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Passive measures are a valuable first priority.......While both pillars of passive and active measures benefit resilience and decarbonization, passive measures are the first priority to address two main challenges: 1) peak energy load management and 2) energy affordability and equity. Electrification in the building, transportation, and industrial sectors is projected to dramatically increase peak electricity demand. Prioritizing passive measures helps manage the total electricity load growth. For example, according to RMI research (Hu et al. 2024), peak electricity demand in New York State could rise by 123 percent by 2050 if residential buildings are simply electrified. However, implementing residential envelope retrofits combined with building electrification would reduce this peak electricity demand growth by 27 percent.
Moreover, passive measures are already widely implemented and prioritized in decarbonization efforts to reduce energy use and carbon emissions. RMI's founder, Amory Lovins, highlights that equipping buildings with passive measures can eliminate, shrink, or simplify HVAC equipment when electrified. Another challenge is energy affordability and equity, which is recognized as an essential priority in both national and state level building decarbonization efforts. Prioritizing passive measures such as weatherization drives down total energy usage and lowers utility costs year-round. It also reduces the size of solar PV and battery storage to meet a building’s remaining energy needs and provide back-up power when necessary. Because passive measures can reduce total load and shift load outside of the hours of peak demand on the grid, it helps empower buildings as grid resources that support reliability. Each of these benefits is especially valuable for households in environmental justice communities that may financially struggle to purchase and use heating and cooling equipment to maintain safe indoor conditions during extreme events. Notably, RMI research has demonstrated that passive measures significantly extend a homes’ “hours of safety” during an outage shown below. Improving passive measures in new buildings to meet or exceed current energy code is often cost-effective, and in existing buildings can extend the ability to shelter in place by as much as 120 percent during extreme cold and up to 140 percent during extreme heat. However, passive measures have been adopted more slowly than the rate needed to confront climate threats. Quantifying the resilience benefits of passive measures could be beneficial to accelerate the adoption of .......
Passive measures .......These measures improve the building envelope to reduce the required capacity of heating, cooling, ventilation, and lighting systems by maximizing the use of natural resources such as sunlight and airflow. This passively extends the “hours of safety” indoors when buildings have no power during extreme weather events.
Active Measures......These measures take a more active resilience role by generating, storing, providing, and efficiently using energy. Some ensure continuous access to critical energy services. Others position buildings as an asset to grid reliability both in normal operations and through power outages. In many cases, these measures provide both services. Individual active measures can be networked locally into microgrids or virtually aggregated to form virtual power plants (VPP).
Three real-world examples demonstrate the value of breaking down silos.....Using this integrated approach to decarbonization and resilience, we can steward climate progress and prepare for future climate threats like flooding, extreme temperatures, and wildfires......read on https://rmi.org/resilient-carbon-free-buildings-are-within-reach/
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Drought is quietly pushing American cities toward a fiscal cliff. Drought is set to pose a greater risk to the $4 trillion municipal bond market than floods, hurricanes, and wildfires combined.Grist Tik Root Senior Staff Writer 27 Oct 2025 City of Clyde sits about two hours west of Fort Worth on the plains of north Texas. It gets its water from a lake by the same name a few miles away. Starting in 2022, scorching weather caused its levels to drop farther and farther. Within a year, officials had declared a water conservation emergency, and on August 1 of last year, they raised the warning level again. That meant residents rationing their spigot use even more tightly, especially lawn irrigation. The restrictions weren’t, however, the worst news that day: The city also missed two debt payments. Municipal bond defaults of any kind are extraordinarily rare, let alone those linked to a changing climate. But with about 4,000 residents and an annual budget of under $10 million, Clyde has never had room to absorb surprises. So when poor financial planning collided with the prolonged dry spell, the city found itself stretched beyond its limits. The drought meant that Clyde sold millions of gallons less water, even as it imported more of it from neighboring Abilene, at about $1,200 per day. Worse, as the ground dried, it cracked, destroying a sewer main and bursting another quarter-million dollar hole in the town budget. Within days of Clyde missing its payments, rating agency Standard & Poor’s slashed the city’s bond ratings, which limited its ability to borrow more money. Within weeks, officials had hiked taxes and water rates to help staunch the financial bleeding.
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Nature-Based Solutions (NBS) often Fail to Deliver their Promised Impact reguarding Urban Resilience
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NBS are defined as “actions to protect, sustainably manage, and restore natural or modified ecosystems that address societal challenges effectively and adaptively, simultaneously providing human well-being and biodiversity benefits”5. This approach offers a way to tackle multiple urban issues concurrently, yielding environmental, social, and economic benefits6. From urban forests mitigating heat island effects to constructed wetlands managing stormwater and enhancing biodiversity, NBS have demonstrated potential to transform urban landscapes and improve city dwellers’ quality of life7. However, despite growing enthusiasm and increasing implementation, the effectiveness of NBS often falls short of expectations8. Several key factors contribute to this gap between potential and reality:
- 1.Short-sighted planning: Many NBS projects are designed as one-off interventions, failing to consider long-term impacts or how they fit into the broader urban ecosystem9.
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Limited stakeholder engagement: Top-down approaches often dominate, with experts and officials implementing solutions without meaningful input from local communities, resulting in projects that fail to resonate with or meet the needs of residents6.
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Oversimplification of urban complexity: Cities are intricate systems with countless interconnected parts, and many NBS projects fail to account for this complexity, leading to unintended consequences or missed opportunities10.
- .Rigid visions of the future: Urban planners and policymakers often work with a single, inflexible vision of the future, an approach that can lead to solutions that quickly become obsolete in our rapidly changing world11.
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Siloed expertise: NBS projects often lack truly interdisciplinary teams, resulting in solutions that fail to fully integrate ecological, social, and technological considerations3,9.
These limitations reflect a broader challenge in environmental management: the disconnect between scientific approaches and local ways of knowing and interacting with nature12. This disconnect is particularly pronounced in urban areas, where diverse communities, each with their own relationship to the environment, coexist. Several frameworks have been proposed to enhance urban NBS. For example, Raymond et al.6 introduced a framework for assessing and implementing the co-benefits of NBS, Barker et al.13 explored the potential of strategic planning in implementing NBS, and the European Union has developed a roadmap emphasizing collaborative and scenario-based planning14. However, many of these approaches tend to focus on individual components. Recognizing both their innovative potential and their inherent challenges—such as the complexity of urban systems and resource requirements—the present work adopts a critical perspective that underlines the need for an integrated strategy.
Several participatory and adaptive governance frameworks have sought to address the challenges in NBS planning. Adaptive co-management15 emphasizes iterative decision-making based on stakeholder input, while transition management16 applies long-term visioning and experimentation in urban sustainability contexts. Additionally, urban living labs17 have been employed to pilot nature-based interventions with active citizen participation. However, these approaches often focus on either stakeholder engagement or future scenario development in isolation, lacking a mechanism to integrate visioning, design, and evaluation into one iterative process. In response to these limitations, the Adaptive Multifutures Framework (AMF) is introduced as a cohesive, iterative process that unifies participatory visioning, scenario planning, fractal design, and immersive visualization. By merging these components, the AMF not only bridges known implementation gaps but also provides a realistic assessment of the challenges associated with urban sustainability. The framework represents an integrated approach to conceptualize, design, and implement NBS. It embraces uncertainty, complexity, and diverse knowledge systems to pave the way for more effective, resilient, and socially just urban solutions18. As cities worldwide seek innovative approaches to address pressing environmental and social challenges, the AMF offers a timely and thought-provoking framework for reimagining urban futures in harmony with nature.
By offering a framework that considers complexity, fosters genuine participation, and plans for multiple futures, the AMF contributes to transforming urban planning practices and NBS implementation, leading to more resilient, sustainable, and equitable cities. The AMF emerges as a response to the growing recognition of limitations in current NBS implementation. As urban environments face increasingly complex and interconnected challenges, the need for a more holistic, adaptive, and inclusive approach to NBS has become evident9. The components of the AMF are illustrated in Fig. 1, which shows the interplay between participatory visioning, scenario planning, fractal design, and immersive visualization. Each component is interconnected and supports the others to create a holistic approach to urban planning and NBS implementation.
Participatory visioning: beyond technical expertise......At the heart of the AMF lies the recognition that effective NBS require more than just technical expertise; they demand an understanding of local contexts, values, and potential future scenarios.
The Adaptive Multifutures Framework: Bridging Gaps in Urban NBS Implementation......The AMF emerges as a response to the growing recognition of limitations in current NBS implementation. As urban environments face increasingly complex and interconnected challenges, the need for a more holistic, adaptive, and inclusive approach to NBS has become evident9. The components of the AMF are illustrated in Fig. 1, which shows the interplay between participatory visioning, scenario planning, fractal design, and immersive visualization. Each component is interconnected and supports the others to create a holistic approach to urban planning and NBS implementation.......read on- there's much more. https://www.nature.com/articles/s42949-025-00222-y
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These Floating Islands Will Form a ‘Parkipelago’ in Copenhagen’s Harbor. Good News Network Andy Corbley -Mar 5, 2021The Scandinavian countries are famous for their bays, and Copenhagen harbor in Denmark’s capital is a perfect example of that beauty in a metropolitan setting.Now a new architecture project drifting in the harbor’s waters celebrates this heritage while allowing residents to relax away from the boom of urban development along the shoreline, Complete with discreet features that will allow residents to enjoy the islands through kayaking, picnicking, and swimming, Danish design company Studio Fokstrot describes them as a celebration of traditional Danish harbor life, and a way to strengthen the cohesion of marine harbor ecosystems.
Each island is built from thin strips of wood, steel, and recycled boat material, and the first one is 215 square feet, featuring a single mature linden tree for shade. The presentation website dreams big, claiming that once more islands are finished (three new islands are slated to float in spring 2021), the entire parkipelago will be home to floating gardens, floating saunas, floating mussel farms, and a floating sail-in café—all of which can be explored for free.Underneath the islands’ hulls, special care is made to create a surface from which seaweed and other marine plants can cling, attracting small fish and crustaceans, which thereby attract larger sea life. “During summer the islands can be distributed to unused parts of the harbor, serving as an adventurous escape for the increasing amount of kayaks, sailors, and general users of the harbor coastline,” reads the website. “During winter and for special events or festivals, the islands can be brought together as a supercontinent, creating a cluster more easily accessed from the harbor side.”......(ed) I guess a thousand years of war have clued them in that peaceful moments with nature is infinitely better than wars- the tragedy is that it took so long! https://www.
AND URBAN......The Bogota-based Woodpecker, which tried to develop a material from rice fiber, palm fronds, sawdust, and even recycled plastic, eventually settled on coffee husk for its availability, fire resistance, and insect/waterproofing. Another benefit? Utilizing coffee husks would stop them ending up in landfills where they would add to the methane emissions of the country. “We saw that there was a huge necessity for a lightweight construction system for housing and classrooms in rural and isolated places where traditional construction systems cannot go—like bricks, cement, and concrete,” said CEO Alejandro Franco. The prefabricated “casa kits” have to be able to be loaded and transported on small boats, helicopters, or even on the back of a donkey. Each kit consists of lightweight steel frames that, like LEGO, can click together with minimal tool use, and coffee husk boards that can be attached to the steel frames without need for nails and screws. “The system worked perfectly considering that there was no energy supply, the soil was muddy, the airport damaged, no food, etc.—all the problems that you can imagine,” he said. “We think our houses are an excellent solution for the housing crisis there.” https://www.
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