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ADAPTAlaska Case Study on Climate Scenario Planning for the Kenai Peninsula

ADAPTAlaska Case Study on Climate Scenario Planning for the Kenai Peninsula

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Climate change impacts in Alaska are more pronounced than in other regions of the United States. These impacts are well documented in the Kenai Peninsula, where communities are coping with a variety of impacts related to a warming climate. These include reductions in wetland areas, glacial ice coverage, and freshwater availability as well as increases in temperature, ocean acidification, and harmful algal blooms. Although efforts to document these changes can create a long-term, local strategy for climate change adaptation, challenges such as the uncertainty of future climate change trajectories, the need for regional data synthesis, and limited capacity for interagency collaboration have presented barriers to effective climate change planning. A 2015 Science Transfer project led by the Tijuana River and Kachemak Bay Reserves aimed to address these challenges by helping coastal communities on the Kenai Peninsula plan for a changing climate.

This case study, featured on the ADAPTAlaska website, profiles this project and highlights the state-federal-local partnership on the Kenai Peninsula that is working across boundaries to link local climate science and art to scenario and adaptation planning.