A climate change advisory team develops or augments your resiliency objectives and accelerates your energy transition, yielding an effective climate action plan. The secret? Integrated, cross-project actions—not just solutions in isolation.
You have an energy transition or climate action plan, but is it integrated?
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Buildings
Environmental Justice
Nature
Resilience
Transport
Real estate assets often dominate the municipal carbon emissions footprint. But when designed and operated with the future in mind, your buildings can pivot to playing a significant role in meeting carbon emissions reduction goals, mitigating climate risks, and improving asset management.
Make your buildings work for you
Energy
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$2 billion
per day in global costs
connect with our climate action team
60%
of all people live within 50 miles of the ocean
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Go local
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Electrify
02
Make your buildings work for you
Finance
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connect with our climate action team
connect with our climate action team
Define new protocols to support the proliferation of DERs on the electric grid. Plan to upgrade communication, information technology, and emergency management systems.
03
Utilize renewables like solar, kinetic hydro energy, bioenergy, and wind—combined with energy storage systems—to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and provide added grid reliability.
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Offset or eliminate power loads for electric vehicle charging stations (including zero-carbon transportation solutions) with localized DERs such as solar photovoltaics.
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WHAT TO DO?
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did you know?
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Distributed energy resources (DERs) are a variety of modular power generation methods and technologies that are connected to a power distribution grid. They could be solar, battery storage, wind, diesel, natural gas, hydro, or others, and they provide alternative energy sources, supplementing, diversifying, or restructuring traditional systems.
Fundamentally change your electrical grid resiliency
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Contact
https://www.stantec.com/en/projects/united-states-projects/n/nasa-chp-microgrid
https://www.stantec.com/en/projects/canada-projects/s/sidewalk-toronto-master-innovation-development-plan
DERs illustration
Robyn Koropatnick
Thiromi Rajapakse
Mehrdad Rostami
No single solution will address all your vulnerabilities and consider all the factors of climate change. Integrating many solutions though—that’s how you meet your goals. Find your climate action advisory team.
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Senior Associate, Water
Ray Rush
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To meet the affordability and service challenges our water and wastewater clients face today, they need reliable, data-driven solutions so they can.
Contact Ray
Combine projects, introduce other partners, conduct early stakeholder outreach, and bundle funding as a cost-sharing method. Consider how distributed energy resources might reduce costs and mitigate the health and environmental impacts of fossil fuels.
Engage a climate translator
01
Combine projects, introduce other partners, conduct early stakeholder outreach, and bundle funding as a cost-sharing method. Consider how distributed energy resources might reduce costs and mitigate the health and environmental impacts of fossil fuels.
Engage a climate translator
01
Combine projects, introduce other partners, conduct early stakeholder outreach, and bundle funding as a cost-sharing method. Consider how distributed energy resources might reduce costs and mitigate the health and environmental impacts of fossil fuels.
Combine projects, introduce other partners, conduct early stakeholder outreach, and bundle funding as a cost-sharing method. Consider how distributed energy resources might reduce costs and mitigate the health and environmental impacts of fossil fuels.
Engage a climate translator
Read More
Read More
Combine projects, introduce other partners, conduct early stakeholder outreach, and bundle funding as a cost-sharing method. Consider how distributed energy resources might reduce costs and mitigate the health and environmental impacts of fossil fuels.
Engage a Climate Translator
Combine projects, introduce other partners, conduct early stakeholder outreach, and bundle funding as a cost-sharing method. Consider how distributed energy resources might reduce costs and mitigate the health and environmental impacts of fossil fuels.
Engage a climate translator
Read More
Eliminate fossil fuel energy sources by designing and retrofitting buildings to be 100% electric and powered by renewable energy sources, preferably on-site and maybe using distributed energy resources.
Electrify
Read More
Reduce your reliance on carbon-intensive systems and materials—prioritize locally available building materials and mass timber structural systems over concrete and steel.
Go local
Read More
Define new protocols to support the proliferation of DERs on the electric grid. Plan to upgrade communication, information technology, and emergency management systems.
Prepare policies
+
Read More
Include alternatives like solar, kinetic hydro energy, bioenergy, and wind—combined with energy storage systems—to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and provide added grid reliability.
Utilize renewables
+
Read More
Offset or eliminate power loads for electric vehicle charging stations (including zero-carbon transportation solutions) with localized DERs such as solar photovoltaics.
Go smaller
+
Read More
As power outages related to extreme weather events become more common, cities, and rural communities need solutions that keep them online. Distributed energy resources (DERs) are a variety of modular power generation methods and technologies that are connected to a power distribution grid. They provide alternative energy sources—supplementing, diversifying, or restructuring traditional systems.
Fundamentally change your electrical grid resiliency
Combine projects, introduce other partners, conduct early stakeholder outreach, and bundle funding as a cost-sharing method. Consider how distributed energy resources might reduce costs and mitigate the health and environmental impacts of fossil fuels.
Get strategic
+
Read More
Convert contaminated, blighted, or abandoned properties in distressed neighborhoods into affordable housing and transport options, new parks, and other community assets.
Transform
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Look beyond conventional decision making and consider the full range of environmental, social, and health factors impacting communities today. Not just communities at the site or project location—but also upstream and downstream.
Be diligent
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What does it mean to design with community in mind in the face of the climate crisis, in the shadow of the global pandemic, in the wake of the 2020 social justice protests? Environmental justice examines the intersection of environmental impacts and social justice.
Do the right thing with environmental justice
Embrace the fourth industrial revolution—use digital tools to investigate, model, and predict the natural world’s modified processes.
Go digital
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Enhance coastal communities with nature-based solutions, especially through adaptation and resilience, to support habitats and carbon sequestration. This also improves community and infrastructure resilience in the face of sea level rise and more frequent storm events.
Foresee changes
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Revitalize degraded habitats to support hydrological, chemical, and biological ecosystem services beyond the original habitat—which may no longer be viable.
Restore
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More than 200 years of releasing thermal energy and aerosol particles has significantly altered the heat content in our atmosphere. We need to reframe our behaviours and integrate more sustainable practices, from habitat revitalization to smart city planning. Nature-based solutions could contribute 20% of the mitigation needed to keep global warming below 2°C.
Embrace nature-based solutions to support resiliency and net zero
Add a bottom line focused on nature-based solutions to every project—from hospitals and water systems to transportation and power infrastructure. Adaptation needs to be holistic, rigorous, and scalable.
Mitigate
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Enact an adaptation plan to increases the resilience of your asset, improving its service life and helping it better serve your community.
Make a plan
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Commission a risk assessment. Your climate action advisory team works collaboratively—aligned with international standards—to review the data and complete risk assessments that outline vulnerabilities in your asset or project.
Define your risks
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Climate change is causing more extreme weather events—heat waves, floods, and storms—that are impacting our buildings, infrastructure, lifestyles, and health. Every £1 invested today in resilience saves your community up to £5 over the life of infrastructure surviving a changing climate.
Invest in adaptation to build your climate resilience
Ensure access for all populations—or only those who can afford to be green will transfer. Cities can avoid movement poverty and transit underutilization by considering environmental justice.
Be equitable
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Plan for transportation electrification and hydrogen, from your fleet to your logistics, support facilities, and resource requirements.
Go non-carbon
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Prioritizing walking, cycling, and passenger transport is still the principal aim to reduce planetary impacts of movement, though keep an eye on carbon net-zero buildings as well.
Shift modes
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Behind energy production, transport has become the largest source of emissions in many countries. Global movement burns 16 billion litres of petroleum daily. But reducing carbon in transport isn’t as simple as introducing electric or hydrogen vehicles. You need an efficient system of movement, delivering economic growth, social equity, and environmental benefit. Stop thinking transport. Start thinking mobility.
Get onboard with mobility
Reduce your reliance on carbon-intensive systems and materials—prioritize locally available building materials and mass timber structural systems over concrete and steel.
Go local
+
Read More
Eliminate fossil fuel energy sources by designing and retrofitting buildings to be 100% electric and powered by renewable energy sources, preferably on-site and maybe using distributed energy resources.
Electrify
+
Read More
Compare competing projects side-by-side to help inform decisions and prioritize projects based on financial viability.
Compare
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with this tool, you can
Stantec developed its own robust and proprietary financial modelling tool, the Financial Analysis & Management System (FAMS). Our team uses FAMS to model current financial conditions, incorporating operating costs, revenues, reserve assumptions, and capital improvement planning costs, including provisions for various project funding sources. FAMS optimizes capital spending based on defined funding rules—on a project-by-project basis.
How do you pay for your climate action plan?
Bring in a design professional that translates climate risk assessments into tangible actions. Their services minimize your risks and improve adaptation and resilience.
Engage a climate translator
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Analyze the local financial implications of infrastructure improvements related to climate change, including Smart City infrastructure improvements designed to decrease greenhouse gas emissions.
Analyze
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Quickly assess various “what-if” scenarios in real time, modeling the estimated costs and financial impacts of system-wide outages, levee breaks, or other infrastructure failures.
Assess
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Improve transparency and communication between technical teams and stakeholders through data visualization and easy-to-understand graphics.
Improve
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Reduce your reliance on carbon-intensive systems and materials—prioritize locally available building materials and mass timber structural systems over concrete and steel.
Go local
+
Read More
Eliminate fossil fuel energy sources by designing and retrofitting buildings to be highly energy efficient, 100% electric, and powered by on-site or off-site distributed energy resources.
Electrify
+
Read More
Work with a design professional who’s skilled in translating the results of climate risk assessments into tangible design actions that improve climate adaptation and resilience.
Engage a climate translator
+
Read More
how to act
Real estate assets often dominate the municipal carbon footprint, representing nearly 40% of energy-related CO2 emissions. But when designed and operated with the future in mind, your buildings can pivot to playing a significant role in meeting carbon emissions reduction goals, mitigating climate risks, and improving asset management.
connect with US
connect with US
connect with US
connect with US
connect with US
connect with US
how to act
how to act
how to act
how to act
how to act
how to act
Think local: meet microgrids
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AV-matchmaking: Finding the right technology to fit your autonomous vehicle project
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How smart cities can become resilient to extreme heat
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How creative designs can further a vision of sustainability and resilience
connect with US
connect with US
how to act
how to act
connect with US
how to act
connect with US
how to act
connect with US
how to act
connect with US
connect with US
connect with US
connect with US
connect with US
connect with US
connect with US