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CLIMATE CONSIDERATIONS Module 1 Hello. Sam Carrie Jason Jill Name Where are you from? Where did you experience your worst storm? Where would you want to retire? CLIMATE CHANGE 101 AIR TRANSPORT THAWING PERMAFROST COAL PLANTS CROP BURNING COAL MINING INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES OIL PRODUCTION FERTILIZATION FOREST BURNING LAND TRANSPORTATION INDUSTRIAL AGRICULTURE LANDFILLS Global Carbon Emissions from Fossil Fuels Million Metric Tons of Carbon 10000 7500 5000 2500 0 1850 1875 1900 1925 1950 1975 2000 We Each Have a Carbon Footprint Per capita carbon emissions Our Household Carbon Footprint Broward County’s Footprint 24,600,000 metric tons of CO2 per year 2000 Years of CO2 and Global Temperature As CO2 Increases, So Does the Temperature Temperature CO2 Concentration 0 AD 0 AD 500 500 1000 1000 1500 1500 2000 2000 0 AD 0 AD 500 500 1000 1500 1000 2000 1500 2000 National and International Science Reports Global Temperature by Decade 1881 – 2010 Global Temperature (°C) 14.5 58ºF 14.2 14.0 Average 13.7 13.4 56ºF 32° 33° Thermal Expansion of the Oceans An increasing amount of heat is being captured in the oceans Capturing Heat Heat Content Shallow Ocean Deep Above Ocean Releasing Heat 1960 2010 Global sea level has risen 3 inches in last 23 years (since 1992) NASA report – August 2015 Causing Bigger, Harder Downpours, and Simultaneously Causing Longer and Deeper DROUGHTS 1 Evaporation from the ocean into the atmosphere increases even MORE 2 As the air gets even warmer, it can hold even MORE water vapor 3 Heavy downpours get even heavier, causing worse flooding 4 Snowpacks melt earlier in the year, leading to more spring flooding, but less water in the heat of summer 5 There longer intervals in droughtThere are are longer intervals in drought-stricken areas between droughts stricken areasdownpours, between making downpours, EVEN WORSE making droughts EVEN WORSE 6 More water also evaporates More water also evaporates MOREMORE QUICKLY from the soil,from making deeper QUICKLY theDROUGHTS soil, making and longer still deeper and longer still DROUGHTS Climate Equality • Climate trends differ by region • Some people are more vulnerable • Some communities lack resources to invest in resilience Activity “Climate Dice” LOCAL IMPACTS Impacts in South Florida Sea Level Rise Over the next 15 years, sea level will rise 3 to 5 inches. 2 feet by 2060 Drinking Water Supply Impacts Undergroun d Aquifer 1994 1996 2009 2014 6 miles Rising groundwater levels 20-year trend > 1 foot increase Tidal Flooding Highest King Tides: September-November 1 foot above typical high tide 2 to 24 days per year By 2030: 45 days By 2045: >200 days 2015 High Tide Flooding: Extensive News Coverage High tides now regularly flood parts of Miami Beach, Florida © 2013 Chris Julin/BURN + SoundVision Productions CC BY 3.0 December 7, 2015 Miami, FL Severe Weather and Flooding Hollywood, FL 16.2 inches, 1:100 yr December 2009 Predicted increase in intensity of tropical storms Boynton Beach, FL 22.2 inches, 1:1000 yr January 2014 Increased Beach Erosion from High Tide Events and Storms Potential for loss of turtle nesting habitat and impacts to reefs A1A in November 2012, after erosion from Tropical Storm Sandy and Thanksgiving storm Rainfall & Storms Less rain overall, change in patterns Increased intensity of storms Statistical models: • 20% reduction across all seasons Dynamic models: • 50% reduction for single Broward Rainfall/ Storm Summary summer month 1999 (mm/d) 2014 Temperature Changes HEAT WAVE Above 95ºF Temperature Variation 11 days 5°F Data: 2011, 2013 75 days Elevated temperatures can lead to increased energy consumption, increase in emissions, health and comfort impacts and impaired water quality. December 2015 Heat Wave Heat + Humidity Extreme Danger Increasing Likelihood of Drought Lake Okeechobee, FL May 2007 GLOBAL / NATIONAL / REGIONAL ALIGNMENT Global/National/Regional Alignment Paris Agreement President’s Climate Action Plan Prepare for the impacts of climate change Broward County Goals Paris Agreement Truly global Limit warming to 2 degrees Celsius, aim for 1.5 degrees Planet has already warmed by about 1 degree President’s Climate Action Plan Cut carbon pollution 26-28% below 2005 levels by 2025 Prepare for the impacts of climate change State, Local, and Tribal Leaders Task Force Federal flood standards Lead international efforts County has endorsed and participated Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact 2009 agreement among Broward, Palm Beach, Miami-Dade, and Monroe Counties to work together on climate change issues Partnerships with many stakeholders, including cities Four commitments State and federal advocacy Annual summits Regional tools – e.g., unified sea level rise projection Regional Climate Action Plan Technical Assistance, Funding Federal .. .. 2 Regional Planning Councils 50 year 7 County Prosperity Plan Miami-d Regional Climate Action Plan 4 Counties County level Climate Change Action Plan Local Mitigation Strategy City level Aligning Regionally • Sustainability Plan • Capital Improvement Plan • Comprehensive Plan Land Use Plan COUNTY INITIATIVES TO DATE A History of Leadership 2007 2009 2011 2013 2014 2014 Signed U.S. Mayors’ Climate Protection Agreement Formed Regional Compact Unified Sea Level Rise Projection Served on White House Task Force on Climate Preparedness and Resilience Achieved 4-STAR Community Sustainability Rating Named Climate Action Champion – White House, Department of Energy Core Elements Policy • Climate Change Element, GHG reduction goal Planning • Climate Change Action Plan, Energy Plans Modeling & Analysis • Vulnerabilities and risk Support • Decision-makers and stakeholders Implementation • Projects and Investments Broward County Goals General goal 80 percent reduction in greenhouse gases countywide by 2050 Resolution We adopted by Commission in 2014 20 percent reduction in electricity use in county facilities 20 percent of electricity from renewable sources can meet these goals and go further! Comprehensive Plan, Land Use Plan, Climate Action Plan Risk Modeling Climate Vulnerability Groundwater Modeling/ Surface Water Inundation Modeling (USGS) Coming Soon 3D Flood Visualization (NEMAC UNC) Coastal Flood Modeling (Surge + Sea Level Rise) Greenhouse Gas Emission Inventory Percentage of GHG Emissions by Source 2011-2014 Other 3% Commercial 14% Residential 16% Upstream Impacts 21% Transportation 46% Upstream Impacts: Fuel Production and Transport Other: • Wastewater • Agriculture • Industrial • Solid Waste Emission Trends Million Tonnes of CO2e 30 25 20 23.6 25.0 24.7 22.3 22.2 24.3 24.6 15 10 GOAL 5 4.7 0 2007 2009 2010 2011 2012 Year 2013 2014 2050 Natural Resource Resilience Green Infrastructure Analysis Offset Carbon Emissions from Local Events Dune Re-vegetation Infrastructure Resilience Facilities Roads/ Drainage Intrusion/ Inundation Modeling Community Solar Demonstration Project *not actual Critical Infrastructure Energy Utilities Community Resilience EPA RESES Grant Healthy Communities Zone Grant 4 STAR Seal of Sustainability DASEES Holistic Resilience Decision Tool Health, Safety, Community Links Sustainability Stewards Economic Resilience Damage Costs, Adaptation B/C ratios Robust Decision Making Structure & Timing of Adaptation Investments Disruption Tolerance Resilient Redesign • Models of Resilience for redevelopment • 3 day design workshops • Sites: • Miami Beach, West Dade, Dania Beach • Delray Beach, Hollywood, Key West BREAK