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Report/Paper: Urban Planning for Climate Change
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Published 1 December 2007 by Lincoln Institute of Land Policy (original article)

A report by Edward J. Blakely for the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, Urban Planning for Climate Change provides advice on planning for cities' uncertain futures as they are shaped by global climate change. His first-hand experience as the Executive Director of Recovery Management provides illuminating examples of the kinds of issues that today's cities face.

Published 1 December 2007 by Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, http://www.lincolninst.edu/pubs/PubDetail.aspx?pubid=1310

Abstract
Scientific opinion is now unanimous that global temperatures are likely to continue to rise with concomitant extreme weather patterns and events. There is a protean body of scientific literature available on global warming and climate change, which is affecting urban living
in every respect from 'heat islands', continuous light and sea level changes as well as severe droughts and floods paralysing urban areas. Urban planning implications are reflected in buildings, street and community design for more environmentally sustainable cities. The urban science related to climate change and its implications for human settlement is in its early stages. Nonetheless, climate change is already becoming a concern of insurance and actuarial industries as they begin to assess risk to human settlement, construction and other risks associated with atmospheric conditions. These cannot be anticipated and need to be examined with a new paradigm for urban problem solving which is outlined in this paper.

Partial contents

  • The Climate Change Risk Equation
  • Climate Change and Sustainable Environments
  • Designing For or Against Climate Change
  • Urban Natural Disasters
  • A Policy Research Agenda for Climate Change Planning
  • A Climate Change Agenda for Cities
  • Profiling Risk – The New Orleans Case
    • Heat Waves
    • Infrastructure Risks
    • Heat-Related Illness
    • Tourism
    • Energy and Water Demand
    • Criminal Behavior
  • Increased Mean Temperature
    • Tourism
    • Water Resources and Energy Demand
    • Damage to the Built Environment
    • Storm Tide and Surges
    • Impacts to Planning Zones and Flooding

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