Climate Change Commission

Komikina Loli Aniau

 
 

About

In accordance with the City Charter, the Climate Change Commission is charged with gathering the latest science and information on climate change impacts to Hawai‘i, with a focus on O‘ahu. They also provide advice and recommendations to the mayor, City Council, and executive departments as they look to draft policy and engage in planning for future climate scenarios.

Commission members are appointed by the mayor and confirmed by the City Council. The Resilience Office administratively supports the Commission.

Commission Meetings

If you require assistance to participate in a meeting (i.e., sign language interpreter, interpreter for a language other than English, or wheelchair accessibility), please contact us at least three (3) business days prior to a meeting.

All written testimony must be received at least 48 hours prior to the meeting. Please send testimony directly to our office by email, fax, or post. If it is within 48 hours, written and/or oral testimony may be submitted directly to the Commission at the meeting.

 

Next Meeting:

To be determined


Last Meeting:

October 25, 2024


 

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Guidance


Trees in between buildings and around South King St.
 

Adopted Jan. 26, 2024

Urban Heat Guidance

This guidance provides a set of findings and recommendations to the City on managing heat stress and heat shocks. It describes the physical nature of atmospheric and marine heat in Hawai‘i and provides accounts of how other cities have managed urban heat, the successes and lessons learned, and possible directions that will provide the maximum benefit for City services and communities. Past and present efforts to manage urban heat in the City and County of Honolulu are also reviewed.


 

Adopted June 5, 2018

Updated March 31, 2023

Climate Change Brief

This brief describes the local, regional, and global impacts of climate change as documented by peer-reviewed scientific literature and credible empirical data sources. It provides a benchmark for the commission, attesting to the Climate Change Commission’s concerns, underpinning the Commission’s decisions and recommendations, and serving to inform those the Commission serves.


king tide flooding road
 

Adopted June 5, 2018

Updated July 29, 2022

Sea Level Rise Guidance

This report builds on findings in the Hawaiʻi Sea Level Rise Vulnerability and Adaptation Report (2017), Sweet et al. (2017), USGCRP (2017), Sweet et al. (2018), and other scientific literature to provide specific policy and planning guidance on responding to sea level rise by the City.


High rise buildings in Honolulu with houses in background
 

Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions From Buildings

Adopted July 29, 2022

This guidance document provides potential actions for the City’s consideration in order to mitigate climate change through reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from buildings’ operational energy use and to adapt to climate change through the implementation of sustainable and resilient development policies and design strategies. It supports implementation of the Honolulu Climate Action Plan and Hawaiʻi Clean Energy Initiative and informed the City’s climate adaptation strategy, Climate Ready Oʻahu.


View of power plant near a road
 

Social Cost of Carbon

Adopted May 17, 2021

This document provides an overview of carbon pricing mechanisms and the “social cost of carbon” (SCC) and how this might apply to the City and County of Honolulu. SCC is a monetary estimate of economic damage that would result from emitting one ton of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. The purpose of this document is to provide guidance to the City on operationalizing a carbon price to guide City decision-making.


Women dressed in traditional Hawaiian hula adornment
 

Climate Change and Social Equity

Adopted Dec. 8, 2020

Updated July 29, 2022

The purpose of this guidance document is to define social equity in the context of climate change, explain the importance of social equity in the context of climate change mitigation and adaptation policies, begin to identify conditions that create resiliency and vulnerability on O‘ahu, and provide key findings and recommendations for local leadership to inform equitable decisions with regard to climate mitigation and adaptation initiatives.

Additionally, the Climate Change Commission adopted an Equity Pledge on December 16, 2022, to commit to and incorporate equity throughout the entirety of their Commission work.


Sunset at Waikiki Beach
 

Climate Change and Financial Risk Guidance

Adopted July 14, 2020

The purpose of this guidance document is to provide considerations of the emerging financial risks affiliated with climate change, particularly climate shocks and stressors relevant to the City and County of Honolulu. This prompts the need to critically examine the nature of hazards, current insurance information and mechanisms used by the City, as well as general practices of public finance. This guidance document highlights potential alternative risk transfer options to address climate change shocks as well as discusses City public finance in the context of climate change stressors.


Canva - Brother and Sister Siblings Lifestyle Portrait.jpg
 

Adopted June 29, 2020

One Water for Climate Resiliency White Paper

Water, in all forms, is critical to Hawai‘i’s built and natural environment and managing it sustainably will be essential as the pressures of development, aging infrastructure, climate change, and sea level rise increase over time. This White Paper asserts that a supporting ordinance is needed to provide a ‘One Water Collaboration Framework’ among City agencies to coordinate planning and infrastructure investment for climate resiliency. This new ordinance will help develop actions and processes for implementing the goals and strategies advised in Directive 18-2.


Erosion North Shore Oahu.jpg
 

Shoreline Setback
Guidance: ROH Ch. 23

Adopted Dec. 23, 2019

The Hawai‘i Revised Statutes (HRS), Chapter 205A, authorizes the City to establish a coastal setback and to revise it as appropriate. In order to provide guidance on new shoreline regulations and rules, this document provides recommendations for amending the Revised Ordinances of Honolulu 1990 (ROH), Chapter 23, “Shoreline Setbacks.”


Members

 
Melanie has dark brown hair.

Melanie B.Y. Islam, AIA, NCARB, LEED AP BD+C, LFA, Chair

An innovator in the architectural and sustainability fields and a pillar of the community.

Kiana's headshot.

Kiana Otsuka, MSc, Vice Chair

Advocate for equitable greenhouse gas mitigation through sustainable land-use and transportation.

Brad's headshot. Brad has brown hair and beard with blue shirt.

Brad Romine, Ph.D.

Coastal geologist and climate adaptation scientist putting science to work with our communities.

Kirsten headshot. Woman with short brown hair and large necklace.

Kirsten Oleson, Ph.D.

Ecological economist focused on ensuring the value of nature is considered in decision-making.

Woman with dark brown hair, yellow necklaces and white earrings.

Kealoha Fox, Ph.D.

Kanaka ‘Ōiwi practitioner-scientist who applies Indigenous innovation for collaborative solutions in community, with businesses, & across government.

 
 

Contact the Commission

 

City and County of Honolulu
Climate Change Commission

Fasi Municipal Building
650 South King St., 11th Floor
Honolulu, HI  96813

(808) 768-2277 ccc@honolulu.gov