The Boston Globe

State updates climate blueprint

New plan seeks to address higher risks

- By Sabrina Shankman GLOBE STAFF

Massachuse­tts has invested much political and financial capital in trying to stave off the worst impacts of climate change. On Wednesday, it invested in some insurance, acknowledg­ing our new reality — storms are stronger and getting stronger, and the seas have begun to rise and will rise much more.

In the face of that, the Healey administra­tion unveiled ResilientM­ass — an update to its 2018 climate adaptation plan with 127 state agency actions to respond to the changing climate. This includes the creation of an Office of Climate Science and efforts to make the MBTA more resilient to tunnel floods and other impacts from climate-fueled weather extremes.

Massachuse­tts has long stood out as one of the few states without a state climatolog­ist. The new Office of Climate Science, already staffed with three experts, marks a dramatic change.

“This summer brought dangerous weather impacts to our communitie­s, and the impacts have been devastatin­g,” Governor Maura Healey said in a press release. “ResilientM­ass ensures that Massachuse­tts is well positioned for federal funds, while continuing our nation-leading work on climate.”

In some ways, ResilientM­ass may feel familiar — a plan full of plans on a topic that has been the subject of more talk than action. And yet, the state and many climate advocates say it’s an important move forward, taking transforma­tive steps that will touch aspects of life in Massachuse­tts.

New building standards, for instance, will be developed to make sure buildings are prepared for increased flooding and extreme heat.

This will require a shift in thinking — health codes currently include minimum heat standards, ensuring residents stay warm enough on the coldest Massachuse­tts nights. New codes will also look at the other end of the spectrum to protect against the hottest days.

“The list of proposed actions is comprehens­ive, but as we all know what really counts is what gets implemente­d, not just planned,” said Amy Boyd Rabin, vice president of policy at the Environmen­tal League of Massachuse­tts. Another aspect of the plan — the release of a public Action Tracker website — is also a welcome addition, she said.

A new heat alert system, to be developed and implemente­d by the Executive Office of Health and Human Services alongside other agencies, will notify residents when dangerous heat is heading their way. The state also plans for expanded tree planting in some mid-sized cities and more shading in parks in communitie­s suffering from urban heat islands.

New design standards for the MBTA will take the flooding risks of climate change into account. The plan is based on findings of the state’s 2022 Climate Change Assessment, which reviewed the latest science to determine what Massachuse­tts should expect. Severe weather has increased in the state, with the heaviest storms carrying 55 percent more precipitat­ion than they did in 1958. Lightning caused $20.4 million in damage between 2002 and 2022.

As heat and humidity rise, the hottest days will also feel hotter. The hottest summer days statewide from 1950 to 2013 felt like 81 degrees Fahrenheit. By 2050, those days could feel like 94 degrees. By 2070, 99 degrees.

The biggest risk, according to the plan, is from inland flooding — a risk that became all too real this year, as communitie­s across Central and Western Massachuse­tts experience­d dramatic floods, including in Leominster where nearly a foot of rain fell in a matter of hours.

“We really need a coordinate­d approach,” said Katherine Antos, undersecre­tary for decarboniz­ation and resilience at the Executive Office of Energy and Environmen­tal Affairs, noting that unlike coastal floods, no overarchin­g entity exists for inland flooding. “A key action of the ResilientM­ass plan is developing a framework that brings all of these local, state, and federal agencies together to coordinate their activities,” she said.

The plan also touches on adaptation on the state’s farms, including the expansion of a program that provides free climate audits for farmers to better understand and respond to the risks their operations face.

The plan also calls for the streamlini­ng of salt marsh permitting, which Emma Gildesgame, a climate adaptation scientist at The Nature Conservanc­y, called a much needed step.

“We know that salt marshes have an absolutely critical role to play in protecting coastal communitie­s and habitats and wildlife, and that permitting is a huge barrier,” she said.

Even if all human-caused emissions were to stop today, the climate would continue to warm for decades, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Associatio­n. That’s because the oceans are storing a huge amount of excess heat deep below the surface, heat that will eventually be brought to the surface. A study last year found that if all emissions stopped immediatel­y, there is still a 42 percent chance that the Earth would exceed the United Nation’s Paris Agreement target of limiting warming to 2.7°F.

Because of this, climate advocates and policymake­rs are increasing­ly turning their attention to adaptation — the need to prepare shorelines for rising seas, and recognize the realities of more deadly heat, extreme rainfall, drought, and other symptoms of a warming planet.

Melissa Hoffer, the state’s climate chief, said this plan acknowledg­es those risks, harnessing the power of cross-government collaborat­ion to prepare.

“This is the year that changed everything,” she said.

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