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New York City’s Push For Sustainability in the Face of Global Climate Change

A talk by Stuart R. Gaffin, Ph.D., Center for Climate Systems Research, Columbia University & NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies.

A talk by Stuart R. Gaffin, Ph.D., Center for Climate Systems Research, Columbia University & NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies.

Spurred by recent observational evidence that climate change may be occurring more quickly than anticipated — the current spate of record high temperature years, rapid ice melt on the Greenland Ice Sheet, for example — public and political attention to the issue is at an all-time high. Moreover, thinking on “what to do” about the problem has broadened considerably from focusing on reducing greenhouse gas emissions to preparing for inevitable changes. New York City is quite vulnerable to global warming given its total and lower income populations, economic and property value, and coastal setting. Columbia University researchers have long been in the forefront of providing New York’s city climate change “forecasts.” Now the focus of much of our work is how to mitigate the impacts that are in store. This is an opportune time for this work because New York City policymakers, from the Mayor’s office on down, are engaging in more and more ambitious “urban greening” programs to help the city weather the changes ahead. The speaker will summarize Columbia research he has been involved with to characterize and mitigate some of the more problematic concerns like heat waves, runoff and waterway pollution and air quality impacts.

Photo of Aaron Donovan
Before he began blogging about land use and transportation, Aaron Donovan wrote The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund's annual fundraising appeal for three years and earned a master's degree in urban planning from Columbia. Since then, he has worked for nonprofit organizations devoted to New York City economic development. He lives and works in the Financial District, and sees New York's pre-automobile built form as an asset that makes New York unique in the United States, and as a strategic advantage that should be capitalized upon.

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