Social Implementation Program on Climate Change Adaptation Technology

SI-CAT
ACTIVITY INFORMATION
What we are doing

SI-CAT is a large scale national research program in Japan that develops tools and methodologies to support local governments to develop/implement their climate change adaptation action plan. It aims to protect the security of Japan's residents and their property from threats of climate change. SI-CAT develops reliable technologies for near-term climate change projections to review and formulate climate change countermeasures by local governments and assess the effectiveness of those countermeasures. It supports the adoption of regionally-specific municipal adaptation measures. SI-CAT conducts its technological development in collaboration with researchers of geoscience, social science and humanities, and officials of local governments. It contributes to the development of adaptation plans by local governments and the creation of new enterprises, in consideration of the steady adaptation of various needs to climate change.

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How we are tracking

As ICLEI JO, submitting the report to the programme is the mandate

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What we are achieving

To assist SI-CAT in its efforts, ICLEI is compiling the best practices in urban resilience and adaptation programs/projects taking place outside of Japan. In 2017-18, ICLEI conducted a set of interviews with local governments worldwide, analyzing those practices and submitted reports which will be used to help researchers and local government officials to further develop understanding of urban resilience and thus contributing to the development of adaptation plans at local level. In 2019, ICLEI will research and compile examples of how local governments are utilizing and systematically managing scientific data in its resilience planning and in its adaptation programs/projects.

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Related ICLEI Pathways
  • Resilient development
Related SDGs
Partners

Culture, Hosei University, Japan, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Japanese National Institute of Environmental Studies, Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, Sports