Funding Opportunity: Call for Statements of Interest for NW CASC Research

The Climate Adaptation Science Center Network, made up of nine regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers serving all US states, territories and affiliated Pacific Islands, is coming together to advance climate adaptation science through its Federal Fiscal Year 2022 funding opportunity. Through this funding opportunity, an estimated $10 million may be available across the network for research to support natural and cultural resource managers making science-based, climate adaptation decisions!

As part of this effort, the NW CASC is seeking proposals for Northwest climate adaptation research. Proposed projects should focus on developing scientific information and products that can be directly applied to the following resource management priorities, either locally or broadly across landscapes in Idaho, Oregon, Washington and western Montana:

  • Management of Invasive Species and Diseases under Future Climate Scenarios
  • Management of Shrubland Ecosystems under Future Climate Scenarios
  • Managing Climate-driven, Post-fire Ecological Transformation

Individuals from the following eligible organizations may submit proposals as the lead Principal Investigator:

  • Members of the NW CASC Consortium (Boise State University, Oregon State University, University of Montana, University of Washington, Washington State University, Western Washington University)
  • USGS centers, field stations, laboratories, Cooperative Research Units, etc.
  • Researchers from other organizations (federal, state, tribal, non-governmental and other) may participate in CASC-funded projects and receive funds via subawards, contracts or interagency agreements through an eligible organization.

An informational webinar about this opportunity will be held on Tuesday, February 16 at 3 p.m. (PT). You can find the Zoom information in the RFP linked below.

The deadline for Statements of Interest is: Friday, March 19, 2021 | 2 p.m. (PT)

SEE THE REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS


NW CASC Seeks Postdoc Focused on Fire & Climate

Are you a researcher interested in the nexus of climate change and wildfire? The University of Washington, in partnership with the Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center (NW CASC) and the University of Montana, is searching for a talented scientist with an interest in climate-fire-ecosystem dynamics and associated natural resource management in the Northwestern US and a passion for delivering research that informs decision-making!

LEARN MORE


Director’s Corner: A Voyage of Discovery

The Climate Impacts Groups’ first grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Science Administration charged the team of scientists with a “voyage of discovery.” 25 years and even more discoveries later, the group at the University of Washington is still on a scientific quest to support climate-smart decision making across the Northwest region. 

Setting sail — without a map

When Edward Miles established the Climate Impacts Group in 1995, he wanted to advance the conversation about — and action on — climate.

Miles, University of Washington Professor of Marine Affairs, saw a large gap between the scale of information produced about climate change and the needs of people who could help prepare for climate risks. It may seem obvious now, but at the time, scientists were focused on global climate change. There was little attention on climate impacts science at the local and regional levels, where our responses strongly shape our vulnerability to changes in climate.

In fact, in the mid-90s there were no groups we know of in the U.S. or around the world focused on understanding the importance of climate at a local level. We knew very little about how natural variations in climate affected the Northwest’s resources, ecosystems, infrastructure and more. We knew even less about how human-caused changes in climate would affect those same things.

Though there were no guides for doing this work, we knew from the beginning where we wanted to go; we wanted to develop climate information that would be both useful and used. In this spirit, when the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration funded our group in 1995, they called our mission a “voyage of discovery.”

Building the foundation for Northwest climate resilience

The Climate Impacts Group’s early work established how climate shapes life across the Pacific Northwest. Our small team was made up of climate dynamicists, hydrologists, forest and aquatic ecologists, coastal managers, social scientists and lawyers. By studying the consequences of past fluctuations in climate (warmer years, or years with less rain, as examples), we built a foundation of knowledge of how climate affects Northwest communities, economies and ecosystems. We worked with partners to measure the ability of humans to cope with fluctuations in climate through policy or practice. Studied together, this research allowed us to project the likely future consequences of human-caused climate change.

One of our first breakthroughs was the group’s discovery that changes in patterns of rain, snow and snowmelt are the most significant driver of impacts in the Northwest. Broadly, warmer temperatures in winter lead to less snow falling and remaining frozen in the mountains, which then means less water available from mountain snowmelt in the summer. This basic change in hydrology — more water in winter, when we need it less, and less water in summer, when we need it more — is behind several of the biggest risks of a changing climate, including increased risk of flooding in winter; of drought in summer; and of wildfire.

Another major breakthrough for climate resilience across Washington State was spurred by orders from Governor Christine Gregoire and the state legislature. In response to several directives, the Climate Impacts Group developed the first Climate Change Impacts Assessment for the State of Washington, which outlined the projected effects of climate change on water management, forestry, agriculture and more. We also developed, at the request of the legislature, comprehensive data to support long-range water resources planning in the Columbia River Basin.

These efforts provided us with the necessary foundation to assess the risks of climate change across the state. When we released the report at a conference two years later, more than 600 participants from around the state gathered to discuss how to address the findings. It marked a tipping point in the reach of our work.

Writing the guidebook

Since then, we have continued our mission to not only develop scientific understanding of climate in the Northwest, but to enact change in this sphere through education, policy and consultation. We’ve partnered with natural resource managers, engineers, city planners and many others to create dozens of tools that help decision makers prepare for natural and human-caused variations in climate. We’ve led innumerable workshops, presentations, webinars and phone calls to educate people of all backgrounds on climate change. And we’ve normalized the use of climate information in making decisions at the local, regional and national level.

Thanks in part to our work, public and private water utilities across the region now incorporate climate information into their planning. The cities of Portland and Tualatin, Oregon, as well as Seattle, are just a few of the utilities who have used our science to prepare for a changing climate. At the federal level, the U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and other resource management agencies have worked with us to provide training on climate impacts to their staff, study the impacts of climate on key resources and develop strategies for adapting to climate change.

The structure and mission of our organization as well as our research and approach to our work have served as a model for similar groups across the country. What was seen as novel in 1995 is now understood to be necessary.

The discoveries, breakthroughs and impacts from this work are due not only to Edward Miles’ vision and prescience, but to the creativity, innovation and commitment of the people who have worked here and with whom we have partnered over the years. We owe a tremendous amount to those early voyagers whose work I’ve (partially!) described here.

25 years and counting: Looking to the future of regional climate resilience

This year we are planning a series of virtual lectures and events to bring together Climate Impacts Group team members past and present, partners and collaborators and supporters and friends to celebrate 25 years of building climate resilience.

Our first lecture, to be held December 3, will reflect further on past successes in building climate resilience, progress we’ve made across the region and where there’s still work to be done.

Upcoming on the Director’s Corner blog, I will focus on our present and future — what we’re doing now and what we need to do to prepare for the effects of climate change. The second and third lectures in our series, to be held January 27, 2021 and March 30, 2021, will do the same.

When talking about our present and future, you can expect me to be completely frank about our circumstances. Because when I look around the Northwest and think about what is in store for us all as a result of climate change, I am both hopeful and deeply concerned.

I am hopeful because we now have a tremendous depth of scientific and practical knowledge about local climate risks and vulnerabilities. I am hopeful because there are a lot of engaged professionals applying this knowledge to address climate issues. This marks progress that would have been difficult to imagine 25 years ago, when we first set off on a voyage of scientific discovery.

But I am concerned because we don’t have the widespread attention to this issue that is needed, or the deep recognition that time is short to prepare for the changes underway. We don’t yet feel the urgency that’s needed to drive real change to address the climate risks we face.

So let’s celebrate how far we’ve come and rise to the remaining challenge. Let’s link the knowledge we have about climate risks with the action necessary to reduce those risks. Let’s mobilize across sectors, geographies and communities to build a climate-resilient Northwest. The time for action is now.

Dr. Amy Snover
Director, Climate Impacts Group
University Director, Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center


Washington Commissioner’s Climate Summit Highlighted Area, Global Vulnerabilities

“The insurance buying public wants to know that insurance is going to be available and affordable to them when they need it.” That was the take-home message from Washington Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler, who hosted a half-day virtual summit on climate change on Wednesday. Dr. Amy Snover, who spoke at the summit, is quoted.


Healthy Planet, Healthy People

Five experts in climate science and low-carbon infrastructure at the University of Washington wrote about how we can recover from a climate crisis during a health crisis. Amy Snover is one of the five featured experts. 

“Rebuilding our collective lives post-pandemic requires attending to all of the intertwined systems that we depend on. Responses to COVID-19 must incorporate solutions for climate change and racial justice. Recovery investments must accelerate decarbonization, not pause it — and advance preparation for rising climate stresses, not punt on it. In a world of compound risks, we must insist on compound solutions. We don’t have enough time, money or planet to do it any other way.” – Amy Snover


America’s Year of Fire and Tempests Means the Climate Crisis Just Got Very Real

Record-breaking wildfires and hurricanes were just the most high-profile effects of global heating — and this is only the start. 

“All of the systems that society depends on were designed to function in the climate of the past,” Snover, Climate Impacts Group director, told the Guardian. “But we no longer live in the climate of the past. The climate disruption brought by warming, changes in precipitation, changes in storms and changes in sea level is destabilizing the foundation of all these systems at once.” 


How Climate Change Affects Wildfires, Like Those in the West, and Makes Them Worse

The consequences climate scientists have long been warning about are coming to fruition in the increased intensity of natural disasters around the globe, recently in the form of devastating wildfires that ravaged the western states and enshrouded areas not plagued with flames under hazes of smoke. 

“These are not unprecedented events,” Dr. Crystal Raymond, climate adaptation scientist, told ABC News. “Scientists know these types of fires burned in the late 1800s and early 1900s, but it’s the frequency at which they are now burning that has become a concern.” 


Forest Ecologist Backs Inslee’s Assertion that Wildfires are Worsened by Climate Change

Gov. Jay Inslee has continued his stance that the hundreds of thousands of acres burned by wildfires in Washington state are a result of climate change, bringing a forest ecologist to back research that shows the connection in his latest meeting with the media. Crystal Raymond, climate adaptation specialist, is quoted.

“As bad as it is now, as high as the risks are now, they will continue to worsen as long as climate change continues to worsen,” Raymond said.