Helping Working Waterfronts Thrive in a Warming World
Ensuring working waterfront communities thrive in a warmer world .
We are working with Kittery, Portland, Tremont, and Lubec to establish a statewide model approach for working waterfront climate planning, that can be used by state officials, legislators, municipal governments, regional planning organizations, and blue economy businesses.
Project Goals:
- Develop a framework for assessing climate-related risks to working waterfront communities through a social, economic, and environmental lens.
- Build out processes to engage communities, including youth, in articulating values of and visions for the working waterfront.
- Build a decision support tool that supports working waterfront managers in implementing flood resilient adaptation strategies for key utilities and operations as a part of routine maintenance and storm recovery.
- Explore potential adaptation and mitigation actions to support climate-smart working waterfront communities.
Working waterfronts throughout Maine face a range of climate-related risks from sea level rise, warming waters, ocean acidification, and heavier rainfall events. In addition, working waterfronts are complex economic ecosystems, involving an array of infrastructure, operations, and businesses. Responding to these climate impacts and addressing these sources of climate warming not only builds socioeconomic resilience but unveils the possibility for new economic opportunities.
This project leverages our climate capacity at GMRI, municipal relationships, and knowledge of waterfront economies to ensure Maine’s coastal communities aren’t just prepared for climate change but are empowered to thrive in a warmer world and capitalize on the economic opportunity that responding to climate change can realize.
Project Team:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Katherine Maltby, Ph.D.
Former Assistant Research Scientist
-
-
Project Sponsor
This project is generously supported through NOAA via an earmark by Senator Angus King.
-
Starting a Climate Committee: A Personal Guide
In 2024, while living in Woolwich, Dave Berndtson launched the town’s first climate resilience committee. He’s now a resident of Arrowsic (and a member of …
Perspectives
-
What does climate readiness look like for Maine’s towns?
Climate readiness looks different in every community, with each facing its own unique risks, priorities, and visions for the future. Through sustained relationships, place-based data, …
Perspectives
-
2025 Gulf of Maine Temperature Report
Over the past decade, our scientists have led a body of research that highlights temperatures in the Gulf of Maine. To keep you informed, we …
Reports
-
Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) 101
This 101 explainer breaks down what the AMOC is, how it influences climate, what scientists are observing now, and what a changing AMOC could mean …
Explainers