Event on September 23, 2010
Get Past the Past: Climate Change Adaptation In & Around NYC
Climate change holds great uncertainties, but the fact of climate change is not in doubt. Cities, in which more than half the world's population now live, are ever more at risk. The New York Metro Area — with its dense population, concentration of essential infrastructure systems and high-value building stock — is particularly vulnerable.
This year, the New York Academy of Sciences published Climate Change Adaptation in New York City: Building Risk Management Response written by the New York City Panel on Climate Change. This report will set the terms of metropolitan adaptation analysis for cities everywhere.
Today, City government, The Port Authority and private insurers are developing risk management tools for identifying, assessing, and managing risks posed by climate change. Learn how experts think through complex urban climate adaptation issues — some of which are well beyond the realm of past experience — and how decisions about adaptation are being made.
This event is presented as a part of Climate Week New York.
Speakers:
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Gary Yohe, Ph.D., Professor of Economics, Wesleyan University, NYC Panel on Climate Change
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Megan Linkin, Ph.D., Swiss Re, NYC Panel on Climate Change
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Christopher Zeppie, Director of the Office of Environmental Policy, Programs and Compliance at the Port Authority NY/NJ
Moderator:
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Alyssa Katz, Pratt Center for Community Development, Author, Our Lot: How Real Estate Came To Own Us
Event Details
September 23, 2010 - 6:00pm - 8:00pm
New York Academy of Sciences