Home » Keeping wise on climate

Keeping wise on climate

Ku-ring-gai Council in Sydney has won a major award for its program encouraging community resilience in the face of extreme weather conditions.

The Council won the NSW Resilient Australia Government award for its Climate Wise Communities program this year.

Since its inception in 2011 the Climate Wise Communities project has evolved into a comprehensive package for councils and other agencies to help communities deal with extreme weather and the havoc it can play.

Traditionally the most common communication method in preparing for extreme weather events is for frontline agencies to rely on one-way information to the public. However evidence shows that this does not translate into behavioural change.

Along with a range of two-way communication methods, the Climate Wise Communities program introduces the notion of ‘shared responsibility’. The program allows councils and agencies to identify where they have responsibility and where residents need to take action themselves. It also bridges the gap between emergency managers who see community education as a lesser priority and councils who view community education as the responsibility of the emergency services.

The project incorporates guidelines, tools and tips on how to better prepare communities for extreme weather patterns and conditions linked to climate change. The toolkit is flexible enough to be oriented to any disaster type or context and is sensitive to the physical, social, financial and risk characteristics of each disaster.

The main outcome of the Climate Wise Communities program is that emergency management agencies, NGOs, councils and others have a coordinated approach to planning that integrates residents and keeps them active in the planning, preparation, response and recovery phases.

‘At risk’ community members are identified either by sector (e.g. aged care, seniors living independently, child care centres) or by location (e.g. bushfire hazard zones, known storm corridors, property characteristics). The process begins with improving people’s understanding of their vulnerability to extreme weather in terms of their location, property and lifestyle choices. This allows people to develop a good sense of why taking action is better than inaction.

Specially developed events and activities help people plan scenarios in extreme weather. The format follows the ‘serious play’ concept to capture people’s imagination and provoke thought. Climate Wise Communities provides a non-contentious atmosphere to discuss climate change impacts and empowers people with practical and refreshing solutions to the risks.

Another fundamental of the project is that it is low cost and applicable to a range of agencies tasked with resilience building. Because Climate Wise Communities is online, the materials, tools and format can be picked up anywhere in Australia or overseas. The resource manual and activity guidelines are self-explanatory, but Council staff members also offer phone and personal support to other councils embarking on a similar journey.

The project was positively reviewed by seven councils, NGOs and emergency services that trialled the toolkit. Macquarie University’s Dr Kirsten Davis said, “This program has a wide application across multiple disaster types and could be used to strengthen community resilience in almost any context.”

Ku-ring-gai Council is now exploring more ways of networking between councils, Local Emergency Management Committees and community groups as a portal for sharing information and aiding recovery from extreme weather events.

To find out more visit the Climate Wise Communities website at ww.haveyoursaykuringgai.com.au/climate-wise-communities-toolbox

Digital Editions


  • Parramatta’s sustainable benchmark

    Parramatta’s sustainable benchmark

    City of Parramatta has been recognised as a Gold Partner of Sustainability Advantage, the first council in Sydney to reach this status, setting the benchmark…

More News

  • Sports planning convention

    Sports planning convention

    Local governments play a critical role in shaping the future of community sport, recreation and active living. From planning and investing in facilities, to maintaining sports grounds and delivering programs…

  • Redlands on the runway to the Olympics

    Redlands on the runway to the Olympics

    Redlands Coast businesses and industry leaders have come together at a special event in Alexandra Hills to share ideas, network and forward plan for the Brisbane 2032 Olympic and Paralympic…

  • Urgent action needed on childcare

    Urgent action needed on childcare

    NSW councils are demanding urgent action to expand and properly fund council-run childcare services in response to a parliamentary inquiry into the early childhood education and care sector, finding that…

  • Paving the way sustainably

    Paving the way sustainably

    City of Moreton Bay is paving the way for more sustainable roads, partnering with infrastructure company Fulton Hogan in 2024/25 to facilitate a Queensland first research and development project aimed…

  • Taking a hard-line on soft plastics

    Taking a hard-line on soft plastics

    Giving soft plastics a second, third, fourth life – and counting. “Nice work Surf Coast, your soft plastic recycling efforts are paying off, with the first shipment from Anglesea now…

  • Greater Geraldton bridge lauded

    Greater Geraldton bridge lauded

    City of Greater Geraldton bridge replacement project wins prestigious engineering award Inovative engineering has earned the recently completed Nangetty-Walkaway Road Bridge Replacement Project top honours at the 2026 Institute of…

  • New paint technology at Alexandrina

    New paint technology at Alexandrina

    A paint trial is taking the heat out of Alexandrina’s council infrastructure. Alexandrina Council’s Alexandrina Wastewater division is trialing new paint technology to cool down the temperatures inside cabinetry housing…

  • Rotary honours library employee

    Rotary honours library employee

    Whyalla Public Library’s Chris Barsby has been recognised for her outstanding contribution to youth learning, receiving a Special Community Award from the Rotary Club of Whyalla. The award celebrates her…

  • Surfcoast Ecotourism champs

    Surfcoast Ecotourism champs

    Ecotourism Australia is proud to announce that the Surf Coast Shire has officially earned ECO Destination Certification, formally recognising the region’s adherence to global best practice sustainable tourism and environmental…

  • Special transformative project for Bayside

    Special transformative project for Bayside

    In the northwest pocket of Bayside City Council’s municipal boundary, something very special is happening. Yalukit Willam Nature Reserve is a transformative project. The former golf course-to-nature reserve conversion is…