A more granular approach to climate resiliency
GUCA builds on the foundation of ND-GAIN’s Country Index, which measures climate vulnerability and readiness for over 180 countries. The GUCA pilot provides city-level metrics for 12 cities, incorporating data from multiple sources, including remote sensing. Like ND-GAIN, GUCA is free and open-source, so stakeholders across the public, private, and NGO sectors can identify priorities and direct funding where it is most needed.
GUCA measures vulnerability and resilience across a number of globally comparable metrics. Vulnerability includes specific hazards such as flooding, extreme heat, and landslides. It also measures sensitivity to climate change, which can refer to potential impacts on people (such as children, seniors, migrants, or low-income residents) as well as features of urban areas, such as the rate of urban expansion.
Resilience, on the other hand, is the capacity of a city to withstand shocks and adapt over time. It includes disaster planning, water access, governance systems, and economic stability, recognizing that cities with robust systems can respond more effectively to climate-related challenges.
A tool with global implications
Wood emphasizes that this expansion is critical because as more people migrate to urban environments, the need to identify and target funding for climate adaptation in the most impacted cities is becoming an even more widespread and urgent concern.
“At the start of the 20th century, only 13% of the world’s population lived in urban areas. By 2050, that number is expected to rise to 60%, with an estimated 4.9 billion people living in cities,” she points out. “Our team at Notre Dame is eager to see the tool evolve with feedback from partners around the world."
GUCA is the latest addition to ND-GAIN’s already robust suite of data-driven climate tools and resources, which includes the U.S. Urban Adaptation Assessment, a tool assessing over 270 U.S. cities’ climate risks and social vulnerabilities by neighborhood.
ND-GAIN is a program of the Notre Dame Environmental Change Initiative (ND-ECI). At ND-ECI, over 60 faculty across several disciplines are pursuing research solutions for some of the key environmental challenges of our time. ND-ECI focuses on globally significant, multidisciplinary research that can be translated into management and policy solutions to help make the world a better place for humans and the environment upon which people depend.
Contact:
Brett Beasley / Content Strategy Program Director
Notre Dame Research / University of Notre Dame
bbeasle1@nd.edu / +1 574-631-8183
research.nd.edu / @UNDResearch
About Notre Dame Research:
The University of Notre Dame is a private research and teaching university inspired by its Catholic mission. Located in South Bend, Indiana, its researchers are advancing human understanding through research, scholarship, education, and creative endeavor in order to be a repository for knowledge and a powerful means for doing good in the world. For more information, please see the Research website or @UNDResearch.
Better data for planning for your city’s future.
Our communities are facing the intensifying effects of climate change and need to be more proactive than ever. Yet, with so many competing priorities, how do cities decide where to act?
The Urban Adaptation Assessment (UAA) is an interactive database funded by the Kresge Foundation and led by the Notre Dame Global Adaptation Initiative (ND-GAIN) that collates a rich dataset within a visual platform to give leaders the data they need to make decisions on how best to adapt and prepare.
Encompassing data from over 270 cities within the United States, including all 50 states and Puerto Rico, whose populations are above 100,000, the UAA allows you to explore the connection between vulnerabilities to climate disasters, adaptive capacities, and how these are distributed within a city.
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Understanding how best for your city to adapt to a changing climate can be daunting. Our easy-to-use tool gives you metrics to see your city’s risk and readiness in seconds. It also enables you to download extensive datasets, and examine which neighborhoods to focus your efforts. Learn how you can get the most of the UAA with these simple resources:
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