...in thinking

Resilience Engineered

Three films to demystify resilience, funded by The Resilience Shift, developed in collaboration with the Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge.

Summary for Urban Policymakers

A summary for urban policymakers, presenting the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessments in targeted summaries that can help inform action at the city scale.

Resilient Leadership

Real-time learning from the Covid crisis was captured over 16 weeks of interviews with senior leaders, providing insights into what makes resilient leadership, and how to lead for resilience.

...in practice

Infrastructure Pathways

A resource for practitioners in search of clear, easy-to-navigate guidance on climate-resilient infrastructure, compiled from hundreds of leading resources, and organized by lifecycle phase.

Resilience4Ports

Diagram of a working port

 

A multi-stakeholder, whole-systems approach is needed for ports to become low carbon resilient gateways to growth, as a meeting point of critical infrastructure systems, cities and services.

RR- HIDDEN

Resilience Realized

The Resilience Realized Awards recognise projects around the world at the cutting edge of resilience.

City Water Resilience Approach

CWI Wheel diagram

 

Download the step by step methodology to help cities collaboratively build resilience to local water challenges, mapped with the OurWater online governance tool, as used by cities around the world.


Resilience Toolbox

Resilience tools can be useful for a wide range of practitioners but it can be hard to find the right tool for the job. The Resilience Shift has assessed a wide range of tools, which are listed below, mapped by the resilience value they add at different stages of the infrastructure lifecycle. More information about the project can be found here.

Use the filters to break down the results by sector and user type. Click the + button for additional filters.

Having trouble picking the right resilience tool for your work? Get help from the #TRStoolbox - 70 tools reviewed and mapped to help you choose the right one.
https://lnkd.in/djMUM9q

Having trouble picking the right resilience tool for your work? Get help from the #TRStoolbox - 70 tools reviewed and mapped to help you choose the right one.
https://lnkd.in/djMUM9q

Having trouble picking the right resilience tool for your work? Get help from the #TRStoolbox - 70 tools reviewed and mapped to help you choose the right one.
https://lnkd.in/djMUM9q

Having trouble picking the right resilience tool for your work? Get help from the #TRStoolbox - 70 tools reviewed and mapped to help you choose the right one.
https://www.resilienceshift.org/tools/

Resilience tools can be useful for a wide range of #engineering and #resilience practitioners but it can be hard to find the right tool for the job. See our #resilience #tools resource #TRStoolbox https://lnkd.in/djMUM9q

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46 tools found | Visualise these results in the value chain Show full details for each tool as a list

Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse
Adaptation Wizard
AdaptInfrastructure
ARGOS
CAESAR
CAT-I
CIrcleCIrcle
City Resilience Actions Inventory and Stakeholder Perception Review
City Scan
Climate Bonds StandardClimate Bonds Standard
Coastal Resilience
CRAFT
CRICRI
CRIDACRIDA
DRSC
EARTH EX
EDGe$
Elephant Builder
Envision
Equitable Origin
FHWA P3 Toolkit
Green Evaluation
GRESB Resilience Module
GRRASPGRRASP
HAZUR®HAZUR®
HazusHazus
ICLEI ACCCRNICLEI ACCCRN
LCLIP
OASIS Loss Modelling FrameworkOASIS Loss Modelling Framework
OAT
Open Data for Resilience IndexOpen Data for Resilience IndexOpen Data for Resilience Index
OpenSeesOpenSees
PREPPREP
RAPTA
RASTEP
Resilence Atlas
Resilience GarageResilience Garage
RiskSpectrum®
RVR
SAVi
SmartScan
Surging SeasSurging SeasSurging Seas
The IS Rating Scheme
ThinkHazard!ThinkHazard!
UCRAUCRA
UrbanSimUrbanSim
XDIGlobe

Adaptation Wizard

The Wizard is a 5-step process to help you assess your organisation’s vulnerability to the current climate and future climate change, identify options to address your organisation’s key climate risks, and help you develop and implement a climate change adaptation strategy.

The Wizard is also a guide to information, tools and resources to help you.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers)
Phase:, ,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

AdaptInfrastructure

AdaptInfrastructure is the home of adaptation analysis. Here you get to drive the analysis according to different scenario settings you need. Test the effectiveness of adaptation options – from building with different materials, raising floor levels in a flood zone or increasing the design specifications in a wind zone.

Features are:

  • Specify your inputs to refine your analysis
  • Specify the time you want to apply each action, how much it will cost and which assets will be adapted
  • Trial adaptation options to reduce the risk to your assets
  • Compare the performance of adaptation pathways in terms of customers, cashflow, net present value and other KPIs
  • Combine adaptation options to develop an optimal adaptation pathway

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers, planners and engineers)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region: , ,
Value Chain Stage: , , ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

ARGOS

ARGOS is a software system to support emergency organizations to make the best possible decisions in case of incidents involving atmospheric dispersion of hazardous CBRN-materials.

ARGOS is useful throughout the entire disaster life cycle:

  • During the Preparedness phase for planning, dimensioning and training – including evaluation of various ‘What-if’ scenarios.
  • During the Response phase by calculating prognoses about how the situation will evolve; what can be the consequences of the dispersion; what the proper emergency or evacuation zones are; etc.
  • During the Recovery phase; what the effect of applying possible countermeasures will be; etc.
  • and in the Evaluation phase, to study what could have been done better and how the situation could have evolved.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Emergency organizations)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

CAESAR

Cascading Effect Simulation in Urban Areas to Access and Increase Resilience

The Tool CAESAR (Cascading Effect Simulation in urban Areas to assess and increase Resilience) addresses the need to better understand the cascading effects of major disasters in connected and interdependent urban infrastructure systems. CAESAR has the capacity to identify the most vulnerable components within individual infrastructure grids and it allows to assess potential damages within the grid as well as within coupled grids. In addition, the tool is capable to simulate mitigation strategies and their effectiveness beyond single grid boundaries. Required input parameters can be adjusted to the level of the available information enabling analyses on varying levels of detail. The tool can be applied to vital infrastructure grids such as energy, transport and telecommunication.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for?
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

CAT-I

Capacity Assessment Tool for Infrastructure

The Capacity Assessment Tool for Infrastructure (CAT-I) is a tool developed by UNOPS to help countries facilitate better infrastructure development. The tool is designed to help governments identify gaps or challenges in the capacity of their enabling environment to plan, deliver, and manage sustainable, resilient, and inclusive infrastructure systems. Examples of the types of capacities assessed, include:
• Ability to identify the need for new assets or upgrades to existing assets based on current or future needs, including the achievement of development goals and aspirations
• Existence and quality of policies and processes for the management of risk within the built environment
• Existence and quality of codes, standards, and processes to support the proper design and construction of infrastructure
• Cross sector topics like human skill sets, procurement processes, legal mechanisms, quality assurance and quality control mechanisms, and financial resources which support the planning, delivery and management of infrastructure
• Ability to safely manage, operate, upgrade and decommission/repurpose infrastructure systems at end of useful life

Based on the identified gaps or challenges faced by governments, the tool can then be used to develop a pipeline of projects to build national, state, city, or ministerial capacity using technical and advisory support.

To date, the tool has been used in: Nepal; Serbia; Mato Grosso State, Brazil; Turkana County, Kenya; and in three cities in The Gambia.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for?
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,

Developed by

UNOPS

Open Tool

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CIrcle

Ciritical Infrastrctures Relations and Consequences for Life and Environment

CIrcle is a tool to support the analysis of domino effects of critical infrastructure failure. It gives insight into how the effects of shocks and stresses on one type of infrastructure can lead to subequent effects on other types of critical infrastructure.
Users define the dependencies between Critical Infrastructures and CIrcle facilitates the discussion between interdependent stakeholders, building trust and stimulating future partnerships.

CIrcle’s approach:

  • Gather (open) data on critical and vulnerable infrastructure
  • Gather expert knowledge on direct impacts and dependencies
  • Combine data with expert knowledge to conduct cascading effect analyses
  • Complement risk assessments with gained insights on indirect effects
  • Increase cooperation between stakeholders

Users are governmental organizations and agencies, network operators, emergency response organizations as well as large industries who are interested in the dependencies between Critical Infrastructures.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Policy makers, infrastructure owners and operators)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region: ,
Value Chain Stage: , ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

City Resilience Actions Inventory and Stakeholder Perception Review

This review aims to document and analyse existing plans, policies and projects in the city. Establish a baseline of where the city is taking action across the 12 drivers of resilience and identify efforts the City Resilience Strategy can further develop and/or advance.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Infrastructure owners, designers, community groups, environmental organisations, constructors, regulators, policy makers, etc…)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage:
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

City Scan

Rapid urbanization is transforming the planet and the way we live. For the first time in history, more people live in cities than in rural areas, and 90 percent of this urban expansion is taking place in developing countries. Urbanization, if managed well, can help reduce poverty and increase prosperity, as cities can accelerate growth, attract investment, spur innovation and enhance productivity. Poorly managed urbanization, however, can exacerbate existing challenges – including insecure livelihoods, inadequate provision of infrastructure and services, poor urban and systems planning, inadequate oversight of land use and building standards – and leave cities more vulnerable to natural hazards.

In this context, the World Bank Group’s (WBG) City Resilience Program (CRP) is an effort to engage city governments in a long-term partnership to identify areas of need and opportunity and to define a robust response towards building resilience. A broad coalition of experts and working groups accompanies each city-level engagement from program design to implementation to ensure an integrated, risk-informed and spatially driven approach.

The CRP has developed an assessment tool and framework that provides a rapid assessment of the critical development challenges that cities face using publicly available data. The City Scan aims to serve as a conversation starter between the World Bank task team and client city to assess cities’ investment priorities and financing needs in six broad areas, namely: (i) population trends, (ii) city competitiveness and economic growth, (iii) access to infrastructure and public services, (iv) urban transport and mobility, (v) climate mitigation, and (vi) municipal finance and institutions. Each of these areas is informed by various sources of global flood risk information to integrate the needs and challenges of both the built and natural environments.

In addition, other supplementary information (i.e., pedestrian and public transport accessibility, building footprints, and historic and near-real time flood monitoring, among others), in collaboration with different spatial data and remote sensing service providers, are considered in this assessment to tailor fit the City Scan to cities’ specific investment needs. The City Scan is currently being piloted in 14 cities in Sub-Saharan Africa, and is anticipated to be scaled up to other regions in the next phase of engagement.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers and Planners)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?Cities
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage:
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

Climate Bonds Standard

The CBI sets standards for physical climate resilience within components of certain sector guidance. The standards do not have a separate sector or category themselves on physical climate resilience.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers and Planners)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

Coastal Resilience

Coastal Resilience is a global network of practitioners who are applying an approach and web-based mapping tool designed to help communities understand their vulnerability from coastal hazards, reduce their risk and determine the value of nature-based solutions.

Coastal Resilience is a program led by The nature Conservancy. It is an approach which includes a four step process to access and reduce ecological, socio-economic risks of coastal hazards. Through this approach they have developed planning methods, a decision support tool, and web apps that address specific coastal issues.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers - Planners, government officials, and communities)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage:

Developed by

Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium and NOAA's Coastal Storms Program

Open ToolView Case Study

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CRAFT

Climate Risk And Adaptation Framework And Taxonomy

CRAFT provides:

  • a framework for cities to perform robust and consistent reporting of climate hazards and associated adaptation planning and implementation that is required by the Compact of Mayors;
  • a means to monitor and evaluate adaptation planning progress to help cities improve adaptation efforts by enhancing knowledge of best practices;
  • a means for cities to identify priorities and target advocacy for climate adaptation resources;
  • the data to improve the ability for cities and their partners to identify peers and aspirational examples to help inform their own adaptation planning process and implementation.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,

Developed by

Arup

Open Tool

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CRI

City Resilience Index

The City Resilience Index is the first comprehensive tool for cities to understand and assess their resilience, enhancing their ability to build sound strategies and plans for a strong future. Through an online platform, it uses a comprehensive, holistic framework that is applicable at the city scale – one that combined the physical aspects of cities with intangible aspects associated with human behaviour which are often relevant in the context of economic, physical and social disruption. It is developed by Arup with support from The Rockefeller Foundation.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Infrastructure owners, designers, community groups, environmental organisations, constructors, regulators, policy makers, etc…)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?Built Environment
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,

Developed by

ARUP

Open Tool

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CRIDA

Climate Risk Informed Decision Analysis

CRIDA provides stepwise planning guidance for water resources planners, managers, and engineers to implement robust water management as promoted by the AGWA network — particularly for water managers working in the developing world. CRIDA will initially launch as a publication, and support a community of practice to rapidly scale up implementation.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers, planners, engineers)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

DRSC

Disaster Resilience Scorecard for Cities

The Scorecard provides a set of assessments that will allow local governments to monitor and review progress and challenges in the implementation of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction: 2015-2030, and assess their disaster resilience. It is structured around UNISDR’s Ten Essentials for Making Cities Resilient.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Local government)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

EARTH EX

EARTH EX simulates global-scale disruption, with long duration power outages and cascading failures of all other infrastructures. It offers executive and senior level operational decision makers the opportunity to review critical decision-making policies, processes, roles and responsibilities – essential to the success of all other response and recovery operations.

The exercise is designed for self-evaluation, with distributed play conducted using electronic tools, and local facilitation for feedback and execution.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Government, Civil society, Residents, and the private sector)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?Built Enviroment
Type:
Maturity:
Region: ,
Value Chain Stage: ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

EDGe$

Economic Decision Guide Software

NIST had created EDGe$, based on the process found in the Community Resilience Economic Decision Guide for Buildings and Infrastructure Systems (EDG) and designed for use in conjunction with the NIST Community Resilience Planning Guide for Buildings and Infrastructure Systems (CRPG). EDGe$ is intended for community planners, resilience and budget officers, and the public.

The tool provides a transparent and flexible economic methodology based on best-practices for evaluating investment decisions aimed at improving the ability of communities to adapt to, withstand, and quickly recover from natural, technological, and human-caused disruptive events. The tool helps to identify and compare the relevant present and future resilience costs and benefits associated with new capital investment alternatives versus maintaining a community’s status-quo.

The case studies cited in the user manual are derived from the United States and the tool was developed with the United States context in mind.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Public Community Planners and Resilience officers. Local government)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?Community level Resilience Planning, but skewed to buildings and Infrastructure Systems
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

Elephant Builder

The Elephant Builder is Bellwether Collaboratory’s collaborative modeling tool for multi-stakeholder planning processes. Governments and nonprofits use the Elephant Builder to engage experts and community members in an authentically inclusive manner, as stakeholders build and analyze causal models of the community systems of interest.

The modeling process requires little training and can accommodate stakeholders across a broad range of technical sophistication and confidence: models are built node by node, the Elephant Builder asking simple cause-and-effect questions. Once the model is completed, the Elephant Builder guides stakeholders through the identification of causal pathways, system vulnerabilities, feedback loops, and recommended actions. Users can also parameterize the model with quantitative variable-states and probabilistic causal relationships, allowing the Elephant Builder to act as an AI-backed scenario-testing tool.

The Elephant Builder has been used to examine critical lifeline interdependencies in Los Angeles (Susanne Moser Research and Consulting and U.S. Geological Survey), food systems in New York state (SUNY Albany School of Public Health), and community resilience in Larimer County, Colorado (Larimer County Office of Emergency Management).

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers and Planners)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?Cross-sector
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

Envision

Envision is a groundbreaking resource for professionals involved in planning, designing, building, maintaining civil infrastructure. As a rating system for sustainable infrastructure, Envision is supported by a wide array of respected organisations involved in infrastructure design, construction, and operation.

Envision provides guidance on sustainable best practices at no cost to users, and serves not only as a planning and design tool, but also as means of evaluating infrastructure project once complete.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Infrastructure owners, designers, community groups, environmental organisations, constructors, regulators, policy makers)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?Built Environment
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , , , , , , ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

Equitable Origin

Equitable Origin Platform

Tool 1: EO100™ Standard for Responsible Energy Development

The EO100™ Standard for Responsible Energy Development provides a framework for implementing and verifying enhanced environmental, social and governance (ESG) performance, greater transparency, more accountability, and better outcomes for local stakeholders in energy development projects. The EO100™ Standard represents leading industry practices and references international standards for evaluating site-level ESG performance of energy and energy infrastructure projects.

The EO100™ Standard encompasses the following Principles:

  • Corporate Governance, Transparency & Ethics
  • Human Rights, Social Impact & Community Development
  • Indigenous People’s Rights
  • Fair Labor & Working Conditions
  • Climate Change, Biodiversity & Environment

Tool 2: Equitable Origin Platform

The Equitable Origin (EO) Platform is a one-stop resource that provides energy companies, utilities, investors, and corporate power purchasers with essential tools to effectively implement and track due diligence and compliance within their operations, supply chains, and investment portfolios. The EO100™ Performance Assessment provides a quick, easy, and efficient way to measure the performance of energy and energy infrastructure projects and suppliers of energy against a comprehensive and customizable range of environmental, social and governance (ESG) indicators.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Local stakeholders)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?Built Enviroment
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage:
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

FHWA P3 Toolkit

The Center for Innovative Finance Support provides information and expertise in the use of different P3 approaches. The P3 Toolkit includes analytical tools and guidance documents to assist in educating public sector policy-makers, legislative and executive staff, and transportation professionals in implementation of P3 projects. The P3 Toolkit forms the base of a broader P3 capacity-building program which includes a curriculum of courses and webinars. The P3 Toolkit addresses Federal requirements and four key areas of P3 implementation: Legislation and Policy; Planning and Evaluation; Procurement; Monitoring and Oversight.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers, planners, government officials, and communities)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage:
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

Green Evaluation

We base our evaluation of an adaptation project on the increase in resilience the project is likely to provide for the covered geographical area or asset base. This results in the adaptation score.

First, we quantitatively evaluate the benefit of the added resilience, relative to the amount of the financing’s proceeds, on a five-point scale.

The benefit is the forecast reduction in the cost of expected damages caused by extreme weather events. It is based on an entity’s analysis, to which we may apply quantitative adjustments.

Second, we modify the evaluation score determined in the first step, based on our qualitative view of the adequacy of an entity’s quantification approach to determining the resilience benefit.

Third, we may apply additional adjustments in certain cases – for example, for projects that are in developing countries for which the resilience benefit may be understated because the likely significant social benefits are difficult to quantify.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for?
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

GRESB Resilience Module

The GRESB Resilience Module has been developed in response to organisations that are developing a capacity to assess, manage and adapt in the face of social and environmental shocks and stressors. It is motived by two key goals:

  1. To meet growing investor demand for information on resilience; and
  2. To increase access to information about strategies used by property and infrastructure companies to assess and manage risks from social and environmental shocks and stressors, including the impact of climate change

Evaluates how real estate and infrastructure companies and funds are preparing for potentially disruptive events and changing conditions, assessing long-term trends, and becoming more resilient over time.

The Module is an optional supplement to the GRESB Real Estate and Infrastructure Assessments.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Property and infrastructure companies (investors))
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,

Developed by

GRESB

Open ToolView Case Study

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GRRASP

Geospatial Risk and Resilience Assessment Platform

Geospatial Risk and Resilience Assessment Platform (GRRASP) is a World Wide Web oriented architecture bringing together geospatial technologies and computational tools for the analysis and simulation of critical infrastructures. It allows information sharing and constitutes a basis for future developments in the direction of collaborative analysis and federated simulation. It takes on board security concerns in the information sharing process, thanks to its ability to manage users and roles consistently. Based entirely on open source technologies, the system can also be deployed in separate servers and used by EU Member States as a means to facilitate the analysis of risk and resilience in critical infrastructures.

GRRASP can be used for the analysis of complex networked systems taking into consideration cross-sectoral and cross-border interdependencies. It can be used for analyses of CI disruptions at local, regional, national, international level. GRRASP follows a tiered approach according to which Tier 1 modules can be used for the analysis of critical infrastructures at sectoral level, Tier 2 modules for cross-sectoral analyses (interdependencies), and finally Tier 3 modules for high level economic impact of CI disruption at state level.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Infrastructure operators)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?Critical Infrastructure Systems
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
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HAZUR®

HAZUR is a piece of software designed to support the design, implementation and management of cities resilience strategy.

  1. HAZUR Basic is the online software included in the certification courses of the Resilience Academy. It includes the basic functionalities to build your own city project.
  2. HAZUR Assessment helps to summarise all city data, to analyse interdependencies in service networks, to assess impacts aftermaths and cascade effects. It also enables the identification and prioritisation of potential improvement projects, facilitates the definition of crisis management protocols and supports a strategy development process.
  3. HAZUR Manager combines the Assessment information with real-time information and enables the simulation of risk situations at city level. It also equips the cities and experts with tools for service network monitoring, risk management and city stakeholder coordination.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. City strategists, city managers, resilience officers, City Stakeholders (Small-medium cities best))
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , , ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
Diagnose Options Procure Design/Plan Finance Implement Operate Maintain Dispose/Reuse

Hazus

Hazus is a nationally applicable standardized methodology that contains models for estimating potential losses from earthquakes, floods, and hurricanes. Hazus uses Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology to estimate physical, economic, and social impacts of disasters. It graphically illustrates the limits of identified high-risk locations due to earthquake, hurricane, flood, and tsunami. Users can then visualize the spatial relationships between populations and other more Earthquake, Wind, Flood, Tsunami permanently fixed geographic assets or resources for the specific hazard being modelled, a crucial function in the pre-disaster planning process.

Hazus is used for mitigation and recovery, as well as preparedness and response. Government planners, GIS specialists, and emergency managers use Hazus to determine losses and the most beneficial mitigation approaches to take to minimize them. Hazus can be used in the assessment step in the mitigation planning process, which is the foundation for a community’s long-term strategy to reduce disaster losses and break the cycle of disaster damage, reconstruction, and repeated damage. Being ready will aid in recovery after a natural disaster.

Potential loss estimates analysed in Hazus include:

  • Physical damage to residential and commercial buildings, schools, critical facilities, and infrastructure;
  • Economic loss, including lost jobs, business interruptions, repair, and reconstruction costs;
    Social impacts, including estimates of shelter requirements, displaced households, and population exposed to scenario floods, earthquakes, and hurricanes, and tsunamis.
  • As the number of Hazus users continues to increase, so do the types of uses. Increasingly, Hazus is being used by states and communities in support of risk assessments that perform economic loss scenarios for certain natural hazards and rapid needs assessments during hurricane response. Other communities are using Hazus to increase hazard awareness.

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Who is it for? (NB. Government planners, GIS specialists, and emergency managers)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
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ICLEI ACCCRN

ICLEI ACCCRN Process Workbook

The ICLEI ACCCRN Process (IAP) enables local governments to assess their climate risks in the context of urbanisation, poverty and vulnerability and formulate corresponding resilience strategies. The ICLEI ACCCRN Process has been designed in a step-by-step format, divided into 6 phases. Phases 5 and 6 that guide cities in the implementation and monitoring phases will be included in the following edition of the IAP toolkit. The process is also designed to be a continuous cycle of review and refinement, rather than a closed cycle.

The phases are:

  1. Phase 1 of the process will provide all the tools and activities needed to start work with the city. The tools help local governments gain the necessary political and administrative support, establish a climate core team, involve local stakeholders, appropriately share relevant information through a tailored communications plan, and conduct an initial assessment of the city’s progress towards dealing with climate change.
  2. In Phase 2 the main impacts of climate change faced by the city are identified through shared learning dialogues and interactions with the climate core team. The fragile urban systems facing climate threats are also identified and prioritised according to their risk status.
  3. Phase 3 will assist the city government in producing climate vulnerability hotspot maps, in identifying the vulnerable social groups, and in analysing their adaptive capacities as well as those of the impacted urban systems.
  4. In Phase 4, city governments will use the information and analysis from the previous Phases to develop a list of potential resilience building interventions. The tools in this phase help screen and prioritise these interventions, link them to existing city plans, and compile all the information into a City Resilience Strategy.

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Who is it for? (NB. Local government)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
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LCLIP

Local Climate Impacts Profile

LCLIP is a simple tool designed to help organisations to assess their exposure to the weather. It can be used as a standalone tool, or as a step in a risk-based framework such as the Adaptation Wizard.

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Who is it for? (NB. Originally designed for municipalities or local authorities)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
Diagnose & Conceive Design & Deliver Operate & Maintain
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OASIS Loss Modelling Framework

OASIS Loss Modelling Framework (Catastrophe Modelling)

Catastrophe modelling (known as cat modelling) is the process of using computer-assisted calculations to estimate the losses that could be sustained due to catastrophic events such as a hurricane or earthquake.

OASIS is an improved risk assessment through more models, a different view of the risk, transparency, performance, and innovation. The Oasis Loss Modelling Framework provides an open source platform for developing, deploying and executing catastrophe models. It uses a full simulation engine and makes no restrictions on the modelling approach. Models are packaged in a standard format and the components can be from any source, such as model vendors, academic and research groups.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Used in the field of insurance industry, actuarial science, engineering, meteorology and seismology)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , , ,

Developed by

Oasis

Open Tool

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OAT

Opportunity Assessment Tool

In less than 15 minutes, OAT can provide a full set of key decision metrics (using data from thousands of actual E&P projects), including charts, to compare individual opportunities in a portfolio. This enables decision makers to:

  • Quickly assess the viability and marginality of upstream opportunities during bidding, exploration, or early development
  • Understand an opportunity’s true development costs
  • Ensure only the highest return opportunities receive increasingly scant capital funds

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Who is it for?
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage:
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Open Data for Resilience Index

Open Data for Resilience Index (Beta)

The Open Data for Resilience Index is a tool to identify, assess and compare, for any country, the availability and ease of use of datasets that are considered to be key for disaster risk management. Anyone can submit a dataset. The result is a crowdsourced-database providing the state of open data for diaster risk management for any country.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for?
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , , , ,

Developed by

GFDRR

Open Tool

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OpenSees

The Open System for Earthquake Engineering Simulation

A centerpiece of PEER’s program is new research on simulation models and computational methods to assess the performance of structural and geotechnical systems. Breaking the barriers of traditional methods and software development protocols, PEER has embarked on a completely new approach in the earthquake engineering community by developing an open-source, object-oriented software framework. OpenSees is a collection of modules to facilitate the implementation of models and simulation procedures for structural and geotechnical earthquake engineering. By shared development using well-designed software interfaces, the open-source approach has affected collaboration among a substantial community of developers and users within and outside of PEER. Unique among software for earthquake engineering, OpenSees allows integration of models of structures and soils to investigate challenging problems in soil-structure-foundation interaction. In addition to improved models for reinforced concrete structures, shallow and deep foundations, and liquefiable soils, OpenSees is designed to take advantage of the latest developments in databases, reliability methods, scientific visualization, and high-end computing.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for?
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?Hazards
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
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PREP

The Partnership for Resilience and Preparedness data tool

PREPdata is a map-based, open data online platform that allows users to access and visualize spatial data reflecting the past and future climate, as well as the physical and socioeconomic landscape for climate adaptation and resilience planning. The platform is continuing to evolve through the input of PREP partners and PREPdata users. It is a flexible tool for climate adaptation planning, designed to address many of the gaps and challenges adaptation practitioners face.

Distinguishing elements of PREPdata:

  • A visual, map-based platform that is user-friendly and customized to different contexts and skill levels;
  • Active curation of datasets focused on climate resilience, streamlining the process of accessing and navigating to relevant data;
  • A commitment to global coverage, with an emphasis on increasing access to datasets for the Global South, and support for applications across different scales and geographies; and
  • A user-needs based strategy for platform development, utilizing the knowledge and network of the partners and platform users to enable continuous improvement.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
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RAPTA

Resilience, Adaptation Pathways and Transformation Assessment Framework

The Resilience, Adaptation Pathways and Transformation Assessment Framework (RAPTA) is a unique tool to build ideas of resilience, adaption and transformation into a project from the start, to ensure outcomes that are practicable, valuable and sustainable through time and change. It also aligns approaches and monitoring towards common objectives, contributing to integrated strategies, and pursuing synergies in reporting between the Rio Conventions. Use of RAPTA will assist development initiatives to generate sustained positive impacts.
The RAPTA guidelines give practical guidance on the application of RAPTA in project design. The guidelines are targeted at practitioners working with local stakeholders to devise effective development projects that build resilience to shocks, stresses, and major external change.
In addition, RAPTA offers a fresh dimension to the familiar task of project planning and development – one which allows for rapid social, physical and environmental change in an uncertain world – leading to projects which deliver better results, more durably, reliably and consistently.

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Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers and planners)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?Nuclear sector
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage:
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RASTEP

RApid Source TErm Prediction

RApid Source TErm Prediction (RASTEP) is a tool for decision support to emergency response organisations in the event of an accident with potential radioactive releases. It works in the following way: The user answers questions on the ongoing event, and the underlying model uses the given answers together with advanced data modelling to predict the most likely outcome in a database of pre-calculated consequences. We think this tool has potential to be generalized to other situations with uncertain outcome in complex systems, e.g. climate change, volcanic eruptions, epidemics, market development etc.

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Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers and Planners)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?Nulcear sector
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage:
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Resilence Atlas

The Resilience Atlas was developed with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation to identify where projects should take place and allow users to derive insights of their own based on data. The developers believed that policymakers and donors needed to know where problems were occurring to know where to make investments.

The Resilience Atlas is an interactive analytical tool for building:

  1. Understanding of the extent and severity of some of the key stressors and shocks that are affecting rural livelihoods, production systems, and ecosystems in the Sahel, Horn of Africa and South and Southeast Asia;
  2. Insights into the ways that different types of wealth and assets (i.e. natural capital, human capital, social capital, financial capital and manufactured capital) and combinations among these – impact resilience in particular contexts.

The tool is a web-based open source mapping platform.

To date, the tool has been used at the national level, but there are opportunities to use the data at a more localized level. Data is available for all countries. This tool is primarily used in places where capacity for remote sensing and GIS is lower. “

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Who is it for? (NB. Assets owner / managers / operators)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?Buildings
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , , , , , , ,
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Resilience Garage

The Resilience Garage assembles a group of 20-25 experts from across sectors and disciplines with the aim to peer review and to identify opportunities to better understand or solve challenging problems. This is done through either specific resilient projects (projects that have multiple benefits and address multiple issues) or by developing key focus areas for further consideration. It is practical – aiming for concrete recommendations – as well as fundamental – rigorously applying a rich resilience toolset. It applies the learning and tools developed following a two-year collaboration that explored how to make resilience more actionable.

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Who is it for? (NB. Infrastructure owners, designers, community groups, environmental organisations, constructors, regulators, policy makers, etc.)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
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RiskSpectrum®

RiskSpectrum® is the product family name of one of the most advanced risk and reliability analysis software in the world.

It includes tools for fault tree and event tree modelling and analysis, documentation, risk monitoring, human reliability assessment, and failure mode and effect analysis.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers, planners, government officials, and communities)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
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RVR

Resilience Value Realization

The Resilience Value Realization (RVR) methodology was developed by ValueLabs through funding from The Rockefeller Foundation to be used by city governments with project owners identified.

RVR is a customized approach to project planning, pre-development, and development that was designed to identify, catalyze and protect the delivery of resilience value to public and private stakeholders in a project. The RVR approach comprises working with project teams and resilience champions to be very specific about how the opportunity can create resilience and to address, as an integral part of project development, any challenges impacting the delivery of resilience value. The workshop is structured to start with understanding where things are today, then asks participants to develop an opportunity statement around where they want to be in the future, which leads to development of a roadmap for realizing that opportunity.

The tool is flexible and has also been used to identify and empower a project owner.
This tool is delivered as a workshop, but requires pre-work including interviews, data gathering, and data representation (drawings, maps, figures, etc.). This tool can be used in all geographic regions.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Infrastructure owners, designers, community groups, environmental organisations, constructors, regulators, policy makers, etc…)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?Cities
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,

Developed by

Marcela Ruibal

Open ToolView Case Study

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SAVi

Sustainable Asset Valuation

Policy makers, infrastructure planners and investors all ask about the value-added of sustainable infrastructure.

  • Are such assets more expensive to plan and build and finance?
  • Do they bring better value for money?
  • What are the risks associated with greener designs and cleaner technologies?

We are also waking up to reality of climate change and range of other environmental, social and economic risks. Insurance firm Swiss Re, estimates that in 2017, the economic losses from natural disasters was US$ 306 billion. This is almost the double of the losses in 2016, which was US$ 188 billion and also much higher than the 10-year-average of $190 billion.

Such risks and externalities are typically ignored in infrastructure finance analyses. The MAVA Foundation and IISD built SAVi to address such inconsistencies. We built SAVi to make the investment case for sustainable infrastructure.

Using SAVi

SAVi incorporates 3 fundamental features:

Valuation: SAVi values in financial terms, the material risks and co-benefits of infrastructure projects. We work with governments and investors to identify the risks material to their projects and design appropriate simulation scenarios.

Simulation: SAVi is unique in that it combines the results of systems thinking and system dynamics simulation with project finance modelling. We work with governments and investors to identify the material risks of each infrastructure project. We also identify co-benefits that contribute towards realising the UN sustainable development goals. We then determine the simulation scenarios.

Bespoke: The application of SAVi is bespoke. We customise SAVi to each individual infrastructure project. Such an approach is required as each project is characteristic of distinctive opportunities and risks.

SAVi can hence answered questions such as:

  • Do sustainable infrastructure assets bring better financial returns than business-as-usual counterparts?
  • What additional capital is required to make this asset more resilient to changing climates?
  • In a given pipeline or portfolio, which asset make the higher contributions toward the UN Sustainable Development Goals?

The SAVi website is under construction.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers (e.g. financiers, public authorities))
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
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SmartScan

The SuRe SmartScan contributes to action items addressing two challenges (Capital Investment Planning Poor, and/or Non Climate-Smart, Local Development Planning Poor, including Resilience) of the City Creditworthiness Self-Assessment & Action Planning Toolkit of the World Bank.

Increase your infrastructure project’s attractiveness to investors in only a few steps. The GIB SmartScan allows you to assess your projects based on its Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) issues and helps to efficiently flag risks and opportunities for improvements of your project. This process helps you to identify and therefore eliminate risks and to improve the ESG aspects of the assessed project, which is increasingly a mandatory consideration for investors in their investment decisions.

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Who is it for? (NB. Infrastructure owners)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage:
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Surging Seas

Sea Level Rise and Extreme Sea Level Analysis Service

This app exposes information from global climate models combined with datasets on vertical land movement on a local level, and shows this with local population density information (which clearly shows the extend of coastal cities), offering opportunities for data presentation previously unavailable to a wider audience.

The extreme sea levels analysis tool includes the latest historical storm surge data for the globe, high tide events, and sea levels changes caused by lower atmospheric pressure and severe winds during storms in climate scenarios.

Aside from the SLR tool, there are other similar tools as part of the same tool developer that analyse other indicators such as climate change scenarios and baseline data generation, drought monitoring, heat index, etc.

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Who is it for? (NB. Other tool developers, public and private actors)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , , ,
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The IS Rating Scheme

The IS Rating Scheme by Infrastructure Sustainability Council of Australia

The IS Rating Scheme (IS) is Australia and New Zealand’s only comprehensive rating system for evaluating sustainability across planning, design, construction and operation of all phases of infrastructure programs, projects, networks and assets.

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Who is it for? (NB. Project developers and owners)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
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ThinkHazard!

GFDRR, a unit within the World Bank, has developed a web-based tool ThinkHazard! to enable non-specialists (decision makers, planners and government staff) to consider the impacts of disaster on new developments of project.
Users can quickly assess the level of river flood, earthquake, drought, cyclone, coastal flood, tsunami, volcano, and landslide hazard within their project area to assist with project planning and design. Users are only required to enter their project location – national, provincial or district name. The results interface shows a user whether they require high, medium or low awareness of each hazard when planning their project.

The interface provides links to additional resources such as country risk assessments, best practice guidance, and additional websites. ThinkHazard! also highlights how each hazard may change in the future as a result of climate change.
The tool is a web-based open source mapping platform allowing other developers to improve or alter the platform.
This tool is available in English, French, and Spanish. Data is available for all countries, but the information is most relevant for less developed countries as GIS datasets are more advanced in more developed countries.

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Who is it for? (NB. Development professionals, planners, anyone. It should not replace more robust data though)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
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UCRA

The Urban Community Resilience Assessment

The Urban Community Resilience Assessment (UCRA) helps cities incorporate individual and community capacities—social cohesion, familiarity with local climate risks, early warning systems and disaster readiness—into broader urban resilience evaluations. By analysing these local capabilities, the UCRA provides a snapshot of preparedness behaviours, risk perception and the strength of neighbourhood relationships. These findings enable individuals to identify context-specific adaptation actions and allow policymakers to engage community members in urban resilience planning.

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Who is it for? (NB. Local government)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: ,
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UrbanSim

UrbanSim Modelling Methodology

UrbanSim leverages state-of-the-art urban simulation, 3D visualization, and shared open data to empower users to explore, gain insights into, and develop and evaluate alternative plans to improve their communities. UrbanSim is a simulation platform for supporting planning and analysis of urban development, incorporating the interactions between land use, transportation, the economy, and the environment.

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Owners and planners)
Phase:,
Sector:
Sector specific?Built environment
Type:
Maturity:
Region:
Value Chain Stage: , ,
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XDIGlobe

XDI Globe allows you to review your climate impact risks using a spatial interface, from a general area view down to an individual asset. This enables an easy overview, quickly highlighting areas at risk from each or all hazards.

Features are:

  • See high risk areas at a glance
  • Zoom in on individual assets to understand what they are and why they’re vulnerable
  • Compare the same results through Asset View or Area View
  • Identify relative impacts of each hazard
  • View different times slices
  • Interrogate individual assets for risk cost over time

Content provided by developer.


Who is it for? (NB. Decision makers, planners and engineers)
Phase:
Sector:
Sector specific?No
Type:
Maturity:
Region: , ,
Value Chain Stage: ,
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