2011 - E. Pond et al., UBC - Collaborative for Advanced Landscape Planning
This Guidance Manual describes how climate change visioning approaches can be applied by municipalities, consultants and community groups to support adaptation and mitigation in BC communities. The Manual includes local case studies, visual examples and validation research.
$9.5 billion - Cost Estimate of Protecting Metro Vancouver from Sea Level Rise by 2100
posted on 3:13 PM, December 20, 2012
It could cost $9.5 billion to implement flood-protection improvements in Metro Vancouver by 2100 to address sea level rise, according to a report by Delcan commissioned by the B.C. government.
It could cost $9.5 billion to implement flood-protection improvements in Metro Vancouver by 2100 to address sea level rise, according to a report by Delcan commissioned by the B.C. government.
The report, Cost of Adaptation - Sea Dikes and Alternative Strategies, covers more than 250km of coastal shoreline in Metro Vancouver including the Fraser River downstream of the Port Mann Bridge. The report explores options such as new or expanded dikes, floodwalls where there is insufficient room for dikes, breakwaters or barrier islands to dissipate wave energy, restrictions on building in the floodplain and better emergency response systems.
Detailed information on British Columbia weather—past and present—is now just a mouse click away, thanks to a new data portal launched by the Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium (PCIC) at the University of Victoria.
New Professional Flood Management Guidelines in BC now Consider Climate Change
by Lindsay Gardner, posted on 12:26 PM, October 26, 2012
In October 2012, the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of BC (APEGBC) adopted Professional Practice Guidelines - Legislated Flood Assessments in BC, to identify the circumstances when risk assessments are appropriate and to emphasize the need to consider climate change and land use changes in such assessments.
This strategy has been developed as part of a BC Regional Adaptation Collaborative (BC RAC) case study over 2009-2011 focusing on the Cariboo Regional District. This strategy focuses on local government services and was created to help inform a Regional Development Strategy (RDS) outlining a plan for development in the region over the next twenty years.
The steps taken in the development of this strategy are:
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The RDS process is to be initiated in the near future and the climate change adaptation strategy helps the region plan by incorporating climate scenarios for the next 30-70 years.