Designing a federal portfolio approach for understanding complex climate events: Disruption, resilience, and recovery among small- and medium-sized businesses

A. Zycherman, J. Helgeson
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Abstract

At the U.S. Department of Commerce, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Climate and Adaptation Partnerships (CAP) Program and the National Institute of Standards and Technology's (NIST) Community Resilience Program (CRP) collaborate on a portfolio of research projects, across national and regional scales that explore small- and medium-sized business (SMB) disruption and resilience to complex climate events. Some of the most significant costs associated with the impact of weather and climate disasters stem from disruptions experienced by SMBs, but the full extent of immediate and downstream impacts on communities can only be fully understood over time. The NOAA-NIST portfolio of projects uses social science framing to bridge federal research priorities that typically orient around specific hazards and risks, with sector-specific (i.e. SMBs) climate change resilience needs. This approach lends itself to a deeper understanding of complex climate events by focusing on cascading and compound events, including both acute and chronic exposures, as well as the broader social structures that formulate a variety of socio-economic stressors and that can exacerbate both vulnerability to impacts and recovery potential over time. In this commentary, we describe the development of the research portfolio and highlight the importance of the complex event framework and cross-agency cooperation in the federal approach to understanding and addressing climate change. This approach moves beyond considerations relevant to discrete risk types or events, to uncover the social and sectoral spaces in which conditions for impacts and recovery are formed and realized across multiple geographies and over time. Understanding the formulation of complex events, and in this demonstrative case how SMB operators across communities learn about and implement resilience measures, is key for effective and equitable climate services and building community resilience.
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为理解复杂气候事件设计一种联邦投资组合方法:中小型企业的破坏、恢复和恢复
在美国商务部,国家海洋和大气管理局(NOAA)的气候与适应伙伴关系(CAP)计划和国家标准与技术研究院(NIST)的社区复原力计划(CRP)在全国和地区范围内合作开展一系列研究项目,探讨中小型企业(SMB)的破坏和对复杂气候事件的复原力。与天气和气候灾害影响相关的一些最重要的成本来自中小企业所经历的中断,但对社区的直接和下游影响的全部程度只能随着时间的推移才能完全了解。NOAA-NIST的项目组合使用社会科学框架来连接联邦研究的优先事项,这些优先事项通常围绕特定的危害和风险,以及特定部门(即中小企业)的气候变化适应能力需求。这种方法通过关注级联和复合事件,包括急性和慢性暴露,以及形成各种社会经济压力源的更广泛的社会结构,有助于更深入地理解复杂的气候事件,这些社会经济压力源可能会随着时间的推移加剧对影响的脆弱性和恢复潜力。在本评论中,我们描述了研究组合的发展,并强调了复杂事件框架和跨机构合作在联邦理解和应对气候变化方法中的重要性。这种方法超越了与离散风险类型或事件相关的考虑,揭示了在多个地区和时间内形成和实现影响和恢复的条件的社会和部门空间。了解复杂事件的形成过程,以及在本示范案例中了解社区中小企业运营商如何学习和实施抗灾措施,是有效和公平的气候服务和建立社区抗灾能力的关键。
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