SAN FRANCISCO (March 10, 2022) – Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released a report highlighting the importance of resiliency and effective planning for management of debris from natural disasters. Due to climate change and sea level rise, more frequent and more intense natural disasters are generating significant amounts of disaster debris. Planning for and developing resilient affordable housing and debris management infrastructure are critical for equitable and safe disaster debris management.
“The report published today has important implications for our Pacific Southwest region, especially for communities in coastal areas in California and Hawaii and the Pacific Islands,” said EPA Pacific Southwest Regional Administrator Martha Guzman. “Planning now to reduce disaster debris through resilient design, reuse, recycling, and composting can better protect vulnerable communities, support equitable disaster recovery and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”
The Resiliency and Natural Disaster Debris Workshop Report provides key takeaways from two virtual workshops held in 2021. The workshops were attended by over 100 experts in disaster debris planning and management, disaster response, environmental justice, zero waste, circular economy, deconstruction, and green building. The attendees represented federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial governments, non-governmental organizations, and academia.
Workshop participants identified a range of practical steps the federal government and others can take to address gaps and drive innovation around disaster debris management and resilience, including:
Among the report highlights:
Climate Change
Environmental Justice & Jobs
Protecting the Environment & Public Health
EPA has also made available to the public EPA’s 2019 Planning for Natural Disaster Debris guidance, which assists communities in planning for natural disaster debris before a disaster -- including hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes, volcanoes, floods, wildfires and winter storms -- occurs by providing relevant information intended to increase community preparedness and resiliency.
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