亚色影库app

A project of the 亚色影库app & Sciences

Strategy 5: Adapt Everywhere

Invest Equitably in Adaptation

Good plans need buy-in from everyone. Adaptation plans should be a joint effort between the government, states, cities, tribes, businesses, and non-profits. Strengthening these connections and planning means that in a crisis, everyone knows what to do and who to turn to for help. Some initiatives have already been successful at promoting this style of planning.

Roger Henderson, a lead engineer for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Sacramento District, discusses modifications to the Isabella Lake dams during a public meeting Sept. 25, 2013, in Kernville, California. Photo credit: Tyler Stalker, US Army

Climate adaptation planning is critical for national security and efficient resource use. Without adequate planning, climate impacts will be more disruptive to critical infrastructure such as power grids, transportation systems, and communication networks.[i] Climate will also have greater impacts on food and water security, which are critical for the country鈥檚 health and well-being.[ii]

Despite the importance of these systems, few resources are devoted to city, county, state, and regional adaptation planning. Given the intricacies of preparing society for climate impacts, funding community-based plans is critical for tuning to local needs and opportunities.[iii] Normalizing a culture of adaptation planning will also encourage virtuous cycles of continuous improvement.

Federal funding, such as the Department of Housing and Urban Development鈥檚 National Disaster Resilience Competition grants, has effectively provided communities like those on the Ohio Creek Watershed in Norfolk, Virginia, with the resources to implement adaptation strategies to reduce flooding, improve the local economy, and strengthen neighborhood connections.[iv] This adaptation plan engages several players, including the city, the local community, nonprofit organizations, and architectural firms.

The federal government must mobilize the private sector to develop tools for community adaptation and resilience through public-private partnerships. Investments in green technology, such as sustainable transportation and resilient buildings, benefit both local communities and investing companies. One example is the Rockefeller Foundation鈥檚 100 Resilient Cities Initiative, launched in 2013, which provides funding and technical assistance to cities worldwide to develop and implement resilience strategies. The initiative has also received support from private sector partners such as Swiss Re, Microsoft, and Veolia.


[i] Samuel A. Markolf, Christopher Hoehne, Andrew Fraser, et al., 鈥淭ransportation Resilience to Climate Change and Extreme Weather Events鈥擝eyond Risk and Robustness,鈥 Transport Policy 74 (3) (2019): 174鈥186, ; Mathaios Panteli and Pierluigi Mancarella, 鈥淚nfluence of Extreme Weather and Climate Change on the Resilience of Power Systems: Impacts and Possible Mitigation Strategies,鈥 Electric Power Systems Research 127 (2015): 259鈥270, .

[ii] Tim Wheeler and Joachim Von Braun, 鈥淐limate Change Impacts on Global Food Security,鈥 Science 341 (6145) (2013): 508鈥513, ; James S. Famiglietti, 鈥淭he Global Groundwater Crisis,鈥 Nature Climate Change 4 (11) (2014): 945鈥948, ; and Terry Marsden and Roberta Sonnino, 鈥淗uman Health and Wellbeing and the Sustainability of Urban-Regional Food Systems,鈥 Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability 4 (4) (2012): 427鈥430, .

[iii] Linda Shi, Eric Chu, Isabelle Anguelovski, et al., 鈥淩oadmap towards Justice in Urban Climate Adaptation Research,鈥 Nature Climate Change 6 (2) (2016): 131鈥137.

[iv] See U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, National Disaster Resilience Competition, (accessed June 12, 2023) (accessed June 12, 2023); Tim Hare, John Millspaugh, and Scott A. Smith, 鈥淗oney, I Shrunk the Pump Stations: The Value of Using Physical Modeling and Natural Features in Design,鈥 paper presented at the Water Environment Federation鈥檚 92nd Annual Technical Exhibition and Conference (WEFTEC 2019), Chicago, Illinois, September 21鈥25, 2019, https://doi.org/10.2175/193864718825157315.