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Climate Risk Assessment Resources

Assessing Your Project's Climate Risk

EPA developed a worksheet,  Assessing Your Project’s Climate Risk (pdf) (634.29 KB) , that can help applicants and recipients perform a high-level risk assessment for a specific project.

Technical assistance providers — including prospective applicants and recipients — can use the resources on this page to consider current and future climate risks to a project. These resources can help with crafting funding applications, performing project planning and design and implementing projects.

EPA developed a curated table of federal tools that can help applicants and recipients evaluate climate risks and hazards, develop climate-smart projects and consider the impacts of climate change throughout project implementation. 

On this page:

  • Climate Risk Assessment Resources Table
  • Tool Categories
  • Climate Justice Highlight
  • Disclaimer

Climate Risk Assessment Resources Table

  1. Identify and select the tool categories you are interested in. See the list below or click on any of the tool category names in the key to see definitions.
  2. If you are searching for Climate Hazard Screening tools only, you can filter for the hazards relevant to your project. If you are interested in all climate hazards, do not select any hazards from the filter list.  
  3. For all tool categories, you can choose to filter for tools that include climate projections (as opposed to only historical data).
  4. To see all the tools in this table, click the show all button. 

Tool Categories

Technical assistance providers can use this table to help applicants and recipients explore and identify the tools can support their project goals. Learn more about how the tools in this table are organized into specific categories below.

  • Understanding Impacts – These tools provide general awareness of climate trends, stressors and impacts from hazards, as well as risk and/or vulnerability assessments. For example, they may provide text summarizing climate impacts on different sectors, or text and images summarizing climate trends in a region (e.g., National Climate Assessments, ARC-X).
  • Climate Hazard Screening – These tools allow users to screen for climate change hazards using indices or indicators by visualizing current data and future projections for the following climate stressors at a minimum: wildfire, flooding, extreme heat, sea level rise, extreme precipitation. They can generally help users answer questions about regional or location specific trends and often provide output in the form of mapped data (e.g., National Climate Assessment Atlas, Climate Mapping for Resilience and Adaptation).
  • Climate Risk Assessment – These tools walk users through a step-by-step process for performing a general or full climate vulnerability or climate risk assessment (e.g., Climate Resilience Evaluation and Awareness Tool, Assessing Your Project’s Climate Risk (pdf) (634.29 KB) .
  • Identifying Solutions – These tools help users identify what type of project to select, how to design their project for a specific goal and what types of benefits may occur from implementing that project. They often provide output in the form of informational text or case studies (e.g., ARC-X, Climate Resilience Toolkit Case Studies).
  • Environmental Justice Mapping – These tools provide mapped environmental and demographic indicators. They help answer questions about regions facing environmental and/or climate justice issues (e.g., EJScreen, CEJST).
  • Tribal Mapping – These tools include the capability to view Tribal lands. For example, Climate Mapping for Resilience and Adaptation is a Climate Hazard Screening tool that enables users to view mapped climate data by census tract, county, or Tribal land area.

Climate Justice Highlight

What is the difference between EJScreen and the Climate Economic Justice Screening Tool?

EJScreen is EPA's environmental justice mapping and screening tool that provides users with a nationally consistent dataset and approach for combining environmental and socioeconomic indicators. Users can select a geographic area for which they are seeking relevant information. EJScreen provides a way to simply display this information and includes a method for combining environmental and demographic indicators into environmental justice indexes. Applicants and recipients can use EJScreen for a variety of purposes, including those related to project siting, design and development.

The Climate Economic Justice Screening Tool was specifically developed to provide a uniform whole-of-government definition of disadvantaged communities for federal agencies to target Justice40 investment benefits. As a result, the CEJST methodology was developed with federal resource allocation purposes in mind. CEJST identifies communities that are economically disadvantaged and overburdened by pollution. A community qualifies as “disadvantaged” if the census tract is above the threshold for one or more environmental or climate indicators, and the tract is above the threshold for the socioeconomic indicators. Applicants can use CEJST to develop funding proposals, especially when identifying projects or project locations that will benefit disadvantaged communities as defined by Justice40.


DISCLAIMER: This table of tools is not intended to be comprehensive. Applicants and recipients are not required to use these tools to develop their applications, workplans, progress reports or any other element of their application or recipient reporting requirements unless they are directed to do so by a specific funding program. These tools are provided by EPA as suggested resources for the public and are not binding documents nor intended to prescribe when and how the Agency should undertake specific actions. This list is not intended to provide methodologies for how to assess the implications of climate change. The use of these tools or information gleaned from the use of these tools as part of an applicant's proposal does not bind EPA to select recipients for funding.

Climate Resilience and Adaptation Funding Toolbox

  • Learn About CRAFT
    • How to Use CRAFT
    • Definitions
    • Learn about Climate Adaptation at EPA
    • Additional Climate Topics
  • Funding Program Overviews
  • Climate Risk Assessment Resources
  • Communications Materials for Technical Assistance Providers
  • Meaningful Engagement Climate Adaptation and Resilience
Contact Us About Climate Resilience and Adaptation Funding Toolbox
Contact Us About Climate Resilience and Adaptation Funding Toolbox to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on September 30, 2024
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