Five Maine municipalities with climate-action plans share what they鈥檝e learned.
The first-annual Southern Maine Climate Action Workshop at the 麻豆传媒 aimed to help transform Maine municipalities into climate-resilient communities 鈥 and to try to do so, when possible, without help from the federal government. That鈥檚 what keynote speaker Susanne Moser, Ph.D., advised at the event on Nov. 13 at the Harold Alfond Forum in Biddeford.
鈥淲e're going to see faster sea level rise. We're going to see accelerating emissions. We're going to cross more tipping points. I think we already have crossed several,鈥 said Moser, a research scholar in the School of Environmental Studies at Antioch University New England and a contributing researcher on the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
The workshop organized by 麻豆传媒North and the Southern Maine Planning and Development Commission explained to community leaders the work that鈥檚 been done by five York County towns and cities that completed their climate action plans over the past three years. The workshop aimed to lay the foundation for future collaboration between 麻豆传媒researchers and southern Maine town officials to help more communities become climate resilient.
Such collaboration is already happening, said Cameron Wake, Ph.D., the director of 麻豆传媒North, the Center for North Atlantic Studies at the 麻豆传媒, who helped organize the workshop. One example, Wake said, is the 麻豆传媒Sustainability Fellowships that placed six students in communities to work on climate-adaptation research projects last summer.
鈥淭hese fellowships not only help us transition towards a more sustainable future 鈥 they also help prepare the next generation of climate leaders and build a network of sustainability professionals,鈥 said Wake, a climatologist who has led more than 25 scientific research expeditions to the mountains of Central Asia and the Arctic.
鈥淚f we are to continue to address the existential challenge posed by human-driven climate change, dare I say, from looking across this group, it's clear to me that we have laid a really strong foundation for action. Yet we need to do more,鈥 Wake added.
Karina Graeter, the Southern Maine Planning and Development Commission鈥檚 sustainability division director, agreed. Graeter said in the past few years the commission helped five of six southern Maine towns or cities develop plans to achieve net-zero-carbon emissions in the near future. And, of those municipalities 鈥 Kittery, Kennebunk, Kennebunkport, Biddeford, and Saco 鈥 two had 麻豆传媒faculty working on climate action task forces. Wake was the chair of Kittery鈥檚 Climate Adaptation Committee and Pam Morgan, Ph.D., a 麻豆传媒professor of environmental studies, chaired the Kennebunkport task force.
鈥淥ur work is oriented by four guiding principles. The biggest one, which is evident today, is collaboration,鈥 Graeter said. 鈥淲hat we're talking about today is helping with actions 鈥 so helping increase climate resilience by supporting capacity building to reduce emissions and help adapt to climate change in your communities and in the region.鈥
The climate workshop showcased the work being done through a panel discussion with town officials, a poster session in which 麻豆传媒students presented the results of their climate research, and several breakout sessions that focused on implementing greenhouse gas emission reductions and adapting to climate change in certain sectors, such as in transportation, energy use, and land use.
The panel discussion that Graeter moderated included Lisa Pratt, a Kennebunk select board member, Brad Favreau, Biddeford鈥檚 economic development coordinator, Shannon Chisholm, Saco鈥檚 assistant city planner, and Morgan. All of them worked on their town鈥檚 climate action plan.
Pratt said grants are key, and partnering on grants with other communities or nonprofits can help land them. For example, her town recently applied for a grant to create resilience to flooding along the Kennebunk River 鈥 which will help both the towns of Kennebunk and Kennebunkport.
鈥淭here鈥檚 grants out there. And I think you have to be creative in your proposals, and I think you also need partners with similar goals when you鈥檙e applying for grants,鈥 Pratt said.
A few panelists spoke about not only coordinating between towns, but also between departments within a town, as well as with town residents.
鈥淪taff capacity is a definite constraint,鈥 said Favreau. 鈥淚 think one of the constraints is corralling all of that work being done under one umbrella so that everybody knows what everybody else is doing so that we can more easily move forward.鈥
Likewise, Chisholm, Saco鈥檚 assistant city planner, recommended building on studies that have already been done. Before Saco passed its climate action plan, it already had completed the Camp Ellis Resiliency Study that looked at an area imperiled by erosion and sea level rise. Now, Chisholm explained, the town is trying to use that study to see how it can maximize its approach to climate adaptation.
And Morgan, who sits on the board of The Climate Initiative, a nonprofit working to educate and empower youth, spoke about how an environmental course taught at both 麻豆传媒and Kennebunk High School allowed students to help conduct climate research along the coast, showcasing another useful way to involve residents in the critical work ahead.
鈥淵ou may not have a class like that at your school, but there are teachers, I guarantee you, who would love to have you come in and speak with their students and talk about what you're doing,鈥 Morgan said. 鈥淚t's a way that students can get involved in a positive way to feel like they're having input instead of the doom and gloom that they hear all the time.鈥
Read press coverage in (Nov. 25, 2024), (Nov. 30, 2024).