There is Help!

Use the tables to find helpful tools and state guidance documents. Table organization follows the basic steps of the planning process profiled in the U.S. Climate Resilience Toolkit.

Phase 1: Define, Explore, and Initiate Phase 2: Assess Vulnerability Phase 3: Define Adaptation Framework and Strategies Phase 4: Implement, Monitor, Evaluate, and Adjust
2020 California Adaptation Planning Guide (APG) The California Adaptation Planning Guide (APG) provides guidance to support communities in addressing the consequences of climate change. The 2020 APG presents an updated, step-by-step process that communities can use to plan for climate change. This APG explains the connections between climate adaptation, community resiliency, public safety, and security; provides information and planning support for assessing climate vulnerabilities across sectors and regions; and supports tools to create and implement adaptation strategies that can be tailored to meet local needs. Since the state’s release of the first APG in 2012, it has been widely used by communities, government agencies, tribal governments, nongovernmental organizations, institutions, and others throughout California to help guide adaptation planning efforts.
General Plan Guidelines The Governor's Office of Planning and Research (OPR) is statutorily required to adopt and periodically revise the State General Plan Guidelines (GPG) for the preparation and content of general plans for all cities and counties in California. The GPG provides guidance on SB 379, which requires local governments to include a climate change vulnerability assessment, measures to address vulnerabilities, and comprehensive hazard mitigation and emergency response strategy. It also provides guidance on climate change as it relates to General Plans, such as the role of CEQA guidelines in supporting GHG emissions reductions in General Plans, CEQA streamlining, and greenhouse gas emissions inventory, targets, and reduction measures.
State of California Sea-Level Rise Guidance This updated guidance provides a science-based methodology for state and local governments to analyze and assess the risks associated with sea-level rise, and to incorporate sea-level rise into their planning, permitting, and investment decisions. This Guidance provides: 1. A synthesis of the best available science on sea level rise projections and rates for California; 2. A step-by-step approach for state agencies and local governments to evaluate those projections and related hazard information in decision making; and 3. Preferred coastal adaptation approaches.
Phase 1: Define, Explore, and Initiate Phase 2: Assess Vulnerability Phase 3: Define Adaptation Framework and Strategies Phase 4: Implement, Monitor, Evaluate, and Adjust
Adapting to Rising Tides Adapting to Rising Tides (ART) is a program of the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission (BCDC) that identifies how current and future flooding will affect communities, infrastructure, ecosystems and economy in the San Francisco Bay Area. The ART Program integrates adaptation into local and regional planning and decision-making by leading collaborative adaptation planning projects, building regional capacity for adaptation, and providing a portfolio of resources, including how-to guides, findings by sector and issue, and maps and data products. The ART Program Portfolio website includes the adaptation planning methodologies and approaches developed, tested and refined by the ART Program staff and partners, as well as communication and decision-making strategies. In addition to providing how to guides, engagement exercises, process agendas and a step by step approach, the Portfolio includes a Help Desk through which entities can contact program staff for assistance assessing and planning their adaptation projects. Program staff are available to explain the ART approach to adaptation planning and direct users to appropriate resources, information, and expertise.
Cal-Adapt Cal-Adapt is a web platform that has offered free public access to peer-reviewed data for exploring California’s climate change impacts on state infrastructure, communities, and natural resources since it was first launched in 2011. Cal-Adapt allows anyone to explore local climate change impacts on the Local Snapshot Tool, download climate projection data, and explore other data visualization tools. Over the course of a multi-year effort led by the State of California, Cal-Adapt is evolving substantially to integrate the best available climate science and data provided by California’s Fifth Climate Change Assessment. As of 2023, Cal-Adapt includes a more comprehensive and powerful solution for highly technical and data-intensive needs, with a focus on the energy sector, called the Cal-Adapt Analytics Engine. Future offerings of the expanded Cal Adapt enterprise will include a revamped suite of web tools, analytical tools and computational resources for working with the next generation climate data, and a new historical observation data stream. The expanded Cal-Adapt enterprise will continue to provide essential visualization, analytical and computational resources for a broad range of people in using large climate datasets to inform their decision-making and planning processes.
Coastal Modeling System (CoSMoS) The Coastal Storm Modeling System (CoSMoS) is a dynamic modeling approach developed by the United States Geological Survey that allows more detailed predictions of coastal flooding due to both future sea level rise and storms integrated with long-term coastal evolution. The Our Coast, Our Future (OCOF) project uses CoSMoS to create a collaborative, user-driven interface providing coastal California resource managers and land use planners locally relevant, online maps and tools to help understand, visualize, and anticipate vulnerabilities to sea level rise and storms.
Digital Coast Sea Level Rise and Coastal Flooding Impacts Viewer The purpose of this map viewer is to provide federal, state, and local coastal resource managers and planners with a preliminary look at sea level rise and coastal flooding impacts.
General Plan Guidelines Online Mapping Tool The General Plan Guidelines Online Mapping tool draws data sets from multiple sources, allowing users to incorporate local, regional, and statewide data as available into local general plans without cost. This tool can be useful for local governments as they update their Safety Elements to include climate change adaptation. This tool is meant to be used in coordination with Cal-Adapt and the MyHazards planning tool from the California Office of Emergency Services. Content and data will be augmented over time to respond to user feedback.
Phase 1: Define, Explore, and Initiate Phase 2: Assess Vulnerability Phase 3: Define Adaptation Framework and Strategies Phase 4: Implement, Monitor, Evaluate, and Adjust
2020 California Adaptation Planning Guide (APG) The California Adaptation Planning Guide (APG) provides guidance to support communities in addressing the consequences of climate change. The 2020 APG presents an updated, step-by-step process that communities can use to plan for climate change. This APG explains the connections between climate adaptation, community resiliency, public safety, and security; provides information and planning support for assessing climate vulnerabilities across sectors and regions; and supports tools to create and implement adaptation strategies that can be tailored to meet local needs. Since the state’s release of the first APG in 2012, it has been widely used by communities, government agencies, tribal governments, nongovernmental organizations, institutions, and others throughout California to help guide adaptation planning efforts.
Defining Vulnerable Communities in the Context of Climate Adaptation The Governor’s Office of Planning and Research, with input from the ICARP Technical Advisory Council, developed this resource guide as a starting point for practitioners to use when first considering how to define vulnerable communities in an adaptation context. The document includes the ICARP Technical Advisory Council’s definition of climate-vulnerable communities, a summary of existing statewide assessment tools that can be used to identify vulnerable communities in a climate adaptation context, additional indicators that could be used to assess underlying vulnerability on a case-by-case basis, and a list of process guides that can serve to aid agencies undertaking efforts to define vulnerable communities.
General Plan Guidelines The Governor's Office of Planning and Research (OPR) is statutorily required to adopt and periodically revise the State General Plan Guidelines (GPG) for the preparation and content of general plans for all cities and counties in California. The GPG provides guidance on SB 379, which requires local governments to include a climate change vulnerability assessment, measures to address vulnerabilities, and comprehensive hazard mitigation and emergency response strategy. It also provides guidance on climate change as it relates to General Plans, such as the role of CEQA guidelines in supporting GHG emissions reductions in General Plans, CEQA streamlining, and greenhouse gas emissions inventory, targets, and reduction measures.
State Hazard Mitigation Plan The Governor's Office of Emergency Services (Cal OES) leads state disaster preparation, response, and recovery. Cal OES works directly with local, state, federal, and private partners to incorporate climate change into longer-term resiliency strategies. Cal OES also continues to incorporate climate change-associated risks into the State's Hazard Mitigation Plan (SHMP) and to work with local stakeholders to increase awareness of future climate change impacts and incorporate associated countermeasures into their local plans, as directed by the Legislature. The SHMP encourages hazard mitigation planning to protect the environment and to promote sustainable hazard mitigation actions. In line with this priority, the plan aligns with the key principle of promoting and enhancing nature-based solutions, natural processes, and ecosystem benefits while minimizing adverse impacts to the environment. The plan also acknowledges, incorporates, and integrates recognized data on climate change impacts on hazards, risks, and vulnerabilities available from credible scientific sources, into state, local, tribal, and private sector mitigation plans, strategies, and actions.