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A Federal Agenda for U.S. Climate Resilience 

Aerial view of trees and bodies of water

One of the key topics that world leaders are debating at the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Egypt is how nations can more quickly and effectively adapt to climate change’s global threats. As confirmed in a draft U.S. government report released on the first day of COP-27, America is not immune to these threats. The U.S. is warming at a faster rate than many other nations and climate threats are hitting the U.S. hard. 

new white paper by Stanford University visiting lecturer David Hayes outlines the Biden-Harris Administration’s focus on helping communities anticipate and address the highest-priority climate threats that they face, based on their location and risk profile. In his paper Hayes – the former Special Assistant to U.S. President Joe Biden for Climate Policy – urges the U.S. Administration to work with Congress to institutionalize and expand its climate resilience agenda across the entire federal government, in close partnership with state, tribal and local leaders, with special attention on disadvantaged communities that are particularly vulnerable to climate impacts.  

National climate adaptation took center stage at Stanford's COP26 side event and is the focus of a new series of Woods Uncommon Dialogues launched this year. Focused on a national climate resilience strategy, this series was organized in cooperation with a consortium of partners that includes the Duke Nicholas Institute for Energy, Environment, and Sustainability; American Geophysical Union (AGU); National Academies of Science, EcoAdapt and American Society of Adaptation Professionals. The series aims to explore ways in which academia and the nonprofit sector can help facilitate the eventual adoption of a comprehensive U.S. climate adaptation strategy. 

Related Resources 
Webinar: Building Climate Resilience: The Case of Extreme Heat
Research Brief: Urban Traffic Resilience and Coastal Flooding
Research Brief: Valuing Urban Nature – Implications for Flood Resilience
National Press Club Briefing: Climate Adaptation and Building Resilience

Hayes is a distinguished visiting lecturer at the Stanford Law School and a visiting scholar at Stanford’s Precourt Institute for Energy and Woods Institute for the Environment. Prior to his White House role, Hayes was executive director of the State Energy & Environmental Impact Center at the NYU School of Law, where he worked with state attorneys general on climate, environment and clean energy initiatives; the Senate-confirmed deputy secretary and chief operating officer at the U.S. Department of the Interior for Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton; and chairman of the board of the Environmental Law Institute. He has also worked as a partner as global chair of the environment, Land and Resources department at Latham & Watkins.

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