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Climate Change Initiatives
1:  Create an intergovernmental Task Force to protect our vital infrastructure - p. 138

We will expand our adaptation strategies beyond the protection of our water supply, sewer, and wastewater treatment systems to include all essential city infrastructure
In 2004, the City's Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) initiated a Climate Change Task Force to study the potential impacts of climate change on our water infrastructure. Working with research scientists at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Columbia University's Center for Climate Systems Research, and other institutions, DEP has generated global and regional climate models that have been included in the agency's strategic and capital planning.

For example, the design and operation of our sewer and wastewater treatment systems have been based on existing sea levels-as they are in most jurisdictions. But these levels are changing. When combined with increasingly severe storm surges, there will be significant operational effects. The Task Force evaluated these impacts, enabling DEP to take such risks into account as they site new facilities and invest in existing ones.

But substantial other aspects of our infrastructure remain at risk, especially from sea level change; our subterranean subway system and tunnels, the airports, which are at sea level, power plants, which are often on waterfront sites, waste transfer terminals, and other critical infrastructure are all potentially vulnerable. As these facilities are owned and operated by a variety of entities, protecting these sites will require a coordinated effort among the City, the State, the MTA, the Port Authority, and the utilities.

That's why the City will invite these and other relevant public and quasi-public entities to join the New York City Climate Change Task Force. The Task Force will create an inventory of existing at-risk infrastructure, analyze and prioritize the components of each system, develop adaptation strategies, and design guidelines for new infrastructure.

This will not be an easy task. For most agencies, planning for climate change is a new challenge and given other competing-and often immediate-needs, it is often difficult to prioritize. As a result, integrating climate change impacts into long-term capital planning will require new ways of thinking. But it is essential to begin.

Progress (as of 4/22/08):
The City has identified members of the Climate Change Technical Advisory Committee and is preparing to hold the kick-off meeting of the task force and advisory committee.

Progress (as of 10/22/08):
The City launched the New York City Climate Change Adaptation Task Force on August 12, 2008. In addition, the New York City Panel on Climate Change (NPCC), which will be provided technical assistance and expertise to the task force, held its first meeting on August 11, 2008.

New York Panel on Climate Change Report (in PDF)

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