From dangerous heat waves to flooding rains, the impacts of climate change are being felt from coast to coast, and unfortunately, on a more frequent basis. FEMA recognized this trend years ago and put in place a requirement that state disaster plans would only be approved if they addressed the projected effects of climate change on hazard risks. The decision proved to be a good one as numerous states have qualified for (and ultimately received) millions of dollars in pre-disaster mitigation assistance.

According to a September 2019 report from Columbia Law School and the Sabin Center for Climate Change, all 50 states have issued new State Hazard Mitigation Plans (SHMPs) since 2013. Further, nearly all of these SHMPs explicitly recognize and discuss climate change to some degree. “Some states,” as written in the report, “address climate change within each relevant hazard profile, other states designate climate change as its own hazard profile, and some states put climate change into its own separate section rather than within the description of hazards.”

Additionally, and as indicated in the report, “Some states, such as Alabama and Colorado, discuss the future probability of each hazard in relation to clima