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Hawai'i and Pacific Islands

Multi-Model Framework for Quantitative Sectoral Impacts Analysis

Submitted by nina.hall on

This Technical Report presents results from a large set of sectoral impact models that quantify and monetize climate change impacts in the U.S., with a primary focus on the contiguous U.S., under moderate and severe future climates. The report summarizes and communicates the results of the second phase of quantitative sectoral impacts analysis under the Climate Change Impacts and Risk Analysis (CIRA) project. The effort is intended to inform the fourth National Climate Assessment (NCA4) of the U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP).

How to Consider Climate Change in Coastal Conservation

Submitted by luann.dahlman on
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Module Description
This course covers a step-by-step approach that can be used to create a new conservation plan or update an existing one that incorporates climate change information. It is suitable for anyone working to manage or conserve lands in coastal areas. This includes wetland, floodplain, or emergency managers, planners, or conservation organizations. The course's six iterative steps draw from existing strategic conservation planning frameworks; however, the steps here focus on climate considerations and key resources relevant to the coastal environment, including coastal watersheds.
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Collaborating for Success: Sustaining Water Supply on a Pacific Island

Utu Abe Malae, Executive Director of the American Samoa Power Authority (ASPA), understands the importance of responding to early forecasts for El Niño events. On the seven islands that comprise American Samoa, the most notable impact of El Niño is drought, and the potential for a dimished supply of fresh water—any island’s most precious natural resource—is cause for concern.

A Blueprint for Action: Water Security for an Uncertain Future 2016–2018

Submitted by nina.hall on

The Hawai‘i Fresh Water Initiative was launched in 2013 to bring multiple, diverse parties together to develop a forward-thinking and consensus-based strategy to increase water security for the Hawaiian Islands. This Blueprint is the result of the work of the Hawai‘i Fresh Water Council, and provides Hawai‘i policy and decision makers with a set of solutions that have broad, multisector support in the fresh water community that should be adopted over the next three years to put Hawai‘i on a path toward water security.

Hawai'i Social Network Analysis

In 2012, Pacific RISA launched a multi-year social network analysis project to examine communication patterns and how climate information spreads across different sectors and places in the Pacific Islands region. Using the December 2012 release of the Pacific Islands Regional Climate Assessment (PIRCA) report as a springboard, researchers collected data on the professional and scientific networks of climate change stakeholders.

Hawaii Coastal Erosion Management Plan

Submitted by nina.hall on

This document, known as the COEMAP, provides a framework for community discussion and assessment of coastal erosion and beach loss in Hawai'i. The objective of COEMAP, and the public dialogue it seeks to foster, is to outline socioeconomic and technical mechanisms for conserving and restoring Hawai'i’s beaches in a framework of mitigating erosion impacts and reducing exposure to coastal hazards for future generations.

Sea Level Rise Hawaii

This website discusses projected sea level rise impacts in the Hawaiian Islands and offers visualizations of projected sea level rise, coastal erosion, and flooding impacts created by the Coastal Geology Group of the University of Hawai'i at Manoa. The visualizations are available in various formats, including still map images, animated fly-overs, and PowerPoint presentations.

NOAA Fisheries Climate Science Strategy | Pacific Islands Regional Action Plan

Submitted by nina.hall on

The Pacific Islands Regional Action Plan was developed to increase the production, delivery, and use of climate-related information to fulfill the NOAA Fisheries mission in the region, and identifies priority needs and specific actions to implement the NOAA Fisheries Climate Science Strategy in the Pacific Islands over the next three to five years. The Pacific Islands Region spans a large geographic area including the North and South Pacific subtropical gyres and the archipelagic waters of Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands (CNMI), and the U.S.

Water Resources Dashboard

From this single site, water resource professionals can access a range of maps and data that help them make decisions about water resources and planning. The dashboard offers tools in four categories:

  • Forecasts and Outlooks
  • Current Observations
  • Historical Observations
  • Potentially Useful Map Layers

A 30-minute recorded webinar is available for many of the tools: each session features a scientist who discusses the product and a practitioner who describes how they use the information.

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