August 2025
State-Led Coastal Resilience: Lessons from California
The dismantling of climate science programs at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the cancellation of disaster preparedness grants at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), including the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program, represent an alarming withdrawal of federal support for coastal resilience. As a result, states have been forced into leadership roles traditionally held by the federal government.
California, with significant institutional, financial, and technical resources, alongside a longstanding public commitment to environmental protection, has become a powerful testing ground for climate adaptation at scale. While not without its challenges, the state's ability to experiment, iterate, and invest in coastal resilience solutions has yielded hard-won lessons that can inform other states' approaches, particularly those facing similar climate vulnerabilities that must be more strategic with limited resources.
Gathering insights from interviews with local, regional, and state leaders, this memo identifies three key strategies in California's coastal resilience approach that offer valuable lessons for other states:
Institutionalize and fund coastal resilience
a) Build a governance backbone with regulatory and non-regulatory agencies
b) Secure sustainable funding through dedicated revenue streams
c) Reduce resource gaps through technical assistance and targeted support for under-resourced communities
Align state priorities with regional, local, and civic partners
a) Create a shared vision that links local policy to state priorities like environmental justice
b) Leverage regional networks for coordination, knowledge-sharing, and grant support
c) Balance state leadership with local flexibility to respond to emerging issues
Equip local governments with climate data and tools
a) Standardize state climate data on open-access platforms
b) Translate climate science into action through expert engagement and practical guidance
c) Boost practitioner uptake with outreach, training, and user-centered design
Although no state can provide a one-size-fits all model for coastal resilience, California's experience underscores that bold public policy and sustained investment can meaningfully advance resilience efforts and inspire a broader shift in how states across the country approach adaptation.
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