Giving Compass' Take:
- Various government agencies have submitted climate adaptation plans that will significantly impact cities throughout the United States.
- These plans are taking on environmental justice efforts and resilience programming; how can donors support or strengthen these initiatives?
- Read more about climate action.
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More than 20 major federal agencies, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), came out last week with new climate adaptation plans that have implications for cities.
The plans stem from an executive order from President Joe Biden aiming for a whole-of-government approach to addressing climate change. The idea is to “embed adaptation and resilience planning and implementation" throughout agencies' programs and operations, and to continually update those plans.
The plans detail changes in how agencies administer programs, maintain their facilities, and use their reach "to have a really positive effect on communities across the country," said Beth Gibbons, executive director of the American Society of Adaptation Professionals, which connects organizations and individuals working toward climate resilience in different sectors and communities.
While steps to cut greenhouse gas emissions and slow global warming have grown more common across federal, state and local governments, adaptation efforts also continue to emerge.
For instance, the New York City Council last week voted that the city must adopt a climate adaptation plan, to be updated every 10 years, addressing extreme heat, wind, rain and other potential hazards. New York City recently faced its first-ever flash flood emergency during Hurricane Ida, a storm that killed at least 13 of its residents.
After the deprioritization of climate change mitigation and readiness efforts under the Trump administration, the new batch of federal agency plans outlines goals with potential impacts in cities.
The EPA plan, for example, says the agency wants to work with local governments to advance resilience and environmental justice efforts as well as modernize its financial assistance programs "to encourage climate-resilient investments across the nation." EPA says it will prioritize the most vulnerable populations in this work.
HUD leaders intend to collect building-level data to map climate risks and environmental justice concerns, informing strategies with a focus on underserved communities. The department says it will "work to assess the effectiveness of current building efficiency codes and recovery programs and identify resilience best practices that the agency can adopt to promote investments in climate resilience." HUD also says it will strengthen floodplain management regulations.
Read the full article about climate adaptation by Maria Rachal at Smart Cities Dive.