New Climate Task Force Secures New York City

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    New Climate Task Force Secures New York City

    August, 2008 - The low-lying city of New York
    
    - with its complex underground water and sewer systems; electric, gas, and
    
    steam production and distribution systems; telecommunication networks and
    
    other critical infrastructure - is particularly vulnerable to the rising
    
    sea levels and storm surges associated with global warming.
    
    To secure the city's infrastructure from the effects of climate change,
    
    Mayor Michael Bloomberg Tuesday launched the Climate Change Adaptation
    
    Task Force made up of city and state agencies and private companies that
    
    operate, maintain, or control infrastructure serving this city of over 8.2
    
    million residents - the largest city in the United States.
    
    "We face two urgent challenges," said Mayor Bloomberg. "First, we have to
    
    shrink our carbon footprint to slow climate change. Second, we have to
    
    adapt to the environmental changes that are already beginning to take
    
    place."
    
    More frequent and powerful storms are affecting coastal areas like that
    
    occupied by New York, which is situated on the Atlantic coast, and rising
    
    temperatures are straining the electric grid. These changes are affecting
    
    roads, bridges, and tunnels and the mass-transit network - and all
    
    existing infrastructure must be protected and strengthened, the mayor
    
    said.
    
    
    
    Bloomberg said the city must raise critical infrastructure, like back-up
    
    generators, to higher ground in areas prone to flooding. "Changes in the
    
    way we maintain and operate our infrastructure can help secure our city,"
    
    he said.
    
    The task force will be assisted by a technical advisory committee, the
    
    newly formed New York City Panel on Climate Change, made up of experts
    
    from regional academic institutions and the legal, engineering, and
    
    insurance industries.
    
    Bloomberg calls the effort "one of the most comprehive and inclusive
    
    strategies ever launched to secure a city's critical infrastructure
    
    against the effects of climate change."
    
    The Rockefeller Foundation's Climate Change Resilience program has awarded
    
    a $350,000 grant to fund the work of the Panel on Climate Change.
    
    "The Rockefeller Foundation is proud to help New Yorkers blueprint and
    
    build a more sustainable future as a part of our $70 million commitment to
    
    strengthen community resilience to climate change," said Peter Madonia,
    
    the Rockefeller Foundation's chief operating officer.
    
    "This New York City Panel on Climate Change will shape innovative
    
    approaches to cope with global warming's potentially devastating
    
    consequences in our hometown and model the kind of planning which can and
    
    should be applied in cities around the world," said Madonia.
    
    "Experts at Columbia University's Earth Institute are pleased to offer
    
    scientific and technical expertise to assist the City of New York with its
    
    climate adaptation plans," said Cynthia Rosenzweig, senior research
    
    scientist and co-chair of the City Panel on Climate Change.
    
    "It is our hope that cities in the United States and around the world will
    
    use New York City's planning process as a model to respond effectively to
    
    climate change challenges," she said.
    
    The Climate Change Adaptation Task Force will create an inventory of
    
    existing infrastructure that may be at-risk from the effects of climate
    
    change and develop coordinated adaptation plans to secure these assets
    
    based on climate change projections specific to New York City.
    
    The task force will draft design guidelines for new infrastructure that
    
    take into account anticipated climate change impacts and identify
    
    adaptation strategies for further study that are beyond the scope of
    
    individual stakeholders.
    
    "We commend Mayor Bloomberg's leadership on climate change," said William
    
    Solecki, director of the Institute for Sustainable Cities at Hunter
    
    College and co-chair of the Climate Change Adaptation Task Force.
    
    The City Department of Environmental Protection first issued an adaptation
    
    plan for its assets in May 2008, and the new task force will build on
    
    their efforts.
    
    "We look forward to building on the important work the scientific
    
    community has already done on these issues and helping New York City find
    
    specific solutions to adapt to climate change," said Solecki.
    
    The task force was one of the 127 initiatives proposed in PlaNYC, the
    
    Bloomberg administration's long-term sustainability plan, announced on
    
    Earth Day 2007.
    
    
    
    
    










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