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RESILIENCE IN EUROPE THROUGH ACTIVATING CITY HUBS REACHING OUT TO USERS WITH TRIPLE-A CLIMATE ADAPTATION TOOLS

Leistungen

Logo, visual identity and project website

Establish the website have a logo designed

Online Training Modules II

The training program developed under 51 will be supported by online training modules that will be built up gradually from the start of the project starting from basic concepts and from existing material that has already been developed for existing tools that are input to the tripleA toolkit Module II will highlight the Analysis tools

Online Training Modules I

The training program developed under 51 will be supported by online training modules that will be built up gradually from the start of the project starting in Module I from basic concepts and from existing material that has already been developed for existing tools that are input to the tripleA toolkit Main aim is to capacitate city hub partners to be able to act as knowledge counterparts in developing the triple A services

Online Training Modules III

The training program developed under 5.1 will be supported by online training modules that will be built up gradually from the start of the project starting from basic concepts and from existing material that has already been developed for existing tools that are input to the triple-A toolkit. Module III will highlight the Ambition tools

Climate Story Maps: Initial story map (phase I, ANALYSIS)

The delivery of hub specific story maps will follow an iterative process within the Hubs, in sync with the three phases of ANALYSIS, AMBITION, and ACTION. The first story map deliverable is about the ANALYSIS phase. User Story Mapping is a compelling example of a specific type of climate service that is well suited to communicate climate change impacts and relevant adaptation measures to a broad group of end-users. Therefore, not only does it provide a tangible product to teach the principles of the co-creation process, the exercise will also produce local narratives and storylines for each of the case study sites, which will subsequently be available to each of the city hubs and their respective websites.

Midterm City toolkit forum

After the event a report will be published on the REACHOUT website

Delivery of the beta version of web-based portal to support sustainable use of tools

The toolkit will take shape in the form of a web platform that provides a ready-to-use data and tools (toolkit) connected to needs (WP2 outcomes) built on existing services and frameworks, but complemented with national, regional as well as local sources (including local crowd sourcing/community mapping data of vulnerability. The aim of this Toolkit is to enhance the ‘pull’ for climate services (WP2) and to facilitate dialogues across science-to-service-to-practice interfaces (WP1) by transforming (mapping, aggregating and integrating) the massive amount of climate data and information that already exists into knowledge through a customized set of data and tools (Triple-A toolkit). This Triple-A ready-to-use toolkit aims to unlock the potential of past C3S and Hor2020 Climate services investments by connecting them to a set of successful hazard and impact Analysis tools and stakeholder engagement tools for Ambition formulation, and action identification and evaluation. This set of tools will be established in conjunction with WP2 based on a user needs assessment with the hubs (WP1). The main objective is to improve the functionalities of the initial set of tools and develop new ones as well as establish the necessary connectors to EU, national and regional platforms ensuring accurate data, analysis and/or simulations are available for the development of climate service solutions (in WP2). This toolkit will disclose already existing climate services tools, data and applications (for example coming from the C3S toolbox, CDS catalogue and the GEOSS landscape, CORDEX, CORDEX-CORE, etc.), including sectoral information systems and generic hazard mapping tools. The toolkit beta version will be iteratively developed through an agile process. The toolkit will evolve with the brokers (WP2) and end-users (WP1) to meet their evolving needs. In practice there will be dedicated teams consisting of developers and brokers, with different responsibilities, to deliver a specific service (e.g. heatmapping for vulnerable groups for 3 hubs) based on a scalable tool well-connected to platforms. This easy to use toolkit will contribute to the exploitation of information and data from the Copernicus programme and GEO initiative.

Climate Story Maps: interim story map (phase II, AMBITION)

The second story map deliverable is about the AMBITION phase. For each city hub, the story map visualizes the story of how an ambition was set and what the ambition entails.

Data Management Plan

The generated data in the preceding tasks has to be tailored and communicated in a meaningful way to be used effectively in WP2 Therefore the data will be analysed for inconsistencies data gaps and errors and where necessary converted to the appropriate format for development of the climate solutions WP2 Additionally and considering the different type of hazards and impacts additional indices will be calculated Therefore based on the work in the previous tasks tailor the provision of the data to meet the needs of endusers in terms of format and content Achieving the objective of a sustainable development requires the management and integration of different data sets coming from various sources Climaterelated data is valuable when combined with other data sets eg social economic land use etc allowing to monitor and assess the status of global regional or local environments to discover relationships between them or to model future changes To make sense of the huge amount of data that already exists the one that is being generated on a daily basis and the new or updated one that will be generated adhoc for the cases studies it is essential to agree upon common standards to facilitate their sharing quality control and integration

Market strategies: Service organization and market segmentation report

This report is the direct product of task 42 in which the marketability of the tools is further explored by identifying user groups revenue models and financing options and thus further exploit enablers identified under T41 from a user perspective

Guidelines for climate service tools in ANALYSIS

The codesign and codevelopment approach of this project is based on reframing the questions being asked in WP1 and rephrasing them into specific service functionalities WP2 that are answered in a way to ensure that the initial questions are understood and can be usefully and credibly for others The toolkit codevelopment is based on the emphasis on scienceto servicetopractice interfaces in order to provide an easyto use set of tools that allow producers and consumers of climate services to listen to each other and explore solutions using similar lenses In partnership with the endusers in the City Hubs WP1 task 32 functional designs are implemented to further develop the tools in order to make them fit to deliver the service under WP2 Crosshub development teams focussing om similar developments across the City Hubs will structure the work in an efficient way A focused dialogue will support the development and evolution of data information and supportive tools in a manner that is timely and enables manoeuvring across the sciencepolicy and sciencepractice interfaces This deliverable summarises the results of this task in form of guidelines for climate services in ANALYSIS

Veröffentlichungen

A Review of the Financial Sector Impacts of Risks Associated with Climate Change

Autoren: F. Zhou, T. Endendijk & W.J.W. Botzen
Veröffentlicht in: Annual Review of Resource Economics, 2023, ISSN 1941-1359
Herausgeber: Annual Reviews
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-resource-101822-105702

Flood Vulnerability Models and Household Flood Damage Mitigation Measures: An Econometric Analysis of Survey Data

Autoren: T. Endendijk, W.J.W. Botzen, H. de Moel, J.C.J.H. Aerts, K. Slager & M. Kok
Veröffentlicht in: Water Resources Research, 2023, ISSN 1944-7973
Herausgeber: AGU
DOI: 10.1029/2022wr034192

Enhancing resilience: Understanding the impact of flood hazard and vulnerability on business interruption and losses.

Autoren: T. Endendijk, W.J.W. Botzen, H. de Moel, K. Slager, M. Kok & J.C.J.H. Aerts.
Veröffentlicht in: Water Resources and Economics, 2024, ISSN 2212-4284
Herausgeber: Elsevier
DOI: 10.1016/j.wre.2024.100244

Defining successful climate services for adaptation with experts

Autoren: Eva Boon, Jurian Vincent Meijering, Robbert Biesbroek, Fulco Ludwig
Veröffentlicht in: Environmental Science & Policy, Ausgabe Volume 152, February 2024, 103641, 2024, ISSN 1462-9011
Herausgeber: Elsevier BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2023.103641

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