represent 20% of the population of these 4 states, but anchor 70% of the combined gross state product

  6. Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact - 2009 • Driven by County Government: Palm Beach, Broward, Miami-Dade and Monroe Counties • Regional Population: 5.5M • One third of Florida’s population, total economy & emissions – 2011 GMP $260B • Compact Objectives • Develop a regional voice on state and federal policy • Develop a Regional Climate Action Plan • Meet Annually in Regional Climate Action Summits

  7. 2100 The Baseline in SE Florida - 2009 Key West Sea Level Broward CCTF Science and Technical Subcommittee Projection (2009) Army Corps Guidance for South Florida South Florida Water Management District Miami-Dade CCATF Projection (2008) FAU – S Fl Resilient Water Res 2050 2060 2030

  8. SLR Consensus Work Group: Final Planning Projections

  9. Vulnerability Analysis – Physical Features • Ports and airports (high) • Railroads (high) • Water & wastewater treatment plants (high) • Wellfield protection areas (high) • Power plants (high) • SFWMD salinity control structures and pumps (med) • Drainage infrastructure (med) • Landfills (med) • Hospitals (low) • Emergency shelters (low) • Evacuation routes (low) • Marine facilities (low) • Schools (low)

  10. 2013 - 15 Agenda for the Southeast Florida Regional Climate Compact • Implementation Convenings for Select RCAP Strategies • Mainstreaming Adaptation VA/RA in Planning • Coastal Flood Hazards for the Built Environment • Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy • Regional Communications and Outreach • Catalyst Funding for RCAP Strategy Business Cases • Creation of Adaptive Management M&E Model

  11. Conclusion: Work at Each Level is Required Regional Collaborations Typical City or County Climate Action Plan Leadership by Example Model – Internal Only Single Agency Planning & Strategy Development

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