Building resilience to extreme weather and climate events in the rural water and wastewater sectors

Author:

Kettle Nathan P.1ORCID,Trainor Sarah F.1,Edwards Renee2,Antrobus Donald3,Baranowski Curt4,Buxbaum Tina1,Berry Kevin5,Brubaker Michael3,De Long Kristine L.2,Fries Steve4,Holen Davin6,Keim Barry2,Meeker Danielle1,Penn Harry7,Rosa Cheryl8,Thoman Rick1,Walsh John1,Zhang Jian9

Affiliation:

1. International Arctic Research Center University of Alaska Fairbanks Fairbanks Alaska USA

2. Louisiana State University Baton Rouge Louisiana USA

3. Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium Anchorage Alaska USA

4. United States Environmental Protection Agency Washington District of Columbia USA

5. University of Alaska Anchorage Anchorage Alaska USA

6. Alaska Sea Grant University of Alaska Fairbanks Fairbanks Alaska USA

7. Arctic Institute of North America University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

8. United States Arctic Research Commission Anchorage Alaska USA

9. Water Research Foundation Denver Colorado USA

Abstract

AbstractExtreme weather and climate events pose significant risks to rural water and wastewater systems. We examine the vulnerability of the water sector to weather and climate extremes in rural, predominantly Indigenous and underserved coastal areas and analyze how networks support resilience. Drawing on the analysis of 39 web‐based questionnaire responses and 19 interviews with rural water and wastewater managers and service providers in southern Louisiana and western Alaska, this article reports a range of interrelated historical, environmental, and social factors that influence vulnerability to extreme weather events. Formal and informal social networks serve multiple roles in building resilience. These roles include building technical and financial capacities, supporting emergency response and operational‐ to long‐term planning, fostering data collection and monitoring, supporting information sharing and innovative research, and providing institutional support. Results from this research enrich our understanding of the social, relational, and networking processes that condition community resilience to extreme weather events.

Funder

Climate Program Office

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology,Ecology

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