Climate Vulnerability Index Identifies Priority Areas Requiring Action and Resources to Mitigate Climate Change Threats

Dr. Weihsueh Chiu, a professor at the Texas A&M School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, partnered with Environmental Defense Fund to create a new tool that provides communities and policymakers with actionable data about long-term vulnerabilities tied to climate change.

Dr. Weihsueh Chiu
 
Weihsueh Chiu

Texas A&M University School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences

The Climate Vulnerability Index (CVI) is the most comprehensive screening tool of its type, showing how, why, and where climate risks threaten the stability of communities throughout the U.S.

“The launch of the CVI represents a significant leap forward in our understanding of the cumulative impacts of climate change,” Chiu said. “By offering a comprehensive framework to evaluate the multi-dimensional susceptibilities of communities to climate-related risks, this new tool provides a template for addressing local-scale climate and environmental justice around the globe.”

The CVI was based on the peer-reviewed journal article “Characterizing vulnerabilities to climate change across the United States” and was developed into an interactive map of the U.S. and dashboard by Darkhorse Analytics.

“The wildfire smoke from Canada and the heat wave over the entire Southern U.S this summer emphasized the importance of better understanding the effects of climate change on people’s lives and of figuring out what we can do to help people communities adapt to the changing conditions,” Chiu said.

How Does The CVI Work?

The CVI combines 184 sets of publicly available data to rank more than 70,000 U.S. census tracts. The data used can be grouped into seven broad domains — including health, infrastructure, and extreme events — which can then be broken down into sub-domains addressing specific issues like chronic disease and mental health.

“We first combined the data indicator sets at the smallest most detailed level, then we combined those into the seven domains, and, finally, we combined those into the overall vulnerability index,” Chiu said. “This tool is designed to very quickly enable people to move from viewing the overall CVI score all the way down to a location’s score based on a single data indicator. This will help people identify potential connections, such as the interaction between infrastructure and flood risk.”

The CVI also allows users to search by location to view their overall climate vulnerability and the conditions that shape it — from quality of housing and access to supermarkets to proximity to toxic waste sites and number of deaths from air pollution.

In Houston, for example, census tracts in the Settegast community northeast of downtown rank in the 99th percentile for overall vulnerability. The CVI shows what’s driving the vulnerability, including low chronic disease prevention, high exposure to harmful pollutants like soot, and inadequate access to fresh, nutritious food.

According to the CVI, these are the most vulnerable U.S. counties:

  1. John the Baptist, Louisiana
  2. Iberville, Louisiana
  3. Knox, Kentucky
  4. Landry, Louisiana
  5. Dillon, South Carolina
  6. Tangipahoa, Louisiana
  7. Acadia, Louisiana
  8. Floyd, Kentucky
  9. Jefferson, Texas
  10. Whitley, Kentucky

The CVI will continue to be updated in the future to reflect the most recent census results and incorporate new data as it becomes available.