Preparing for climate change means improving our ability to respond to extreme weather events, like heat waves, wildfires, and flooding, and adapt to more gradual impacts, like water shortages, sea level rise and seasonal changes that impact food systems. With better understanding of climate risks, we can better prepare for the changes ahead and improve the resiliency of our communities. This process is called climate adaptation.
This section provides resources, tools, and information for local governments to learn more about understanding, preparing for, and adapting to climate change.
Climate adaptation can be implemented alongside actions that reduce greenhouse gas emissions. For resources on emissions and energy projects, visit our section on local government mitigation actions.
Effective climate change preparedness and adaptation is a broad responsibility and involves many roles across a local government:
Engaging with elected officials across departments is also important to ensure climate adaptation actions have support and can be implemented.
Funding
The BC Community Climate Funding Guide is an all-in-one resource with funding opportunities for climate action projects in your community, including emergency management and adaptation funding.
There are a variety of funding options available, including:
Thinking about equity
The impacts of climate change in our province are not felt evenly across society. Climate change poses the greatest threat to people that face deep-rooted and systemic challenges.
Effective adaptation efforts need to consider how climate change impacts diverse populations in different ways. It’s important to consider an equity lens in climate change planning. One way to start is by including equity-based organizations in your community in the conversation around climate change adaptation efforts.
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Quick start actions
Getting started with climate change adaptation can be daunting. Here are a few quick start actions to implement while continuing to work on longer term plans:
Adapting to climate impacts
Communities are unique and may experience climate change differently. At the same time, neighbouring communities can share common challenges. By engaging widely, communities can work together to develop better climate risk assessments and adaptation strategies, leading to more effective implementation of climate adaptation actions.
Local governments may not be able to directly implement all the actions that can build resilience in a community, but they play an important role in educating and supporting others to act.
Engaging residents, Indigenous communities, partners, and organizations and collaborating across regions can build capacity and collect valuable input for climate preparedness and adaptation.
Engaging internally
Depending on the type of engagement planned, you might involve your communications team, planners, engineers, finance, and public works. As decision-makers, engagement with elected officials is likely an essential step.
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Engaging with government partners and regions
Engagement with partners and across regions involves collaboration with Indigenous communities, other neighbouring communities, regional districts and different levels of government to explore shared interests and solutions. Regional collaboration can offer the extra benefit of additional resources and expertise on complex issues.
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Engaging with the public and partner groups
Public engagement will involve citizens and partners, including community organizations, decision-makers, non-governmental organizations, local businesses post-secondary institutions, and other leaders in your community.
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Communication
Communication about climate change is important not only for engaging with the public, but also for illustrating impacts to decision-makers. While there is no one-size-fits all approach to climate change communication, local government communications professionals can find information in the below resources.
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Climate has always impacted our communities. We have typically understood these impacts based on historical climate data and trends. As climate changes, we need to inform our decisions with forward-looking climate data projections to build the resilience of our communities to the climate of the future.
In general, for the 2050s and beyond in British Columbia, we can expect hotter, drier summers, wetter winters with less snow, and greater extremes in temperatures.
However, climatic changes (for example, extreme precipitation), hazards (for example, flooding), and their impacts (for example, washout of roads) are site specific, so each community will need to identify how climate is expected to change in their region to assess the impacts of these changes.
Navigating climate data resources
Developing climate projections is a complex science. Yet, there are user-friendly tools available to help understand how climate is expected to change in your area. As with any data set, climate data projections reflect some assumptions and have some limitations. It is important to use the appropriate tool based on the type of decision being made.
As a general guiding principle, climate projection tools are an excellent resource for building broad understanding of how climate will change in an area and informing preliminary planning decisions. Any decisions relying on specific numerical details of climate projections (for example, engineering design) should be informed by climate science expertise to ensure there is an understanding of the assumptions being made and limitations of the data.
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A climate risk assessment helps different regions to systematically chart out specific impacts that are expected from their area’s changing climate.
Undertaking a climate risk assessment will take effort and time and should involve multiple partners to ensure that various perspectives and impacts are considered. An example of such an impact could be that landslides are expected to be more common, impacting evacuation routes and transportation in and out of the area.
The impacts posed by climate change are a combination of the following:
Local climate risk assessments
Climate risk assessments can be broad in scope (for example, community-wide), or more focused (for example, infrastructure risk assessment for existing systems or project-level risk assessments at the stage of project design) depending on what the risk information is meant to inform.
With information from the assessment, local governments and partners can make more informed decisions about what needs to be done to manage risks, where resources should be allocated, and how to prioritize actions.
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Provincial and regional disaster and climate risk and resilience assessments
The Province is leading the development of provincial and regional disaster and climate risk and resilience assessments, building on the 2019 Preliminary Strategic Climate Risk Assessment for B.C., to better understand and reduce disaster and climate risks.
The following sections provide information, resources and tools specific to key action areas over which local governments have authority and can act on.
Planning and land use
Local government planning can help build community sustainability and resilience. Planning and land use provides many opportunities to adapt to climate change.
Tools such as development permits, zoning, other bylaws, Official Community Plans (OCPs) and regional growth strategies can all help to manage increased risk to infrastructure and public health from a changing climate.
Planners also play a role in engaging with the public and across departments about climate change adaptation.
Examples addressing adaptation in planning and land use include:
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Emergency services and management planning
In B.C., local governments lead emergency planning, response and recovery efforts in their communities and are required by law to have emergency plans in place.
With increasing extreme weather events, it’s becoming critical to revise emergency management and response to also consider changing climate conditions and their impacts.
The Province is modernizing its emergency management legislation and has committed to implementing the Sendai Framework, which recognizes climate change as a driver of disaster risk. Revising local emergency plans, while engaging broadly internally and externally, will also help to better mitigate, prepare, respond and recover from ever increasing climate-related disasters. Understanding climate data can help with these revisions to ensure risks are accurately understood and planned for.
One assessment tool, the Hazard, Risk, and Vulnerability Analysis (HRVA), outlines a process to identify hazards that may cause an emergency and the potential consequences. Understanding this helps a community establish priorities, plans and strategies to prevent or reduce the risk from climate change.
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Asset management and finance
Climate change may affect critical infrastructure assets by reducing their service life, increasing maintenance costs and the risk of asset failure, reducing the level of service provided, and increasing the cost of managing risks.
Asset management is an integrated process undertaken by local governments in making informed decisions about where to most effectively and efficiently allocate resources to deliver services sustainably and manage risks. Considering climate impacts throughout the process is key to understanding infrastructure vulnerabilities as part of asset management planning and increasing community resilience.
Additionally, local government infrastructure must be adapted to changing conditions. Local government finance departments are critical partners in enabling adaptation. Finance can support the development of funding strategies for adaptation initiatives using available tools and resources and can support developing plans for accessing additional funding where required (through grants, tax rate, or fee increases).
Those working in financial reporting and capital planning may also be involved in identifying and reporting on climate-related financial risks. The recommendations from the Task Force for Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) were initially developed for private sector organizations, however, public sector organizations and cities specifically are seeing value in adopting these recommendations to inform decision-making and reporting.
Furthermore, while local governments have traditionally used asset management practices to operate, maintain and replace their built assets, recently there's been an increasing recognition of the importance of including natural assets within these frameworks. This shift comes from understanding that natural assets are crucial components of a community's infrastructure system, and that careful management and planning are required to maintain their health and usefulness.
Local governments in B.C. can integrate natural assets into their existing asset management plans by recognizing their value and incorporating them into financial planning and decision-making processes. This approach not only enhances infrastructure resilience, but also supports climate adaptation strategies by preserving and leveraging natural ecosystems for sustainable development.
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Buildings
There are many ways that climate change can impact our buildings, including:
With respect to their own corporate buildings, local governments can choose to build or renovate using resilient design measures that plan for the expected climate-related hazards in their region.
They can also support the resiliency of the community by encouraging specific practices or features in building design and construction through development permits for resilient building siting and landscaping, development cost charge reductions, waivers or fast-tracking permits. For example, through development permit areas for wildfire, local governments can regulate building form, exterior design and finish, often based on FireSmart principles. Local governments can also offer revitalization tax reductions for certain types of construction or retrofitting.
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Natural assets or natural asset infrastructure is the stock of natural resources or ecosystems that a local government or Indigenous community relies upon, manages or could manage to provide one or more services to a community. They include wetlands, forests, parks, grasslands, coastal ecosystems, streams and watersheds.
Natural assets provide critical services and functions to communities independently and in conjunction with engineered assets as part of infrastructure systems. These services include:
Both natural and engineered assets are vital, each playing unique but interconnected roles within an overall system. Managing natural assets, which involves identifying, valuing and overseeing them is as important as managing built assets. Adopting this comprehensive approach helps ensure the entire infrastructure system is sustainable and robust.
Local governments have traditionally used asset management practices to operate, maintain and replace their built assets. Recently, there's been an increasing recognition of the importance of including natural assets within these frameworks. This shift comes from understanding that natural assets are crucial components of a community's infrastructure system, and that careful management and planning are required to maintain their health and usefulness.
To date, many B.C. local governments have begun identifying, measuring, managing or accounting for their natural assets.
Natural asset inventory
The first step in natural asset management is conducting an inventory. This inventory systematically catalogues all natural assets within a specified area and assesses their condition and service value. This process provides a comprehensive understanding of these assets, enabling informed decision-making and effective management.
Conducting a natural asset inventory allows local governments to gain valuable insights into natural assets' climate, ecological, economic and social benefits. The outcomes include detailed maps, condition reports and valuations of ecosystem services, which support sustainable land-use planning and conservation efforts. This foundational step can be used to guide the long-term health and resilience of natural resources in the community.
Several organizations support local governments in inventorying, valuing, and managing natural assets. Some offer roadmap programs introducing local governments to the steps required to undertake an inventory and management of natural assets.
Local governments conducting natural asset inventories should consider using the CSA Q218 specifications for natural asset inventories, a National Standard of Canada, which provides minimum requirements for developing and reporting a natural asset inventory.
Questions related to natural asset infrastructure inventorying or management can be directed to the Local Government Climate Action Program.
Please refer to the BC Community Climate Funding Guide for up-to-date climate-related funding opportunities.
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Water and waste management
Climate change can impact services for drinking water, stormwater management, sewage collection and treatment, and solid waste management. Areas prone to flooding and drought may face increased risks.
Examples of climate impacts to drinking water services include:
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Climate change can affect stormwater services, through impacts on built infrastructure and natural assets as well as wastewater services, like sewage collection and treatment.
Taking a holistic approach by establishing long term, integrated strategies for stormwater management and the protection of natural watercourses can help communities to become more resilient and better protected.
Examples of climate impacts on wastewater and stormwater services include:
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Potential climate impacts on solid waste management services include:
The Environmental Management Act (section 24) requires that all regional districts prepare and submit a solid waste management plan to the provincial government. Full details on the requirements and process are outlined in the Guide to Solid Waste Management Planning (PDF, 1.7MB). In addition to the solid waste management plan, local governments may prepare liquid waste management plans for their jurisdictions.
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Transportation
Climate change impacts such as more frequent and intense precipitation events, temperature extremes and more variable freeze-thaw cycles are creating increasing challenges for transportation infrastructure.
Potential impacts on land transportation include:
Climate impacts are location-specific so communities will need to undertake climate risk assessments to determine potential implications.
Moving forward, applying a climate lens and designing for future climates during the project planning phase can help communities develop resilient transportation infrastructure.
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Public health and well-being
Climate change is not just an environmental and economic threat. It also has consequences for public health. Healthcare systems may be increasingly strained, increasing public costs and potentially limiting the ability to offer quality care to everyone.
Local governments play a role in supporting public health by reducing the impacts of climate health hazards as they occur and tackling the factors that make people more vulnerable to climate health hazards.
Adapting to the health impacts of climate change can include:
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Parks, recreation and culture
Climate change will likely have impacts on a community’s parks, recreation and cultural infrastructure and systems. Parks and recreation spaces are more vulnerable to flooding and inundation as they are often located near coastal, creek and low-lying areas. Warmer winter temperatures may reduce the availability of winter recreational activities and warmer summers may make outdoor recreation spaces less comfortable. Cultural events, like music, art and heritage festivals may also be impacted by hotter temperatures.
At the same time, parks and recreation present many opportunities to integrate adaptation, and can provide benefits like flood mitigation, emergency gathering spaces and shading during hotter summer months. It’s important to consider how to prepare these spaces for a changing climate and to consider them in climate adaptation strategies to capture their benefits.
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