empowering communities: making climate change local and exploring alternative future visions
DESCRIPTION
This presentation shows how visualising the impacts of climate change on local communities, along with visual depictions of adaptation or mitigation, can be a very useful to drive local engagement in vulnerable areas. Presentation by Stephen R. J. Sheppard PhD., ASLA. Collaborative for Advanced Landscape Planning, UBC, Vancouver, CanadaTRANSCRIPT
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EMPOWERING COMMUNITIES: Making climate change local and exploring alternative future visions Stephen R. J. Sheppard PhD., ASLA. Collaborative for Advanced Landscape Planning, UBC, Vancouver, Canada Communicating Climate Change: Visualization workshop, Bedruthan, Cornwall 21 May 2014
D. Flanders, CALP
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Empowering Communities: Outline 1. More effective community engagement:
– Making climate change local with simple visual learning tools (eg. photo-albums, community mapping)
2. Better planning processes: – Exploring alternative future visions: embedding
landscape visualization within participatory processes
3. Resources for scaling-up and replicating/adapting such methods
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Crisis?
Source: InTouch Magazine, 14 August 2006
Which crisis?
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Principles for communicating climate change
• Make it local (or regional)
• Make it visual (compelling)
• Make it holistic (connecting the dots on climate change)
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Question: How many of you have seen climate change?
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Coastal flooding in West Vancouver, 2013
Photograph by: Mark van Manen, Vancouver Sun
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7
Subtle impacts in local landscapes…
Proof
Taylor & FrancisNot for distribution
Proof
148
PART II Knowing, seeing and acting
Unstable weather patterns are becoming more obvious owing to the increasing frequency
of extreme events. While the media often dramatise these events, they receive only short-
term coverage and are easily forgotten unless they happen in one’s own community.
Worse yet, they are generally not linked to climate change in information releases where
they are consistent with expected climate change trends. Often, only foresters and park
managers recognize the long-term aftermath in the local landscape. These events (such
as record snowfalls or rainstorms) are still relatively rare in many communities in
temperate regions, and it is hard for people to detect their increasing frequency without
good, clear information.
Impact Window 3 Historical evidence and gradual shifts in temperate regions
Fading memories of once-common conditions, and creeping changes.
(a) Backyard ice-rinks: a tradition for children growing up in eastern Canada that is becoming a thing of the past in this hockey-obsessed nation. Will Canadians see a fall-off in interest in the sport or just more children being driven to the hockey arena?
(b) ‘Early spring’ in my mother’s garden in Witney, England: are the early blossoms on the almond tree and clematis a delight or a foreshadowing of worse to come?
M06_Visualizing Climate Change_P02C06.indd 148 05/12/2011 08:51:30
Source: S. Sheppard, 2012
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Climate Change Components Causes
“Carbon consciousness”
Impacts “Damage report”
Mitigation solutions “Dealing with the causes” (GHGs)
Adaptation solutions “Dealing with the effects”
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Seeing the world through a holistic climate change lens
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BC Community Energy and Emissions Inventory (CEEI)
• Natural gas • Gasoline
West Vancouver CEEI data
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What goes around comes around?
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Photo-album documenting local causes of climate change
13
Proof
Taylor & FrancisNot for distribution
Proof
112
PART II Knowing, seeing and acting
Carbon Window 3 Fossil fuels in the neighbourhood (I): burning carbon in our homes and backyards
(a) Large or low-efficiency homes consume high quantities of natural gas, oil, coal or electricity from fossil fuels for heating or cooling. Chimneys may be the only externally visible carbon indicator.
(b) Gas meters: many buildings have them, explicitly recording how much carbon we are burning and releasing, but they are hard to read, located in less visible locations outside the home, and often deliberately screened from public view.
(c) High carbon businesses in Merida, Mexico, with air-conditioners in poorly insulated office buildings and on-street employee parking.
(d) Natural gas fireplaces are designed to be viewed inside the home and to mimic an attractive, carbon-neutral wood fire. In truth, ‘natural’ gas in this context is really unnatural (extracted from deep below the earth) and more dangerous.
M05_Visualizing Climate Change_P02C05.indd 112 05/12/2011 08:45:40
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Local Mitigation Solutions
Proof
Taylor & FrancisNot for distribution
Proof
188
PART II Knowing, seeing and acting
Mitigation Window 5 Community-wide services and redevelopment
When local government gets in on the act.
(a) A community district heating system and 2.2MW power generation in Purkersdorf near Vienna, running on wood-chips: comfortably embedded in the heart of the village next to the fire station and shops. Townsfolk can see where their power comes from.
(b) Higher density zoning reduces per-family carbon footprints in various architectural configurations, but moderate densification through infill housing, secondary suites, etc. is more acceptable to existing residents than stark high-rise glass and concrete towers.
(c) View from a train in eastern Germany: rural communities living cheek by jowl with co-owned wind farms that contribute to the local economy.
(d) Grass growing on road medians and verges in Freiburg, Germany is kept long and natural to reduce the use of fossil fuels in maintenance: they have become a low-key symbol of green living, accepted by residents.
M07_Visualizing Climate Change_P02C07.indd 188 05/12/2011 08:55:40
Photo credits: S. Sheppard
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Local Adaptation Solutions
15
Proof
Taylor & FrancisNot for distribution
Proof
CHAPTER 8 Seeing adaptation solutions
223
Adaptation Window 4 Measures for managing water hazards in one area
The MetroVancouver region of Canada: wet and wild.
(a) Sea-walls have been built to protect homes along Boundary Bay, BC, but higher walls to guard against faster sea-level rise have been opposed by some residents because they will block cherished beach views.
(b) Major stream channel reconstruction has become necessary on steep Northshore creeks to reduce bank erosion, channel scouring and debris flows (rock-laden torrents).
(c) Beach restoration in West Vancouver, increasing protection from storm scouring by reconfiguring the shoreline to trap marine sediment; well accepted by the community, but hard to notice without time-lapse photography.
M08_Visualizing Climate Change_P02C08.indd 223 05/12/2011 09:00:22
Photo credits: S. Sheppard
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Making energy visible with thermal imaging Eagle Island neighbourhood retrofit
• 29/30 homes have done energy audits & thermal imaging
• Most have done energy upgrades, reduced carbon emissions
• Fuelled by dinners, wine, and fun !
Sources: PICS White Paper on thermal imaging and community-led social mobilization (Cote et al., in press); UK TI research: Goodhew et al., 2010
Proof
Taylor & FrancisNot for distribution
Proof
CHAPTER 9 Seeing the big picture
255
Retr
ofit
exis
ting
com
mun
ity
Eagle Island, West Vancouver, Canada, 2009
Eagle Island is a community of about 30 homes where almost all households have done an energy audit, are doing thermal imaging of heat loss, and have pledged to retrofit their homes to cut carbon footprint and reduce energy costs.
Gussing, Austria, 1996 A crisis in paying for fossil fuel led to wholesale conversion of the town to biomass energy for heating and electricity. Now an internationally renowned green tourism centre.
To illustrate just how much progress is possible, we will now take a closer look at three examples of pioneering communities that are quite far along the path towards realizing their visions of sustainability. They give us glimpses of what the future may look like when communities follow very different pathways. Box 9A shows what a small rural community can accomplish and Box 9B, a fairly large city; both exhibit retrofitting of existing communities (with some new development), coming from different parts of Europe. Our third example comes from China, which in 2009 overtook the USA to become the world’s largest source of greenhouse gases: it represents the different problem faced in the ‘New World’ of building a very large low-carbon city more or less from scratch.
M09_Visualizing Climate Change_P02C09.indd 255 05/12/2011 09:04:51
Photos: S. Sheppard
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DIY visualization
Credit: Andrew MacFarland and Damion Dorn, West Vancouver Secondary School
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NEIGHBOURHOOD TOOLKIT: Mapping climate change on your block
Purpose: engaging neighbours with community mapping of local climate change indicators
– Carbon (high or low?; mitigation potential?) – Vulnerability to climate change (high or low?;
adaptation potential?)
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Green Areas
Credit: Mayara Benedetti
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MOST POSSIBLE FLOODED AREAS
SECONDARY FLOODED AREAS
Vulnerability—easily flooded areas Nanjing Forestry University students Group 6, November 2013
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Empowering Communities: Outline 1. More effective community engagement:
– Making climate change local with hands-on visual learning tools
2. Better planning processes: – Exploring alternative future visions: embedding
landscape visualization within structured participatory processes
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Graphs and numbers aren’t enough
Delta: 1.2m of sea level rise projected by 2100 (BC Sea Dike Guidelines, 2011)
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We need ‘defensible drama’: visually compelling, science-based time-travel in familiar places
Ladner Dike View
D. Flanders, CALP
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Build Up Scenario
D. Flanders, CALP
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Goal: develop and test a new engagement/planning process:
• best available data, expert & local knowledge: co-production
• spatial analysis/GIS & hybrid modelling • experiential ‘landscape visualization’ to
tap emotions & sense of place • evaluation of the effect of the process on
knowledge, opinions, motivations & policy
Local Climate Change Visioning Process
Localize, spatialize and visualize climate change
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Average April 1st Snowline Snowpack example
Canadian Global Climate Model 2: A2 scenario
Data: Environment Canada; Visualization: D. Flanders, CALP
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Components of Visioning Process
1. Participation
2. Scenario Building
3. Data / Modeling Integration
4. 3D and 4D Visualizations
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Visioning Process
Iteration of components through phases with a local working group.
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GHG Scenarios (CO2-equiv, millions of tonnes)
( 2 8 -‐ 0 1-‐ 0 7)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 2070 2080 2090 2100
A 2 / F ortressWorld
B 2 / PolicyR eform
B 1-‐450 / GreatT rans itions
GB-QUEST Modelling/ Tellus regional scenarios for Metro Vancouver (Carmichael)
Visualizing future pathways (alternative land use plans and lifestyles)
Visualisation: D. Flanders, CALP
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• 2D maps/comm- unity mapping
• Info-graphics
• 3D landscape visualizations, video, animations
Various visual learning tools
30
Proof
Taylor & FrancisNot for distribution
Proof
CHAPTER 10 Making climate change more visible
297
One exciting way of connecting locally observed information with that of other communities is through what is called Public Participation GIS (PPGIS), where people enter their own data into an online spatial database:
What if we could exploit the collective reality of what emerges from multiple and consistent observations around the world? The Global Climate Change Mapping Project is designed to collect and display the ‘people’s view’ of climate change by offering the opportunity for anyone to identify environmental changes that may be due to climate change … when you combine easy-to-use mapping technology with the global reach of the internet.12
This approach taps local knowledge in communities by giving people a simple, structured way to locate and describe changes in their landscape that may be due to climate change (Figure 10.7), though information quality may be very variable unless more systematic methods (as proposed here) or scientific verification are used. It could also be extended to map causes and solutions for climate change.
Figure 10.7 Data points with annotations on observed local climate change impacts, entered by contributors around the world using a Google Maps interface developed by the Landscape Values and PPGIS Institute; this example is from Washington State
M10_Visualizing Climate Change_P03C10.indd 297 05/12/2011 09:08:50
Data: Natural Resources Canada; Visualization: J. Danahy, U. of Toronto
N. Miller, CALP
Greg Brown,
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How does Climate Change Visioning work in practice?
• With a regional socio-economic model and climate change projections: – North Vancouver, BC: suburban hillside community – Delta, BC: coastal floodplain community
• With simple GIS mapping & Google Earth in an official adaptation plan: – Kimberley, BC: rural forest-dependent community
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Current Mean April 1st Snowline (759m) 2020s World 1 (A2) Mean April 1st Snowline (789m) 2050s World 1 (A2) Mean April 1st Snowline (920m) 2090s World 1 (A2) Mean April 1st Snowline (1074m) NORTH VANCOUVER D. Flanders, CALP
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NORTH VANCOUVER J. Laurenz, CALP
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Local food market
Live / work development
60% reduction in home energy consumption
Mul4family suites
Community gardening
Electric commuter vehicles
Smaller, efficient cars
Increased public transit
Stormwater drainage swale Passive solar
conservatory
NORTH VANCOUVER J. Laurenz, CALP
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Coastal Neighbourhoods
Holistic Landscape Planning for Climate Change DNV Presentation
December 15, 2008 Flanders/Pond
Existing Condition 2100: Storm surge (3.48m)
2100: Wall Adaptation 2100: Dike Adaptation 2100: Retrofitting largely complete 2050: Complete resilient floating neighbourhood
DELTA D. Flanders, CALP
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Change in Perceptions of Urgency:
• Before: 23% of practitioners felt that the impacts of climate change are serious now
• After: 46% felt that way
When impacts of climate change will become serious (Metro Van Practitioners;
Before)
020406080
100
Never 100yearsfromnow
50 yearsfromnow
20 yearsfromnow
It isserious
now
% R
espo
nden
ts
When impacts of climate change will become serious (Metro Van Practitioners;
After)
020406080
100
Never 100yearsfromnow
50 yearsfromnow
20 yearsfromnow
It isserious
now
% R
espo
nden
ts
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Impacts of Local Climate Change Visioning Process?
• Increased understanding of local impacts and solutions
• Increased willingness (65-69%) to support local mitigation/adaptation measures
Delta 2007 public workshops with survey:
Longterm impacts on decision-making (interviews 4 years later): • Local government staff
more willing to consider radical solutions to climate change
• Northshore climate hazards study / detailed Delta adaptation scenario assessment
• Widespread use of visual images in the community
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Participant comments on the process (South Delta community):
• "I learned how climate change could affect my community in a very graphic way. Numbers may not stay with me but visuals will”
• "I was somewhat aware of global warming impacts on the Maldives and polar ice caps - this presentation placed my own community in that context”
• “Felt empowered”
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Kimberley: User evaluation of visualization helpfulness
Over 30 adaptation measures adopted in the final Plan
Kimberley public meeting Respondents n=38, valid n=38 Mean: 4.370, Standard Deviation 1.051
O. Schroth, C. Miller, CALP
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Empowering Communities: Outline 1. More effective community engagement:
– Making climate change local with hands-on visual learning tools
2. Better planning processes: – Exploring alternative future visions: embedding
time travel through landscape visualization within participatory processes
3. Resources for scaling-up & replicating such processes
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Resources:
Earthscan/Routledge book www.visualizingclimatechange.ca
Delta RAC website: http://www.delta-adaptation-bc.ca Visualization Training Modules: http://www.delta-adaptation-bc.ca/category/training-modules/
www.calp.forestry.ubc.ca/publications
Visioning Guidance Manual (Pond et al, 2010)
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Guidelines for ethical & effec;ve use of visual media on climate change
• Clarity -‐ vivid, easily seen and understood • Credibility -‐ honest, balanced, verifiable • Engagement -‐ interes4ng and accessible • Connec4vity -‐ relevant, personal, integrated • Feasibility -‐ prac4cal, cost-‐effec4ve, replicable
See also more detailed Visualiza4on Code of Ethics
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• Vivid, personally meaningful visual imagery: – grabs attention, resonates, can
accelerate learning & action – can be a grassroots DIY tool
• Moral imperative to use visuals more systematically: – training and capacity-building for
increased application in practice
• Professional imperative to do it right: – adopt ethical principles – embed in structured, participatory
decision-making processes
Implications for visualizing our futures with climate change
www.calp.forestry.ubc.ca
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Future Delta 2.0 educational climate change videogame
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ollOh5xRz3M
UBCO CCT Team
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Respondents n=38, valid n=36 Mean: 2.190, Standard Deviation 1.305
User evaluation of interactive Google Earth usage in Kimberley public meeting
Fire-spread mapping: Bob Grey Consulting
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Generic Neighbourhood: The Sandbox, by land use