Climate Change and Resilience
Climate Change and Resilience
Building resilient communities through adaptive, innovative, and strategic solutions to climate impacts
Communities across North America are grappling with climate impacts. Severe weather, water scarcity, degrading ecosystems, and pressure to reduce emissions are forcing organizations to take action. Brown and Caldwell is collaborating with cities, utilities, and industry clients to develop custom solutions to solve complex climate challenges, including work with:
- Municipalities, utilities, and other public entities to establish transparency, trust, and stewardship into near-term and long-term planning and projects.
- Private sector companies to reduce business risks, increase opportunities for social impact, and manage reputational risk.
- Public and private sector collaborations that are not only mutually beneficial but have a broad positive impact on the local communities, watersheds, and environment.
Together, we seek robust alternatives that build adaptive capacity and preserve flexibility in the face of an uncertain future. We engage with our clients to apply methods for flexible design and adaptation, bolstered by a research team that tracks and pilots groundbreaking technologies. Our approach identifies and emphasizes the connectivity of interdependent systems, giving focus to nature-based solutions that both mitigate and enhance a community’s response to climate change.
Services
Establishing a vision for meeting future water challenges
State water planners are identifying and prioritizing water supply strategies that confront an uncertain future
Facing evolving challenges from climate change and population growth, the Colorado Water Conservation Board sought a revision of their Colorado Water Plan (CWP). Coordinating with stakeholders, BC developed an action-focused CWP update by prioritizing projects into strategy-focused plans for each of the State’s nine basins to identify and secure the state’s future water needs. This framework integrates climate change impacts, environmental needs, water supply projections, and forecasted gaps to comprehensively address Colorado’s long-term water supply needs.
A history of delivering innovative and forward-thinking solutions
BC and King County’s Wastewater Treatment Division have a legacy of innovation that began in 1958 with the development of the County’s original sewer and drainage survey. In the 1980s, BC designed the first-ever renewable natural gas pipeline from wastewater treatment system in North America and, at the time, the largest wastewater heat recovery project in the world. Ahead of its time, the project supported the County’s energy management plan and captured renewable energy in two innovative forms. Today, our work with the County to develop forward-thinking, multi-benefit solutions continues with the King County Clean Water Plan. This work will guide the direction and prioritization of billions of dollars in future County investments to achieve the best water quality benefits, provide equitable and affordable service, and address climate change and sustainability goals.
Advancing water action at the global scale
From accelerating progress and voluntary commitments driven by the Water Action Agenda to the future of water policy and green infrastructure, Dr. Carla De Las Casas, Rebecca Maco, Dr. Farokh Kakar, and Carolina Tornesi MacKinnon share key takeaways for the water industry.
“Maintaining reliability and system performance in an environment of changing climates, aging infrastructure, shifting regulations and ratepayer conscious budgets is a challenge we are proactively partnering with clients to meet.”
Adam Ross
Climate Change and Resilience Leader
“Maintaining reliability and system performance in an environment of changing climates, aging infrastructure, shifting regulations and ratepayer conscious budgets is a challenge we are proactively partnering with clients to meet.”
Adam Ross
Climate Change and Resilience Leader
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Related Papers and Reports
- Pathways and Barriers to Corporate Water Stewardship in the Colorado River Basin
- The Value of Inside-the-Fence Projects as Part of a Water Sustainability Program
- Sustainability: Opportunities at Your Facility to Think Globally and Act Locally
- Sustainability, One
- Enhancing Your Utilitys Competitive Edge by Incorporating Sustainability
- Effect of Climate Change on Sewer Overflows in Milwaukee