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Gov. Schwarzenegger Issues Executive
Order Directing State Agencies to Plan for Sea
Level Rise and Climate Impacts
For Immediate Release
Contact: Aaron McLear, Lisa Page: 916-445-4571
DATE: 14 November 2008
LOCATION (**VENUE
CHANGE**): Preservation
Park Ginn House, "Large Parlor" Room
Given the serious threat of sea level rise to
California’s water supply and coastal resources
and the impact it would have on our state’s
economy, population and natural resources, Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger today issued an Executive
Order (EO) to enhance the state’s management
of climate impacts from sea level rise, increased
temperatures, shifting precipitation and extreme
weather events.
“We have to adapt the way we work and plan
in order to manage the impacts and challenges
that California and our entire planet face from
climate change,” Governor Schwarzenegger
said. “Given the serious threat of sea
level rise to California’s water supply,
population and our economy, it’s critically
important that we make sure the state is prepared
when heavy rains cause flooding and the potential
for sea level rise increases in future years.”
There are four key actions in the EO including:
(1) initiate California’s first statewide
climate change adaptation strategy that will
assess the state’s expected climate change
impacts, identify where California is most vulnerable
and recommend climate adaptation policies by
early 2009; (2) request the National Academy
of Science establish an expert panel to report
on sea level rise impacts in California to inform
state planning and development efforts; (3) issue
interim guidance to state agencies for how to
plan for sea level rise in designated coastal
and floodplain areas for new projects; and (4)
initiate a report on critical existing and planned
infrastructure projects vulnerable to sea level
rise.
One key benefit that the EO will facilitate
is California’s first comprehensive climate
adaptation strategy. This effort will improve
coordination within state government and adapt
the way work so that better planning can more
effectively address climate impacts to human
health, the environment, the state’s water
supply and the economy.
Another benefit from the EO includes providing
consistency and clarity to state agencies on
how to address sea level rise in current planning
efforts, reducing time and resources unnecessarily
spent on developing different policies using
different scientific information.
The EO and its actions carry on the Governor’s
environmental leadership by continuing to address
climate change adaptation in coordination with
our climate change mitigation policies as outlined
in AB 32. The states of Washington and Oregon,
as well as Canada and Mexico, along with several
global institutions have expressed interest in
coordinating our climate change adaptation policies
as outlined in this EO.
California’s Energy Commission, the California
Ocean Protection Council and Caltrans are conducting
numerous scientific studies on the impact of
climate change, including new sea level rise
impact projections that are being used to develop
the state’s climate change adaptation strategy.
Full text of executive order:
EXECUTIVE ORDER S-13-08
by the Governor of the State of California
WHEREAS climate change in California during
the next century is expected to shift precipitation
patterns, accelerate sea level rise and increase
temperatures, thereby posing a serious threat
to California’s economy, to the health
and welfare of its population and to its natural
resources; and
WHEREAS California is a leader in mitigating
and reducing its greenhouse gas emissions with
the 2006 Global Warming Solutions Act (Assembly
Bill 32), the Low Carbon Fuel Standard (Executive
Order S-01-07), the 2008 Senate Bill 375 and
the Renewable Portfolio Standard; and
WHEREAS these efforts, coupled with others around
the world, will slow, but not stop all long-term
climate impacts to California; and
WHEREAS California must begin now to adapt and
build our resiliency to coming climate changes
through a thoughtful and sensible approach with
local, regional, state and federal government
using the best available science; and
WHEREAS there is a need for statewide consistency
in planning for sea level rise; and
WHEREAS California’s water supply and
coastal resources, including valuable natural
habitat areas, are particularly vulnerable to
sea level rise over the next century and could
suffer devastating consequences if adaptive measures
are not taken; and
WHEREAS the country’s longest continuously
operating gauge of sea level, at Fort Point in
San Francisco Bay, recorded a seven-inch rise
in sea level over the 20th century thereby demonstrating
the vulnerability of infrastructure and resources
within the Bay; and
WHEREAS global sea level rise for the next century
is projected to rise faster than historical levels
with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
predicting that global sea levels will rise by
between seven to 23 inches this century and some
experts predicting even higher rises; and
WHEREAS while climate models predicting global
sea level rise are generally understood and improving,
less information is available for sea level rise
projections specific to California that accounts
for California’s topography, coastal erosion
rates, varying land subsidence levels and tidal
variations; and
WHEREAS billions of dollars in state funding
for infrastructure and resource management projects
are currently being encumbered in areas that
are potentially vulnerable to future sea level
rise; and
WHEREAS safety, maintenance and operational
efforts on existing infrastructure projects are
critical to public safety and the economy of
the state; and
WHEREAS the longer that California delays planning
and adapting to sea level rise the more expensive
and difficult adaptation will be; and
WHEREAS the California Resources Agency is a
member of the California Climate Action Team
and is leading efforts to develop and implement
policy solutions related to climate change adaptation
regarding current and projected effects of climate
change; and
WHEREAS the Department of Water Resources (DWR)
is responsible for managing the state’s
water resources to benefit the people of California,
and to protect, restore and enhance the natural
and human environments; and
WHEREAS California’s coastal management
agencies such as the California Coastal Commission,
the California Ocean Protection Council (OPC)
and California State Parks are charged with managing
and protecting the ocean and coastal resources
of the state; and
WHEREAS the California Energy Commission’s
(CEC) Public Interest Energy Research Program
has funded research on climate change since 2001
including funding the development of preliminary
sea level rise projections for the San Francisco
Bay area by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography/University
of California at San Diego.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, Governor
of the State of California, by virtue of the
power vested in me by the Constitution and statutes
of the State of California, do hereby order effective
immediately:
1. The California Resources Agency, in cooperation
with DWR, CEC, California’s coastal management
agencies, and the OPC, shall request that the
National Academy of Sciences (NAS) convene an
independent panel to complete the first California
Sea Level Rise Assessment Report and initiate,
within 60 days after the signing of this Order,
an independent sea level rise science and policy
committee made up of state, national and international
experts.
2. By March 31, 2009, the OPC, DWR and the CEC,
in coordination with other state agencies, shall
hold a public workshop to gather policy-relevant
information specific to California for use in
preparing the Sea Level Rise Assessment Report
and to raise state awareness of sea level rise
impacts.
3. The California Resources Agency shall request
that the final Sea Level Rise Assessment Report
be completed as soon as possible but no later
than December 1, 2010. The final Sea Level Rise
Assessment Report will advise how California
should plan for future sea level rise. The report
should include: (1) relative sea level rise projections
specific to California, taking into account issues
such as coastal erosion rates, tidal impacts,
El Niño and La Niña events, storm
surge and land subsidence rates; (2) the range
of uncertainty in selected sea level rise projections;
(3) a synthesis of existing information on projected
sea level rise impacts to state infrastructure
(such as roads, public facilities and beaches),
natural areas, and coastal and marine ecosystems;
and (4) a discussion of future research needs
regarding sea level rise for California.
4. The OPC shall work with DWR, the CEC, California’s
coastal management agencies and the State Water
Resources Control Board to conduct a review of
the NAS assessment every two years or as necessary.
5. I direct that, prior to release of the final
Sea Level Rise Assessment Report from the NAS,
all state agencies within my administration that
are planning construction projects in areas vulnerable
to future sea level rise shall, for the purposes
of planning, consider a range of sea level rise
scenarios for the years 2050 and 2100 in order
to assess project vulnerability and, to the extent
feasible, reduce expected risks and increase
resiliency to sea level rise. However, all projects
that have filed a Notice of Preparation, and/or
are programmed for construction funding the next
five years, or are routine maintenance projects
as of the date of this Order may, but are not
required to, account for these planning guidelines.
Sea level rise estimates should also be used
in conjunction with appropriate local information
regarding local uplift and subsidence, coastal
erosion rates, predicted higher high water levels,
storm surge and storm wave data.
6. The Business, Transportation, and Housing
Agency shall work with the California Resources
Agency and the Governor’s Office of Planning
and Research (OPR) to prepare a report within
90 days of release of this Order to assess vulnerability
of transportation systems to sea level rise that
will include provisions for investment critical
to safety, maintenance and operational improvements
of the system and economy of the state.
7. By June 30, 2009, the California Resources
Agency, through the Climate Action Team, shall
coordinate with local, regional, state and federal
public and private entities to develop a state
Climate Adaptation Strategy. The strategy will
summarize the best known science on climate change
impacts to California (led by CEC’s PIER
program), assess California’s vulnerability
to the identified impacts and then outline solutions
that can be implemented within and across state
agencies to promote resiliency. A water adaptation
strategy will be coordinated by DWR with input
from the State Water Resources Control Board,
an ocean and coastal resources adaptation strategy
will be coordinated by the OPC, an infrastructure
adaptation strategy will be coordinated by the
California Department of Transportation, a biodiversity
adaptation strategy will be jointly coordinated
by the California Department of Fish and Game
and California State Parks, a working landscapes
adaptation
strategy will be jointly coordinated by the California
Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and
the California Department of Food and Agriculture,
and a public health adaptation strategy will
be jointly coordinated by the California Department
of Public Health and the California Air Resources
Board, all as part of the larger strategy. This
strategy will be facilitated through the Climate
Action Team and will be coordinated with California's
climate change mitigation efforts.
8. By May 30, 2009, OPR, in cooperation with
the California Resources Agency, shall provide
state land-use planning guidance related to sea
level rise and other climate change impacts.
This Order is not intended to, and does not,
create any rights or benefits, substantive or
procedural, enforceable at law or in equity,
against the State of California, its agencies,
departments, entities, officers, employees, or
any other person.
I FURTHER DIRECT that as soon as hereafter possible,
this Order shall be filed with the Office of
the Secretary of State and that widespread publicity
and notice be given to this Order.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand
and caused the Great Seal of the State of California
to be affixed this 14th day of November 2008. |