We must bring the full strength of the economy to build a more resilient future where people, communities, and economies can thrive within climate risk, write MA Climate & Society student Marina Saguar Urquiola & @ncdp.bsky.social director Jeff Schlegelmilch. Via @thehill.com. https://bit.ly/4bVAKX3
Posts by National Center for Disaster Preparedness, Columbia University
Outrage + Optimism podcast #357 with headshots of the hosts and the text Forecasting Disaster: A "Super" El Niño? And the Case for Early Action with Tom Rivett-Carnac and Paul Dickinson + Andrew Kruczkiewicz from the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre.
How should climate information be translated into useful decisions before disaster strikes? Climate scientist @wxpizza.bsky.social of Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre and @ncdp.bsky.social joins @outrageoptimism.bsky.social to explore what climate preparedness looks like. 🎙️ bit.ly/419gevQ
With the World Cup ahead, join NCDP and our training partners in person on April 7 for a training on extreme weather preparedness for major sporting events. Ideal for stadium ops, EM & public safety.
⏳ Register by April 3 (security required)
🔗 https://luma.com/1jeudqxk
"Every El Niño is different in terms of timing, magnitude, and geographic extent, and such differences lead to variability in the impacts—on temperatures and rainfall, for example—on a global scale," says expert @wxpizza.bsky.social of @ncdp.bsky.social. Via ABC News. https://bit.ly/47AF5fx
There is still time to register.
Insurance payments and funding are the key needs for rebuilding, noted Schlegelmilch. In addition, locally driven innovations to help Altadena residents return home should be pushed and celebrated. ow.ly/TNXs50YrmEV @lapublicpress.bsky.social @climate.columbia.edu
Will AI weather models lead to better & faster extreme weather warnings? @wxpizza.bsky.social is watching how forecasters prioritize AI predictions before issuing public warnings about incoming storms. More models don't always mean enhanced decision-making. ow.ly/RWMj50YlyfC @bloomberg.com
La Californie est régulièrement victime d'inondations provoquées par le Pineapple Express, une rivière atmosphérique arrivant directement d'Hawaï. (Photo Shutterstock)
As part of its Moonshot Goal 8 Program, scientists address the question: Is it possible to tame river flooding? @wxpizza.bsky.social weighs in on this debate in a French article in @lesechosfr.bsky.social.
www.lesechos.fr/idees-debats...
What if disruptions to Tribal Nations’ homes, livestock, and lands from floods, wildfires, drought, and severe storms could be reduced through two-way communications? A new project centers Tribal voices to strengthen resilience. news.climate.columbia.edu/2026/02/16/l...
We are excited to join the esteemed international community of colleagues in the United Nations' Santiago Network by providing technical assistance on disaster loss and damage. santiago-network.org/about/members
@climate.columbia.edu @undrr.bsky.social
Das Dores Ngueussie Ngamini of @ncdp.bsky.social has turned curiosity into a career dedicated to scientific knowledge and climate justice, helping communities most affected by and often least equipped to face climate hazards. #IDWGIS State of the Planet: news.climate.columbia.edu/2026/02/12/w...
Support has to be intentional by making science accessible through training, funding, pathways, & tools adapted to different communities & languages. When we remove barriers, women thrive, & the entire field benefits, noted Das Dores Ngueussie Ngamini. ow.ly/7a3n50YesAc @climate.columbia.edu
Join us on Feb 11, International Day of Women & Girls in Science, and throughout the week as we spotlight just a few of our many remarkable women researchers who are leaders and role models, using today's tools to answer tomorrow's essential questions. Via State of the Planet: https://bit.ly/4qnw67X
✨ Researchers from NCDP helped build seasonal forecasting capacity with the Ethiopian Meteorological Institute. Read how. ow.ly/uKfy50Y8iCv @climate.columbia.edu #AnticipatoryAction #ForecastModeling
It is critical to communicate with farmers for projects to succeed, but current technologies fall short. Working with farmers, researchers from @climate.columbia.edu, Yale Center for Geospatial Solutions & School of the Environment participated in a novel game to understand risks. ow.ly/TVkB50Y421H
Freezing rain is "by far the most dangerous" form of precipitation. When rain freezes on & around surfaces, that could mean cars are encapsulated in ice. Bridges & roadways can also accumulate & freeze over puddles, noted @wxpizza.bsky.social. ow.ly/TqyJ50Y2TYu @axios.com @climate.columbia.edu
Disaster management is complex. This article, published in the @uchilegalforum.bsky.social, analyzes how federal agencies can integrate policies into climate-informed planning and leadership. ow.ly/VRVv50XWHtg @climate.columbia.edu @sabincenter.bsky.social
Proliferation of climate-related disasters points to the urgent need for climate resilience leadership. Sabin Center's Michael Burger, NCDP's Jeff Schlegelmilch & Lucia Bragg outline how FEMA could be a source. Via University of Chicago Legal Forum: https://bit.ly/4pOlcYU
The history of disasters takes us down a path of loss until we reach a breaking point & decide that what we are doing is no longer working, and then transformative innovation follows, noted Jeff Schlegelmilch. ow.ly/Bwxy50XW7P5 @climate.columbia.edu #LAWildfires
Many victims of the LA Wildfires are still tangled in a set of steep challenges. Many are uninsured or underinsured, and payouts have widely fallen far short of rebuilding costs, noted Thomas Chandler. ow.ly/ocOR50XTa4C #LAWildfires @climate.columbia.edu @us.theguardian.com
Places are seeing disasters they aren’t used to, extreme events are intensifying faster, and they are becoming more complex. That requires earlier warnings & new approaches to response and recovery, noted @wxpizza.bsky.social. ow.ly/tKnL50XSqQv @climate.columbia.edu @apnews.com
✨ New publication: "Pathways for enhancing capacity in adult climate literacy within US emergency management" with an epilogue about the present in the Journal of EM Mgmt. by @jldevincenzo.bsky.social with support from Anyieth Philip Ayuen & Syeda Kainaat Jah ow.ly/qKIY50XQ6Oz @climate.columbia.edu
Climate overshoot has huge implications for where we live, how we get our food, & our quality of life, yet despite these potentially cataclysmic shifts, there has been little work done on the human implications of this world, noted @wxpizza.bsky.social. ow.ly/5i6e50XQ4gV @climate.columbia.edu
2025 was a historic year - making headlines for disastrous wildfires, catastrophic floods in TX, and deadly heatwaves in Europe and Asia. Read the top stories that shaped the State of Our Planet.
@climate.columbia.edu @wxpizza.bsky.social
news.climate.columbia.edu/2025/12/22/y...
It is becoming increasingly irresponsible to focus solely on the physical modeling elements of overshooting [2.7°F/1.5 °C of warming]. We need to start thinking about what the [human] scenarios look like for a post-1.5 °C world. @wxpizza.bsky.social. ow.ly/I3G850XNaTY @climate.columbia.edu @vox.com
💬 What role can #GenAI chatbots play in strengthening disaster preparedness and resilience, especially among youth? Shuyang Huang, @jldevincenzo.bsky.social, and Thomas Chandler weigh in on the benefits, challenges, and what frameworks should be prioritized. ow.ly/PnHF50XL75f @climate.columbia.edu
A young person using a wheelbarrow to transport two canisters of water across an arid climate. Stock photo.
It seems increasingly likely that the world will overshoot the Paris Agreement’s aspirational goal of 1.5°C of global mean temperature rise. A Perspective calls for research on the social and humanitarian impacts of climate overshoot. In PNAS Nexus: https://ow.ly/hNhX50Xx2pq
⭐️NEW article from Shuang Huang @jldevincenzo.bsky.social & Thomas Chandler @columbiauniversity.bsky.social on ⭐️positioning Gen AI in #HumanRightsEducation, addressing disaster risk reduction & youth #empowerment
⭐️AVAILABLE FREE ACCESS FOR A LIMITED PERIOD ONLY
Check it out!
doi.org/10.1080/2535...
What happens when the world gets too hot for too long? Researchers at several institutions argue that climate overshoot will reshape risks for societies long before temperatures drift back down. ow.ly/F7za50XxEUV @wxpizza.bsky.social @climate.columbia.edu
... with the cost of doing nothing potentially creating tensions with the humanitarian principle of ‘do no harm', noted @wxpizza.bsky.social.