Topic: Meio Ambiente

Water in the foreground

Lincoln Institute Will Share Land Policy Solutions at 2022 National Planning Conference

By Lincoln Institute Staff, Maio 2, 2022

The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy will facilitate discussions about business site selection, preparing for an uncertain future, and racial equity at the American Planning Association’s National Planning Conference, which will be held in San Diego April 30 to May 3, and online May 18 to 20.

The Lincoln Institute will also host a booth (#601) in the exhibit hall, with multimedia displays and a wide range of publications. Policy Focus Reports will be available at no cost, and there will be a 30-percent discount for books, including Megaregions and America’s Future, Design with Nature Now, and Scenario Planning for Cities and Regions: Managing and Envisioning Uncertain Futures.

Further details about Lincoln Institute sessions can be found below.

MONDAY, MAY 2

9:30­ to 10:15 a.m. PDT | The New Site Selection Tool for ESG Strategies (Room 7B)

Team NEO, the Fund for Our Economic Future, the Center for Neighborhood Technology, and the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy partnered to develop an interactive online tool. All stakeholders in planning and economic development can use it to begin to make better land-policy decisions.

Speaker:

Christine Nelson, Team NEO, Northeast Ohio

11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. PDT | Planning with Foresight: Preparing for an Uncertain Future (Room 06)

Explore how to use foresight—a future-focused approach to strategic decision making that leverages diverse perspectives—to understand future dynamics and address them in participatory planning. Presenters introduce foresight and explain why it’s important for planners. They describe methodologies to identify and review future trends relevant to planning; develop scenarios; create agile, resilient plans; and engage communities.

Panelists:

Petra Hurtado, American Planning Association, Chicago, Illinois

Ryan Handy, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Sagar Shah, AICP, Naperville, Illinois

Alexsandra Gomez, American Planning Association, Chicago, Illinois

Joseph DeAngelis, American Planning Association, Chicago, Illinois

WEDNESDAY, MAY 18

12:30 to 1:30 p.m. PDT | Acknowledging and Righting Planning’s Racial Equity Wrongs

(Virtual, Channel 1)

Learn about planning’s role in historical and systemic racial discrimination and how it resulted in current racial inequity and community disparities, understand why it is important for planners and planning departments to clearly and publicly commit to addressing racial inequities and learn how to communicate this commitment to your community, and explore planning directors’ actionable methods to address racial inequity.

Panlists:

Heather Sauceda Hannon, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Margaret H. Wallace Brown, City of Houston Planning & Development Department, Houston, Texas

Emily Liu, Louisville Metro Planning and Design Services, Louisville, Kentucky

Donald Roe, St. Louis Planning and Urban Design Agency, St. Louis, Missouri

 


 

Photo by Art Wagner/E+ via Getty Images

Solicitação de propostas

2022 Evaluating Tools for Integrating Land Use and Water Management

Submission Deadline: May 15, 2022 at 11:59 PM

The Babbitt Center for Land and Water Policy invites proposals for original research in the U.S. that evaluates the suite of tools, practices, and processes the Babbitt Center has identified as crucial to water sustainability and to connecting land use and water management. This evaluation may assess a category of tools or rigorously evaluate a specific tool.

RFP Schedule

  • Prior to May 15: Applicants are strongly encouraged to complete a pre-bid informal consultation (contact Erin Rugland at 480-323-0778 or erugland@lincolninst.edu)
  • May 15, 2022: RFP submission due at 11:59 p.m. PDT
  • June 1, 2022: Selected applicants notified of award
  • November 30, 2022: Intermediate summary/progress report due*
  • May 1, 2023: Final deliverable due*

*This date is flexible and can operate on a shorter timeline.

Proposal Evaluation

The Babbitt Center will evaluate proposals based on five equally weighted criteria:

  • relevance of the project to the RFP’s theme of evaluating tools for land and water integration;
  • rigor of research methodology;
  • capacity and expertise of the researcher(s) and relevant analytical and/or practice-based experience;
  • potential impact and usefulness of the project for practitioners integrating land and water management; and
  • potential for results to transfer to a wide variety of contexts, even if the proposal focuses on one community.

The geographic focus of this RFP is U.S. communities. Preference will be given to submissions relevant to arid- and semi-arid regions of the U.S. International scopes will be considered so long as they include a component of U.S. research, such as a comparative study between a U.S. community and an international community.


Details

Submission Deadline
May 15, 2022 at 11:59 PM

Keywords

Uso do Solo, Planejamento de Uso do Solo, Água, Planeamento hídrico

Solicitação de propostas

Scenario Planning and Changing Food Systems

Submission Deadline: March 23, 2022 at 11:59 PM

The Consortium for Scenario Planning, in collaboration with the Babbitt Center for Land and Water Policy, invites proposals for original tools that focus on applying scenario planning to enhance community food system resiliency.  

Project communities may include regions where external forces such as climate change threaten the viability of agriculture; areas that support vital commercial agriculture; places with a healthy or limited local food supply; communities encouraging family or small-scale farming; or urban and rural areas that struggle with food accessibility.  

Proposed projects should produce scenario planning guides, toolkits, or workshop models that practitioners and community leaders can use to support food systems planning processes. Successful applicants may receive commissions of up to $10,000. 

Please send questions to Ryan Maye Handy, Planning Practice and Scenario Planning Policy Analyst. 

RFP Schedule 

  • March 3, 2022: RFP announced 
  • March 23, 2022: RFP submission due at 11:59 p.m. EDT 
  • April 5, 2022: Selected applicants notified of award 
  • September 30, 2022: Progress report due 
  • June 1, 2023: Final deliverable due 

Proposal Evaluation 

The Consortium for Scenario Planning will evaluate proposals based on four equally weighted criteria: 

  • Relevance to scenario planning and the exploration of food systems’ future 
  • Quality of proposed approach and data sources 
  • Capacity, analytical and/or practice-based experience, and expertise of the team 
  • Potential impact and usefulness of the project for scenario planning practitioners 

Details

Submission Deadline
March 23, 2022 at 11:59 PM
Related Links

Keywords

Desenvolvimento Comunitário, Economia, Meio Ambiente, Terra Agrícola, Recursos Naturais, Resiliência, Planejamento de Cenários

Climate Smart Agriculture in the Southwest: A Discussion with State and Federal Policy Leaders

Março 16, 2022 | 2:00 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.

Free, offered in inglês

Colorado River water sustainability is inextricably connected to the future of agriculture in the United States southwest and northwestern Mexico. Irrigated agriculture utilizes nearly three-quarters of the water supplies in the Colorado Basin, occupies over 4 million acres of land, and provides food and fiber for the 40 million residents that receive water from the basin and for global agricultural exports. Now, irrigated agriculture faces an increasingly uncertain future where water supplies will not only be reduced, but also less reliable and more expensive. That’s because myriad factors cause competition for water supplies, among them: climate-change induced aridification, a 20-plus-year drought, and water demands from increasing population and urban growth. At the same time, many farmers’ energy costs will increase if hydropower production is reduced due to drought. Our three speakers are at the forefront of efforts to address these challenges and chart a sustainable future for agriculture in the west. Join us to discuss the future of agriculture in the Colorado River Basin and throughout the region.

This webinar is part of the Sustainable Agricultural Water Futures Discussion Series and Lincoln Institute Dialogue Series.

Watch the Recording

Speakers

Gloria Montaño Greene, Deputy Under Secretary, USDA

Karen Ross, Secretary of the California Department of Food and Agriculture

Kate Greenberg, Colorado Commissioner of Agriculture

Moderator

Jim Holway, Director, Babbitt Center for Land and Water Policy, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy 


Details

Date
Março 16, 2022
Time
2:00 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Registration Period
Fevereiro 22, 2022 - Março 16, 2022
Language
inglês
Registration Fee
Free
Cost
Free

Keywords

Terra Agrícola, Intermountain West, Uso do Solo, Recursos Naturais, Planeamento hídrico

How Land Trusts and Conservancies Are Achieving Climate Impact at Scale

By Will Jason, Fevereiro 15, 2022

 

As the climate crisis grows ever more urgent, land conservationists are taking meaningful action to reduce carbon in the atmosphere and protect natural systems from the unavoidable impacts of a warming planet, according to a new report from the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. 

From the Great Plains of the United States to the high-altitude wetlands of Ecuador, land trusts and conservancies are developing and implementing creative, nature-based strategies to address climate change. In the report From the Ground Up: How Land Trusts and Conservancies are Providing Solutions to Climate Change, Lincoln Institute experts James N. Levitt and Chandni Navalkha document these initiatives through a dozen case examples that demonstrate how conservation organizations can help mitigate and adapt to climate change. 

“Such organizations are working in more than 100 nations on six continents,” write Levitt, director of the Lincoln Institute’s International Land Conservation Network, and Navalkha, the Lincoln Institute’s associate director of sustainably managed land and water resources. “They represent millions of engaged citizens working from Finland to Chile to pass our natural heritage on to future generations.” 

The report explores how land trusts and conservancies have addressed climate change in five distinct areas, with examples of successful initiatives in each:  

  • Land Protection, Restoration, and Management
  • Water Supply, Stormwater Management, and Buffering Against Sea-Level Rise  
  • Biodiversity Conservation 
  • Carbon Sequestration 
  • Energy Production 

Among the cases, the report documents how The Nature Conservancy (TNC) is using sophisticated geospatial technology to identify sites  in the United States where wind turbines will not pose a threat to birds or other wildlife. The initiative, Site Wind Right, draws on more than 100 sources to map wind resources, wildlife habitat, infrastructure, and other relevant data. It identifies more than 90 million acres as suitable for wind turbines—enough land to generate wind power equal to the country’s entire electricity supply from all sources in 2018. 

Meanwhile, the South American capital city of Quito, Ecuador, has confronted threats to its water supply—made worse by climate change—through an ambitious land conservation program. The municipality worked with the local water provider and others to enhance water quality and supply downstream by conserving and better managing land upstream, in the high-altitude wetlands known as the Andean páramo, which surround the city. Through partnerships with international organizations, including TNC, the program has been replicated in at least seven other Latin American cities, generating more than USD $200 million for conservation efforts from 500 public and private partners. 

Drawing on these cases and 10 others, Levitt and Navalkha synthesize lessons learned and make five recommendations for those who seek to confront climate change through land conservation: Empower civic sector initiatives that are creative and ambitious in scope and scale; invest in initiatives with clear strategies and measurable impact; aim for broad collaborations; share advanced science, technologies, and financing techniques; and think long term. 

“In the evolving struggle to rein in and cope with climate change globally, all sectors must join forces to find solutions that are sustainable, replicable, and reliable,” the authors conclude. 

 


 

Will Jason is director of communications at the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy.

Image: Flint Hills Credit: Brad Mangas

Solicitação de propostas

Sustainable Agricultural Water Futures in the Colorado River Basin

Submission Deadline: March 1, 2022 at 11:59 PM

The Babbitt Center for Land and Water Policy invites proposals for research related to the future of agriculture in the Colorado River Basin. Proposals should explore approaches to preserve the most productive agricultural lands; increase agricultural revenues and outside funding for water efficiency improvements; maximize ecosystem and economic benefits from both lands remaining in agriculture and lands going out of production; enhance the economic viability of agricultural communities despite a hotter, drier future; or facilitate mutually beneficial water sharing arrangements. Proposals should study impacts within the seven U.S. and two Mexican Colorado River Basin states.

RFP Schedule

  • February 1–March 1, 2022: Applicants are strongly encouraged to complete an informal, pre-bid consultation (contact Erin Rugland, erugland@lincolninst.edu, to schedule)
  • March 1, 2022: RFP submission due at 11:59 p.m. MST
  • April 12, 2022: Selected applicants notified of award
  • October 3, 2022: Intermediate summary/progress report due*
  • April 12, 2023: Final deliverable due*

*flexible and can operate on a shorter timeline

Proposal Evaluation

The Babbitt Center will evaluate proposals based on five equally weighted criteria:

  • Relevance of the project to the RFP’s theme of innovation for agricultural futures
  • Rigor of research methodology
  • Capacity and expertise of the team and relevant analytical and/or practice-based experience
  • Potential impact and usefulness of the project for agricultural producers, land managers, and/or agricultural communities
  • Potential for results to transfer to a variety of contexts, even if the proposal focuses on one region

Details

Submission Deadline
March 1, 2022 at 11:59 PM

Keywords

Ecologia, Gestão Ambiental, Terra Agrícola, Uso do Solo, Água, Planeamento hídrico