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Links to Material from the Metro East Coast Assessment Group:
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Related Articles from the National Assessment's
Newsletter, Acclimations.
Metro East
Coast Regional Assessment Luncheon.Â
Friday 1 March 2002,
1200-1400 hrs EST. Location: Columbia University,
Morningside Campus, Dag Hammarskjold Lounge, School of International
& Public Affairs, 6th floor. Admission: By
Invitation Only. Sponsors: Columbia
Earth Institute and NASA Goddard
Institute for Space Studies (GISS). "Stakeholders
from the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the US
Environmental Protection Agency Region II and the US Federal
Emergency Management Agency Region II as well as university
researchers, will give presentations on how climate affects their
sectors. Members of the business, foundation, scientific,
environmental and political communities will have the opportunity to
engage in inter-sector dialogue. The recently published Metropolitan
East Coast Regional Assessment will serve as the basis for
discussion on how current and future climate conditions can be
integrated into decision-making. Contact: Mr.
Christopher Shashkin, Tel: +1 212 678 5543
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The Workshop
The workshop for the Metro East Coast, part of the series of US Global
Change Research Program (USGCRP) regional climate change workshops, took
place on March 23-24, 1998 at Columbia University. This series of
workshops is seen as a first step in a U.S. national assessment of the
potential consequences of climate variability and change. The Metropolitan
East Coast region is unique in the dominant role played by human systems
with respect to other physical and biological systems. One result of this
is that most of the region's resources are imported and a large portion of
its' waste must be exported. It follows from this that the region's
impacts are often felt beyond its' boundaries.
The working groups were charged with developing assessments which
integrate over the projections of the scientists and the planners. Each of
the working groups included experts in physical and ecological systems as
well as in human systems (e.g., economists, planners, political
scientists, etc.). In addition to addressing impacts, the workshop
addressed issues related to the uncertainties associated with all aspects
of the challenges this region currently faces.
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Issues for Analysis
The assessment considered a number of key sectors and issues that are
critical in the Metro East Coast region. The key issues include: Coasts
and Wetlands, Infrastructure, Water Supply, Public Health, Energy, and
Institutional Decision-making. This region also considered spatial
linkages between New York and other regions and equity concerns as they
underlie the issues under analysis. The assessment focus was on addressing
environmental and socio-economic impacts due to climate changes,
recognizing that some of the current stresses in the region are
complicating factors.
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Strategy for the Assessment
This assessment was designed to be an application of state-of-the-art
climate change science to a set of linked sectoral assessment analyses
important for the Metro East Coast (MEC) region. In the assessment, three
interacting elements of global cities reactions and responses to climate
variability and change are illustrated. These elements include: people
(e.g., socio-demographic conditions), place (e.g., physical systems), and
pulse (e.g., decision-making and economic activities). The model assumes
that a comprehensive assessment of potential climate change can be derived
from examining the impacts within each of these elements and at their
intersections. Thus the assessment was designed to determine the
within-element and inter-element effects.
The U.S. National Assessment scenarios of climate and socio-economic
factors were used to develop six interacting sector studies representing
the three intersecting elements. Stakeholders, i.e., decision-makers
associated with key regional governmental and non-governmental
organizations, were involved in the development and articulation of each
sector study and in the assessment as a whole. The Assessment
document [PDF] is available on the web.
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Principal Investigators |
Cynthia Rosenzweig, Columbia University
William Solecki, Montclair State University |
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Coordinating Federal Agency |
National Science Foundation |
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Agency Representative |
Tom Spence, National Science Foundation |
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Key Sectors/Issues |
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Assessment Team
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Vivien Gornitz, GISS
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Douglas Hill, State University of New York, Stony Brook
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Klaus Jacob, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory
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David Major, GISS
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Vijay Modi, Columbia University Fu Foundation School of Engineering
and Applied Science
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Patrick Kinney, Columbia School of Public Health
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Rae Zimmerman, NYU
Stakeholder Partners
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Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Region 2
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The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
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National Park Service, Gateway National Park
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New York State Emergency Management Office (NYSEMO)
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Southeast New York Intergovernmental Water Supply Advisory Council (SENYIWSAC)
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New York City Department of Health
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New York District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
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Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Region 2
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