Climate Risk Assessment and Adaptation Considerations for Municipal Governance
Within the last 10 years, four of the 10 most extreme and extremely expensive weather- related disasters in Canada have occurred in Alberta, and climate modelling for Western Canada projects increasing changes and weather extremes. Changing and extreme conditions will continue to affect many aspects...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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University of Calgary
2023-03-01
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Series: | The School of Public Policy Publications |
Online Access: | https://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/AUMA-UP44-ResearchPaper.ClimateRiskAssessment.Tyler_.pdf |
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author | Mary-Ellen Tyler |
author_facet | Mary-Ellen Tyler |
author_sort | Mary-Ellen Tyler |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Within the last 10 years, four of the 10 most extreme and extremely expensive weather- related disasters in Canada have occurred in Alberta, and climate modelling for Western Canada projects increasing changes and weather extremes. Changing and extreme conditions will continue to affect many aspects of municipal operations over the next
10 to 30 years. The major risks and impacts of changing climate conditions directly affecting municipalities involve infrastructure performance, increasing water stress, land use change and asset management.
Long-term seasonal temperature and precipitation changes punctuated by extreme weather conditions are a costly combination affecting local governments and communities. Alberta has a diverse range of climate risks, and risk assessment, adaptation and disaster response needs to reflect this diversity. Surveys done in 2019 and 2021 identified common barriers affecting municipal effectiveness in managing and adapting to climate risk which include: available staff time; access to climate risk and adaptation expertise; access to financial resources; and access to locally relevant and credible climate information
and data. Municipalities in Alberta with populations less than 10,000 are more likely to experience these barriers than larger and urban municipalities better positioned to have access to the specialized resources necessary.
All Alberta local authorities are required to have an emergency management plan to respond to extreme weather events of relatively short duration. However, longer term, extreme shifts in seasonal temperatures and precipitation are projected over the next 20
to 30 years that will continue to impact municipal land use planning, water availability and infrastructure costs. Climate risk and adaptation need to be integrated into municipal plans, infrastructure maintenance, capital budgets and asset management to strengthen local resilience. Municipalities in Alberta have a provincial statutory framework that can address climate risk assessment and adaptation. Eight opportunities are identified that can be used within Alberta’s municipal government model to increase municipal effectiveness including: greater use of Intermunicipal Collaboration Frameworks (ICFs) and development of a Climate Adaptation Research and Decision Support (CARDS) network to provide multi- disciplinary decision support to local government decision-makers in different geographic areas of Alberta. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-13T05:18:05Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-4c02ab49b4bc47d2aae5d2db9c92e430 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2560-8312 2560-8320 |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-13T05:18:05Z |
publishDate | 2023-03-01 |
publisher | University of Calgary |
record_format | Article |
series | The School of Public Policy Publications |
spelling | doaj.art-4c02ab49b4bc47d2aae5d2db9c92e4302023-06-15T18:54:04ZengUniversity of CalgaryThe School of Public Policy Publications2560-83122560-83202023-03-01161010.11575/sppp.v16i1.76064Climate Risk Assessment and Adaptation Considerations for Municipal GovernanceMary-Ellen Tyler0University of CalgaryWithin the last 10 years, four of the 10 most extreme and extremely expensive weather- related disasters in Canada have occurred in Alberta, and climate modelling for Western Canada projects increasing changes and weather extremes. Changing and extreme conditions will continue to affect many aspects of municipal operations over the next 10 to 30 years. The major risks and impacts of changing climate conditions directly affecting municipalities involve infrastructure performance, increasing water stress, land use change and asset management. Long-term seasonal temperature and precipitation changes punctuated by extreme weather conditions are a costly combination affecting local governments and communities. Alberta has a diverse range of climate risks, and risk assessment, adaptation and disaster response needs to reflect this diversity. Surveys done in 2019 and 2021 identified common barriers affecting municipal effectiveness in managing and adapting to climate risk which include: available staff time; access to climate risk and adaptation expertise; access to financial resources; and access to locally relevant and credible climate information and data. Municipalities in Alberta with populations less than 10,000 are more likely to experience these barriers than larger and urban municipalities better positioned to have access to the specialized resources necessary. All Alberta local authorities are required to have an emergency management plan to respond to extreme weather events of relatively short duration. However, longer term, extreme shifts in seasonal temperatures and precipitation are projected over the next 20 to 30 years that will continue to impact municipal land use planning, water availability and infrastructure costs. Climate risk and adaptation need to be integrated into municipal plans, infrastructure maintenance, capital budgets and asset management to strengthen local resilience. Municipalities in Alberta have a provincial statutory framework that can address climate risk assessment and adaptation. Eight opportunities are identified that can be used within Alberta’s municipal government model to increase municipal effectiveness including: greater use of Intermunicipal Collaboration Frameworks (ICFs) and development of a Climate Adaptation Research and Decision Support (CARDS) network to provide multi- disciplinary decision support to local government decision-makers in different geographic areas of Alberta.https://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/AUMA-UP44-ResearchPaper.ClimateRiskAssessment.Tyler_.pdf |
spellingShingle | Mary-Ellen Tyler Climate Risk Assessment and Adaptation Considerations for Municipal Governance The School of Public Policy Publications |
title | Climate Risk Assessment and Adaptation Considerations for Municipal Governance |
title_full | Climate Risk Assessment and Adaptation Considerations for Municipal Governance |
title_fullStr | Climate Risk Assessment and Adaptation Considerations for Municipal Governance |
title_full_unstemmed | Climate Risk Assessment and Adaptation Considerations for Municipal Governance |
title_short | Climate Risk Assessment and Adaptation Considerations for Municipal Governance |
title_sort | climate risk assessment and adaptation considerations for municipal governance |
url | https://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/AUMA-UP44-ResearchPaper.ClimateRiskAssessment.Tyler_.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv | AT maryellentyler climateriskassessmentandadaptationconsiderationsformunicipalgovernance |