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From YouTube: Kristen Guida presentation | #AWClimateAssembly
Description
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A
So
just
to
say,
I
sit
in
city
hall
in
london,
I'm
in
the
mayor's
climate
policy
team
and
but
my
role
is
a
lot
more
outward-facing.
It's
really
about
coordinating
activity
among
different
partners
across
different
sectors
and
helping
them
to
think
about
what
the
impacts
of
climate
change
will
be
for
them
and
their
businesses
and
their
communities
and
so
forth,
and
then
work
in
partnership
to
come
up
with
solutions
to
how
they're
going
to
prepare
for
those
impacts
and
deal
with
them.
A
A
Please
great
so
just
starting
a
bit
with
the
science,
so
the
met
office
has,
along
with
defra
and
bays,
have
come
up
with
the
climate
projections
for
for
2018
those
build
on
the
previous
projections
in
2009
and
provide
kind
of
the
most
up-to-date
assessment
of
how
the
uk
climate
is
potentially
going
to
change
over
this
this
century,
and
these
are
based
on
sort
of
socioeconomic
scenarios
that
would
dictate
levels
of
warming.
Go
to
the
next
slide.
Please
right!
A
So
this
one
just
shows
sort
of
future
uk
temperatures
I
mean,
if
you've
heard
anything
about
sort
of
what
we're
expecting
in
terms
of
climate
change.
You'll
have
heard
the
phrases
of
milder
wetter,
winters,
hotter,
drier
summers
and
increasing
frequency
and
intensive
extreme
weather
events.
All
of
that
is
still
true
with
the
latest
climate
protections,
but
now
we
just
have
greater
certainty.
A
A
A
So
the
thing
to
note
here
is
that
the
two
scenarios
are
roughly
the
same
until
about
mid-century
and
if
we
achieve
the
the
best
scenario,
so
that's
scenario
2.6,
then
we're
seeing
the
fastest
rate
of
change
starting
to
happen
early
in
the
century
sort
of
around
now.
A
But
if
we
continue
along
kind
of
a
path
that
we're
already
on
with
business
as
usual,
then
temperatures
start
to
increase
more
sharply
later
in
the
century,
and
that
has
real
implications
for
how
we're
going
to
manage
the
risks
and
what
we
need
to
do
in
terms
of
mitigating
climate
change.
Next
slide,
please.
A
So
this
is
just
talking
about
the
heat
wave
in
2018,
which
is
pretty
notable
year
and
just
explaining
that
the
probability
of
a
heat
wave
like
the
one
we
had
in
2018
has
increased
from
less
than
10
percent
in
the
baseline
period
to
more
than
50
by
the
middle
of
the
century.
And
after
that,
like
I
said
before,
what
happens
after
that
largely
depends
on
whether
we
can
get
our
emissions
under
control
next
slide.
Please
this
is
about
precipitation
projections
and
effectively.
A
I'm
not
going
to
talk
through
these
actually
next
slide,
please
yeah
great!
Oh
sorry,
previous
one,
I
missed
it.
Okay,
great
so
just
pulled
out
some
of
the
temperature
and
precipitation
figures
for
southeast
england,
and
you
can
get
a
lot
of
this
information
for
the
different
regions
of
the
country
and
these
are
for
the
medium
and
high
scenarios
for
the
2050s
time
size.
A
So
I
won't
talk
through
them
in
in
detail,
but
you
can
have
them
for
reference
and
basically
they
just
reflect
what
we've
seen
for
the
uk
picture
in
the
previous
slides,
and
so
the
next
slide.
Please-
and
this
one
just
goes
into
sea
level
rise
for
london,
which
is
the
closest
regional
area
to
the
southeast.
A
You
can
see
the
high
and
medium
and
low
emission
scenarios,
and
it
shows
slightly
over
a
meter
of
sea
level
rise
under
the
high
scenario
for
the
end
of
the
century.
But
I
should
just
point
out
here
that
these
are
not
the
extreme
scenarios
and
there
are
sort
of
what
they
call
h,
plus
plus
or
more
extreme
scenarios
that
do
exist
and
which
some
agencies
are
using
in
some
of
their
planning.
A
So
go
to
the
next
slide.
Please,
okay!
So
we've
seen
a
bit
about
projections
of
climate
change,
but
I
think
that
hides
the
point
that
I
thought
jonathan
made
really
well
about
the
fact
that
we've
already
surpassed
one
degree
of
warming,
and
so
I
thought
it'd
be
useful
to
add
a
bit
about
what
we've
already
observed,
because
climate
change
is
not
just
something
that's
happening
out
there
in
the
future.
A
It's
something
that's
here
and
now
and
we're
really
starting
to
see
and
in
fact
the
central
england
temperature
data
set,
does
sort
of
support
the
fact
that
we've
seen
one
degree
of
warming
since
the
pre-industrial
period
and
that's
consistent
with
what
we've
seen
globally.
A
So
if
you
go
to
the
next
slide,
please,
this
is
a
little
bit
more
about
what
it
looks
like.
So
we've
seen
a
lot
about
data
and
projections,
but
in
terms
of
the
like
the
real
practical
impacts,
there
was
a
small
snapshot.
Actually
that
was
published
by
bloomberg
the
other
day
and
that
shows
kind
of
impacts
across
global
trade,
electricity
demand,
population,
men's
health
and
so
forth,
and
I
think
you
know
I
think
again,
as
jonathan
alluded
to
before.
It's
really,
if
you're
looking
at
any.
A
You
know
even
watching
the
news
these
days,
it's
sort
of
hard
to
miss
the
fact
that
you
know,
for
example,
the
western
coast
of
the
united
states
is
on
fire
at
the
moment.
As
is
you
know,
a
good
part
of
the
arctic,
and
these
there
are
these
storms
that
have
been
going
on.
A
We've
been
hearing
a
lot
about
named
storms
and
they're
running
out
of
names
for
the
storms
that
we're
seeing
and
there
will
be
attribution
studies
for
these
fires
and
for
these
storms
that
will
sort
of
show
exactly
what
role
climate
change
played
in
the
likelihood
and
the
severity
of
those
weather
events.
So
we'll
we
will
see
those,
I
think
suffice
to
say
that
you
know
climate
change
is
definitely
working,
we're
seeing
more
and
more
evidence
of
it
as
time
goes
by.
A
So
that's
kind
of
a
look
at
the
uk
and
global
impacts.
You
know
very
briefly,
but
if
we're
going
to
consider
how
to
adapt
to
climate
change,
which
is
something
that
I'm
always
trying
to
encourage
people
to
do
even
alongside
ambitious
net
zero
strategies
that
needs
to
happen
on
a
more
local
scale.
So
we
need
to
do
some
work
to
understand
what
those
local
scale
implications
are,
and
so
the
next
couple
of
slides
will
show
how
we've
done
that
in
london,
looking
at
the
three
major
his
risks
of
heat,
flood
and
drought.
A
So
if
you
go
to
the
next
slide,
please
so
in
london,
what
we
understand
is
that
we've
got
a
number
of
properties
at
risk
from
surface
water,
flooding
and
flooding
surface
water.
Flooding
that's
flowing
from
rainfall
is
one
of
five
types
of
flooding.
We
have
to
worry
about
in
london,
so
this
is
just
about.
You
know
doing
the
work
to
understand
what
the
exposure
is,
and
you
know
where
we
have
vulnerability
next
slide.
A
Please,
and
here
you
can
see
that
we've
used
earth
observation
data
to
see
the
urban
heat
island
effect
for
london
and
we've
gathered
information
about.
You
know
previous
impacts
from
heat,
the
relationship
between
heat
and
our
building
stock
and
how
well
our
different
types
of
buildings
can
deal
with
heat
and
the
fact
that
we
don't
need
to
have
a
heat
wave
to
experience,
disruption
and
real
health
impacts.
In
fact,
we've
seen
in
london
that
the
overwhelming
majority
of
mortality
from
heat
happens
well
before
we
even
reach
the
heat
wave
thresholds
and
the
next
slide
please.
A
So
this
just
looks
at
water
availability,
and
this
is
thames
water
slide.
That
just
shows,
I
think
they
are.
The
environment
agency
have
called
this.
A
The
jaws
of
death
slide,
but
yeah
southeast
england
is
one
of
the
driest
regions
in
the
world,
not
just
in
this
country,
and
I
think
that's
worth
noting
and
times
where
here
has
projected
projected
a
deficit
of
more
than
400
megaliters
of
water
per
day
by
2040.,
and
that's
even
with
projected
energy
water
efficiency
gains,
and
so
we
need
to
be
planning
for
new
resources,
as
well
as
considering
how
we're
going
to
reduce
demand,
and
that
also
brings
in
things
like
population
and
and
other
demographic
changes
that
we
need
to
think
about.
A
A
I
think
that's
something
really
important
to
think
about,
and
I've
heard
people
mention
that
you're
going
to
be
talking
about
climate
justice,
and
I
think
this
is
a
huge
thing
that
comes
in
to
the
issue.
Is
that
we're
not
seeing
the
impacts
equal
across
the
population
and
they're
not
going
to
be
fair,
and
I
think
this
also
just
reminds
us
that
the
projections
and
the
weather
are
only
part
of
the
story.
A
So
what
are
we
doing
about
it?
I
just
wanted
to
give
a
few
examples
of
how
we're
thinking
about
this
in
london
and
what
we're
doing
in
terms
of
policy
and
programs,
and
that
potentially
other
people
can
replicate
in
other
areas.
So
if
you
go
to
the
next
slide,
please
this
just
shows
adaptation
policy
in
london.
So
we
have
a
chapter
in
our
london
environment
strategy
that
specifically
addresses
climate
change
and
the
risks
identified
in
terms
of
adaptation,
as
well
as
mitigation
and
waste
and
all
sorts
of
other
sustainability
related
issues.
A
But
the
thing
to
note
here
is
that
environment
policy
alone
is
not
going
to
cut
it.
We
we
know
that.
Actually
we
need
to
consider
adapting
all
of
the
the
other
ranges
of
policies
and
proposals
across
across
the
city
and
that's
something
that
you
know,
people
I
think
need
to
think
about.
So
we
have
in
our
in
the
london
plan
our
spatial
planning
policy.
We
have
adaptation
in
our
resilience
strategy
in
our
transport
strategy
and
in
other
areas
as
well.
I
think,
including
our
housing
strategy.
A
A
We
produced
this
london
partnership
produces
in
partnership
with
the
southeast
climate
change
partnership.
When
I
used
to
work
there-
and
this
looks
at
different
types
of
housing
and
how
adaptive
measures
are
also
good
sustainability
measures,
so
thinking
about
some
of
the
things
that
you
can
do
to
make
your
home
different
types
of
homes
are
represented
in
this
guidance.
More
so
resilient
to
the
impacts
of
climate
change
can
also
be
good
in
terms
of
reducing
carbon
emissions
and
being
more
sustainable
in
general.
Next
slide.
Please.
A
We
also
do
some
work
on
transport.
We
have
a
transport
adaptation
group,
that's
led
by
tfl,
and
that
works
to
explore
the
climate
risks
for
our
transport
networks.
It
also
brings
in
national
partners
like
network
brand
highways
england,
and
it's
really
about
just
sharing
knowledge
and
and
working
out
how
to
work
with
national
government
on
adaptation
or
how,
to
you
know,
work
on
different
types
of
projects,
and
things
like
that
also.
A
A
Next
slide,
please
yeah.
So
I've
done
some
work
on
health
recently
looking
at
health
and
how
we
manage
heat
waves
in
the
context
of
cobit
19
next
slide.
Please
there's
also
some
guidance
here
for
local
government
local
areas
on
climate
change
adaptation.
So
thinking
about
how
you
can
how
different
service
areas
can
consider
it
next
slide.
Please-
and
I
thought
I'd
just
also
quickly
say
that
I
mean
if
people
are
thinking
a
lot.
A
I
know
climate
assemblies
that
I've
talked
to
and
climate
commissions
that
I've
talked
to
are
thinking
a
lot
about
climate
change
mitigation
and
net
zero
strategies,
and
I
do
think
it's
used
to
it's
useful
to
consider
that
energy
efficiency
retrofit,
for
example,
needs
to
consider
climate
change
adaptation
as
well.
A
And
so,
if
you
go
to
the
next
slide,
please
the
other
area,
where
adaptation
that
stereo
interacts
is
on
water,
water
efficiency,
watering,
water
saving,
is
energy,
saving,
increases,
resilience
to
water
stress
and
could
be
anything
from
small
home
retrofits
to
designing
in
water
review
systems,
and
things
like
that
next
slide.
Please,
and
I
thought
I
would
just
mention.
A
Actually,
you
can
go
to
the
next
slide,
so
just
wanted
to
mention
something
about
climate
justice
and
of
course
we
talked
a
little
bit
about
the
most
vulnerable
people
in
our
in
how
we
think
about
climate
change,
and
so
we've
done
some
mapping
in
london
looking
at
particular
indicators
of
social
vulnerability
to
climate
change
and
we're
using
this
with
our
health
sector
and
our
planning
people,
and
in
other
you
know
across
our
ngo
sectors
and
stuff
to
try
to
help
think
about
how
you
consider
the
most
vulnerable
people
among
us
in
our
decision
making
when
it
comes
to
climate
change
or
anything
else.
A
So
I
think
that's
me,
I
think,
there's
one
more
slide
and
that's
it
and
I'm
happy
to
take
questions.
So,
yes,
a
very
quick
run-through
of
lots
of
stuff
that
we're
doing,
but
I'm
happy
to
take
questions
when
the
time
comes.