2019_1-14_USDNResilience_BajaUrban Sustainability Directors Network (USDN)
Climate Resilience in Smaller Communities
Kristin Baja, USDN Climate Resilience Officer
USDN Structure for Resilience
•DEFINITION
•OPPORTUNITIES
MAINSTREAMING
ACTION
CONNECTIVITY (SCIENCE)
METRICS & TRACKING
•MIND-FRAME
•PEER-LEARNING
Definition of Resilience
The ability of our community
to anticipate, accommodate,
and positively adapt
to or thrive amidst
changing climate conditions
or hazard events and
enhance quality of
life, reliable systems,
economic vitality, &
conservation of resources for
present & future generations.
Resilience-Integration (Mainstreaming)
•Integrate climate change into risk & vulnerability
assessments
•Mainstream climate and equity into existing
planning documents (All Hazards Plans,
Comprehensive Plans, etc.) and codesPlanning
BudgetTraining•Mainstream climate and equity into budgeting
processes and capital improvements processes
•Integrate and use climate projections in developing
and maintaining ‘Rainy Day’ funds
•Prioritize climate and equity training opportunities
for all municipal staff, stakeholders, leadership,
and decision-makers
•Develop new trainings and provide support to
cities interested in training staff & stakeholders
•Insurance, Reinsurance and Credit Rating
Integration-Planning Documents
Comprehensive Plans
All Hazard
Mitigation Plans
Climate Action PlansSustainability Plans
Transportation Plans
Integrated Resource Plans
All Hazard Mitigation Plans
FEMA AHMPExisting Structure
A.Planning Process
B.Hazard
Identification &
Risk Assessment
C.Mitigation
Strategy
D.Plan Review,
Evaluation, &
Implementation
E.Plan Adoption
•Include climate scientists/academics, equity experts, regional
stakeholders & health experts on Advisory Committee
•Have members of the public involved with the process from
the very beginning as partners
•Connect to the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the
National Climate Assessment (NCA) science and trend data
•Utilize RISA’s, local universities, and local stakeholders for localized data
•Integrate historic, current and predicted impacts for each individual hazard
and factor climate change into probability calculations
•Incorporate social, economic and environmental impacts
•Develop proactive mitigation strategies that have viability for future impacts
•Ensure Benefit-Cost Analysis is comprehensive (social, economic, environmental)
•Utilize “No Regrets” actions as often as possible and crosswalk with other plans
•Utilize trends and scenarios to demonstrate need for proactive approach
•Demonstrate need for combined mitigation-adaptation-equity implementation
•Identify strong metrics for success based on comprehensive benefit-cost
•Connect formal adoption with community commitment to climate & resilience goals
•Connect to regional initiatives, plans and projects
Comprehensive Plans
General Comp
Plan Structure
A.Vison
B.Goals
C.City Profile
D.Economic
E.Land Use
F.Housing
G.Environment
H.Public Facilities
I.Transportation
•Include climate resilience and climate action as part of the vision
•Ensure climate resilience and equity are integrated into the goals or are direct
goals in themselves
•Identify climate resilience in growth, employment, natural systems, housing, etc.
•Connect to the climate impacts and trend lines
•Identify historic, current and anticipated impacts from climate change
•Transform transportation systems to be able to maintain function both during a
disaster and before (effective evacuation support)
•Benefit-Cost Assessment-connect to economic opportunities of a more resilient
community
•Land Use-not building in vulnerable areas and stronger restrictions
•Citing of housing out of high risk areas, energy efficiency and renewable energy
systems with battery backup
•Prioritization of combined blue-green infrastructure, prioritization in urban heat
islands, stormwater management and design criteria, and watershed planning
Resilience-Scenarios Planning
Budgeting-Capital Improvement Process
Resilience Checklists for Capital
•Developed a resilience checklist
for projects requesting CIP funds
•Investing capital dollars into
more detailed climate plans for
neighborhoods (Boston)
Criteria for Resilience
•All CIP projects are subject to
Energy and Climate Performance
Criteria (Miami-Dade County)
•Impacts buildings and
infrastructure and requires life-
cycle cost analyses
Resilience-Staff & Partner Trainings
Resilience-Climate Trainings
Trainings-Game of Floods, Heat, Extremes
Plans: All Hazard Mitigation Plans
Comprehensive Plans
Codes: Building Code Language
Floodplain Code Language
Templates: Crosswalking resilience
with other city plans
Integrate: Short-term & Long-term
Assessment Processes
Ex. Facilities, Health, Vulnerability, Risk
Additional Planning Documents
Ex. CAP’s, Sustainability, Transportation
Additional Code Language
Ex. Land Use, Building, Zoning
Landscape: Budget & Capital Improvement
Processes:Identify opportunities to
incorporate climate change
Develop:Information sheets and provide
support on insurance and credit
rating changes and opportunities
Budgeting
Ex. CIP, Rainy Day Budgeting, Etc.
Insurance
Ex. Re-insurance Bonds, Credit Rating
Bonds, Credit & Ratings
Guidance for Investors, Risk Disclosure
Trainings: Game of Floods
Game of Heat & Extremes
Climate 101, 201, 301
Identify and categorize continuing education
opportunities for interested members
Games
Sector-Specific Training
Continuing Education Training
SHORT-TERM DELIVERABLES LONG-TERM OPPORTUNITIES
BudgetDocumentsTraining
Resilience-Support & Accelerate Action
•Identifying and supporting projects and
opportunities at the Mitigation-Adaptation-Equity
Nexus
•Develop a menu based on common Climate Action
Plan and Climate Adaptation Plan strategiesAdapt-MitNexusInnovationPilot Projects•Support innovation and actions that have multiple
benefits such as updating building codes for
resilience and energy efficiency
•Support innovative solutions such as biomimicry,
blue-green-grey infrastructure & food resilience
•Resilience Hubs business plan and community
preparedness initiatives
•Using socio-economic datasets and layers with
climate change datasets to develop a prioritization
system & map for implementation
Mitigation-Resilience Interactions
Mitigation
Resilience
Mal-Adaptation
measures that
increase resilience
but increase GHG
emissions
Harm
measures that
increase vulnerability
and increase GHG
emissions
Mal-Mitigation
measures that
decrease GHG
emissions but have no
impact on resilience
Synergies
measures that reduce
risk and reduce GHG
emissions
Risk
High Emissions
Mitigation-Resilience Examples
Mitigation
Resilience
Mal-Adaptation
Harm Mal-Mitigation
1.Increasing emissions of
greenhouse gases
2.Disproportionately burdening
the most vulnerable
3.High opportunity costs
4.Reducing incentives to adapt
5.Path dependency
Synergies
Risk
High Emissions
1.Desalinization
2.Ground pumping
3.Increase use of AC
4.Relocation of infrastructure
1.Reforestation with non-native
or water-intensive species
2.Hydropower and wet-season
retention of water in
reservoirs for hot, dry season
(increase flood risk)
3.More compact urban design
(if done poorly, increase UHI)
1.Coastal wetland restoration
2.Reforestation with native
and/or diverse tree species
3.Renewable energy with storage
hybrid systems
4.Soil conservation
VMT –Examples of Synergies
Ex. King County Electric Bus
Car Free Zones & Walkability
Public Transportation Investment
Ex. Brooklyn Battery Park
•Reduce vehicle traffic & Improve human health
•Protect structures from flooding & lower risk
•Reduce urban heat with increased trees and
vegetation
•Capture, treat and slow release stormwater
•Keep assets close to each other so people can walk
and easily get the services they need
Ex. Evacuation Bus Stops
•Cite bus stops out of flood zones
& protected from high winds
•Electric buses for evacuation and
as movable shelters on high heat
days
•Backup energy supply
Buildings –Examples of Synergies
Ex. Living Building in Sacramento
Ex. Hospital General in Mexico City
Green Building Standards
•Improve building energy standards &
ALSO integrate water reuse, flood
protection, elevation of electrical &
mechanical systems (insurance
benefits)
•Weatherization, cool roofs, & energy
efficiency prioritized in areas with
highest heat conditions (UHI’s)
•INNOVATION -such as this smog
eating building façade which
neutralizes emissions and improves
human health
EVs and Water –Examples of Synergies
Ex. EV charging stations elevated
Ex. Blue-Green-Gray Infrastructure, Portland
Electric Vehicles
•Cite EV charging stations out of floodplains
and flood-prone areas
•Elevate EV charging stations near flood-
prone areas
•Treat the bottom of vehicles in areas where
salt water inundation and ‘sunny day’
flooding is common to protect transition to
electric fleet
Water
•Consider exploring energy generation in
stormwater pipes using small turbines
•Utilize Blue-Green infrastructure to reduce
urban heat island and energy demand
Energy –Examples of Synergies
Ex. Solar with Battery backup in Sydney, Australia
Private Example-Water
cooling, embedded electricity
networks, recycled water
treatment plants and on-site
renewable energy generation in
one building
Community Resilience Hubs
•Enhance community resilience utilizing solar &
storage projects that have community solar
benefits
•Increase community adaptive capacity –meet
up spaces, space for events & activities
•Increase tree canopy & green space
•Not just for emergencies-these are YEAR-
ROUND community facilities
•Shift Power to members of the community
Definition-Resilience Hub
•Well-trusted locations utilized year-
round
•Build community and provide resources
•Support community cohesiveness,
before, during and after emergency
events.
•Consists of a building or set of buildings
and outdoor space that provide shelter,
backup electricity, and access to
resources such as food, water, ice,
charging stations, etc.
•Resilience Hubs require governments
and stakeholders to willingly shift power
over to members of the community.
Resilience Hub-Key Components
Resilience Hubs-White Paper
Download a copy here:
https://www.usdn.org/uploads/cms/
documents/usdn_resiliencehubs_201
8.pdf
Other Supporting Documents
Resilience Hubs Technical Feasibility
–Released Jan 20, 2019
Resilience Hubs Business Plan
-Released Feb, 2019
Resilience Hubs Innovation Fund
Project-start 2019
Resilience-Smaller Towns/Cities
•Wind Power Cooperative includes 15 wind turbines
•Prevents 15,000 tons of CO2 emissions annually &
created local jobs and boost tourism
•Create power for 50,000 people and are owned by
the people who use themCosta RicaVietnamCar Free Zones•Biodigester (a large brick-lined storage container
for animal waste) uses methane produced from
the waste to power stoves, lamps and other
appliances for local farmers.
•Reduces household air pollution, deforestation and
noxious manure odors.
•Car Free cities have the multiple benefits of human
health improvement, GHG reduction, congestion
reduction
•Less debris in the form of cars
Resilience in Codes
Jimi Jones
•All new buildings must be “Solar
PV Ready” and have EV charging
infrastructure
•Adopt building categories
(example-Category I –IV)
•Commercial Buildings must be
30% more efficient than IECC 2012
and must also be protected from
extreme water, wind and heat
Credit Ranking Agencies
The growing effects of climate change, including climbing global temperatures, and
rising sea levels, are forecast to have an increasing economic impact on US state and
local issuers. This will be a growing negative credit factor for issuers without
sufficient adaptation and mitigation strategies-Moody's Investors Service
Implementation-Opportunities
•As we are working on autonomous & electric
vehicles, considering the resilience elements
•Example-using buses in Phoenix, Arizona that
are mobile emergency shelters for people who
do not have access to air conditioning
•Many local governments acquiring land to hold for
floodplain management (no development)
•Open space that can be utilized for solar and wind
along with other large items like batteries (as long
as they are in floodproofed structures)
•As stormwater pipes are upgraded,
important to look at capturing the energy
generated by high flow events
•Example-Mexico looking at potential of
capturing energy from wavesFloodplainTransportation
Energy/Water
Proactive-Big Impact Items
•Work with partners to create support structures
and better decision making for relocation
•Use guidance to better inform and support
response and relocation efforts including funds
for buyouts early in the process
•Accommodating displacement and planned
relocation –connect to energy efficient affordable
housing (Lancaster, PA)
•Develop guidelines for strengthening the capacity
of displaced people to gain access to jobs and
support
•Calculating the avoidable health burden
•How to begin preparing for increased
vector-borne diseases
•Working with medical professionals on
climate-related medical issuesClimate MigrationBuy-outsHuman Health
Adaptation-Mitigation-Equity Nexus Menu
of common problems with opportunities to
utilize solutions at the nexus of equity, GHG
reduction, and resilience
Identify partners to work with developing
the menu and pilot opportunities
Implement: Short-term & Long-term
Adaptation-Mitigation-Equity Nexus Support
Innovation:Biomimicry
Food resilience; Art in resilience
Blue-grey-green infrastructure
Critical Issues: Climate migration & relocation
Public health threats
Existing building retrofits
Resilience Hubs:
•Guidance documents
•Technical feasibility Assessment for
solar and storage hybrid solutions
•Business plan
UHI project support at regional scale and
connect to citizen science
Resilience and Equity Projects:
Resilience Hubs
Green Infrastructure & UHI Mitigation
Flood Mitigation: Green Stormwater
Infrastructure-Retaining Walls, Sea Walls,
etc.
Case Studies: Support existing Clearinghouses Continuing Education: Support partner
organizations developing criteriaProgram for Public Information (PPI): Provide support to members interested in PPI
developmentStories: Collect and share stories about both
local and regional resilience-building
Communication with Stakeholders
Engaging with Communities of Practice
Disseminating Best Practices
USDN Website: Upgrade and Maintain
Develop Resilience Page
SHORT-TERM DELIVERABLES LONG-TERM OPPORTUNITIES
ProjectsOpportunitiesCommunication
Connectivity & Collaboration
•Identify opportunities for partners and
researchers to provide stronger project support
•Be aware of work that is being done by other
stakeholder groups and cities (avoid duplication)
•Online Tools and Clearinghouses-Georgetown
Climate Center Adaptation Clearinghouse, Thriving
Earth Exchange, CAKE
•Actively support and participate in resilience and
equity workshops and events and disseminate
information to local governmentsResearchAdvisory
Communities•Collect stories from stakeholders and value input
•Create and utilize Community Ambassador
Networks to help with engagement & outreach
•Involve Youth
Examples-Researchers and Practitioners
Sustained Assessment
•The UREx SRN focuses on
integrating social, ecological,
and technical systems to
devise, analyze, and support
decisions in the face of
climatic uncertainty
•Collaborate with nine cities
to develop decision-support
tools that confront resiliency
challenges and put cities on a
path to sustainable futures
Urban Resilience to
Extremes-URExSRN
•A group of 35 experts
developing a strategy for
protecting the credibility of
the National Climate
Assessment processes and
outputs
•Expanding the role of civil
society in all phases of the
assessment including a
restructuring of how science
is provided to practitioners
Research and Integrated
Science Assessments
•A five-year grant from the
National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA).
•RISA’s support integrated,
flexible processes for
building adaptive capacity to
climate variability and
change in diverse settings in
specific regions within the
US
Community Network Building
•People trust their own friends,
family and community leaders
more than government or
institutions.
•Peer network that is trained and
supported on response, recovery
and preparedness
•Train community members to
identify neighbors in need and
check-in on them or assist with
response
•Provide stipends that value their
time and efforts
Identify and track member needs:
Develop a database with short-term,
medium-term and long-term needs
Identify partners and tools that can best
support and meet members needs
Connectivity: Short-term & Long-term
Identify opportunities for greater
connectivity and collaboration on projects
with multiple stakeholder groups
Connectivity mapping and identifying
partnership opportunities
Identify toolkits and frameworks most used
Track opportunities to reduce duplication
Curation of existing toolkits and tools
intended to support local governments in
taking action
Reduce duplication of efforts from
consultants, researchers, and government
agencies that develop toolkits
National Science and Research:
Provide USDN members with information
Represent local government perspectives
Influence the priorities of state, regional,
federal, & other scales of science production
Serve as an aggregator of member needs and work
to share those needs with potential partners
Connect to National and Regional Science
Networks
Work with research community to develop
science in ways local governments can utilize
Ensure local government needs are integrated
into national and regional production
SHORT-TERM DELIVERABLES LONG-TERM OPPORTUNITIES
Reduce DuplicationField DrivingConnect Science
Resilience Tracts: Meet all members needs
Ex. Water Plaza, Holland
•Build out the amount and type of
support for members in certain
‘tracts’ and identify partnership
opportunities
•Identify existing frameworks and
methodologies to get a project
started and mapped out.
•Develop a video series for local
governments who are ‘just getting
started’ and/or ‘have no funding for
resilience’ and identify ways they can
get started.
•Track one-on-one support requests
and connect members to peer
support opportunities
Metrics and Tracking-Cost Benefit
Work with partners on
taking the successful
cost-benefit calculators
for each content area
and combining them
for more effective cost-
benefit analyses
Metrics-Tie to Existing Reporting Required
ACEEE and
Carbon Disclosure Project
•STAR & LEED are both
extensive frameworks that
include metrics for success &
provide resilience-integration
opportunities
•Opportunity to integrate
resilience, sustainability and
equity into other city
departments and establish
metrics that compare to
other cities
STAR Community
Rating System & LEED
•CDP runs the global
disclosure system for
investors, companies, cities,
states and regions to manage
their environmental impacts
•ACEEE acts as a catalyst to
advance energy efficiency
policies, programs,
technologies, investments,
and behaviors
NFIP Community Rating
System
•CRS is a voluntary incentive
program that recognizes and
encourages floodplain
management activities that
exceed the minimum NFIP
requirements.
•Extensive tracking process
with opportunities to
integrate resilience & climate
Develop track’ for members in different
phases of resilience work
Develop a list of the top 5-10 resilience
actions each member should do
Plan & Metrics: Short-term & Long-term
Resilience Tract Planning for USDN
Members
Explore existing CBA’s being utilized &
identify elements of existing tools work well
Explore potential partnerships for
comprehensive CBA tool development
Comprehensive Cost-Benefit Analysis
Cost of Inaction
Communication Tools
SHORT-TERM DELIVERABLES LONG-TERM OPPORTUNITIES
Cost-BenefitTiersDraft list of metrics for adaptation actions
Draft list of metrics for adaptation-
mitigation-equity nexus actions
Identify measures of failure for most
common climate resilience actions
Develop effective metrics for Climate
Resilience grounded in equity
Connect to and enhance existing data-
tracking platforms with preliminary metricsMetrics
Inventory existing methodologies to create a
short summary of the different ways to start
Curate examples of scope of works for RFPs
and work plans
Identification of opportunities to work at the
adaptation-mitigation-equity nexus
Support in development of stand-alone
resilience plansPlans
Cassandra Syndrome
Mind-frame and Mindset
Cassandra syndrome
occurs when valid
warnings or concerns
are dismissed or
disbelieved
Facts and Information
So many sets of data
along with actual natural
hazard events increasing
in impact and frequency
Racism and Prejudice
Prejudice attitudes
impacting life and work
along with discriminatory
behavior
Peer Learning: Mechanisms
Web-based
Peer Exchange
Collective Action
Peer Mentoring USDN Staff Support
Innovation Fund
Small Groups
Conferences
Each one of us can make a
difference. Together we
make change Barbara Mikulski