The purpose of this site is to increase public access to climate risk data while showcasing some of the datasets the Risk group uses to communicate climate risk to the communities and external partners it works with.
- Drought index [NEX-GDDP-CMIP6]
- Annual precipitation [NEX-GDDP-CMIP6]
- Wildfire danger days [NEX-GDDP-CMIP6]
- Annual mean temperature [NEX-GDDP-CMIP6]
- Hot days (days over 90°F) [NEX-GDDP-CMIP6]
- Lethal heat [Woodwell]
- Warm nights (nights over 20°C) [NEX-GDDP-CMIP6]
- Sea level rise depth value [NASA, Hammond et al. (2021)]
- Tropical cyclone return period [STORM]
Our boundary files came from Natural Earth. So far, we have used:
All SHP
files were converted to GeoJSON
format in GeoPandas
. From there, we used Tippecanoe
to convert the GeoJSON
files to Mapbox .mbtiles
format and used the Mapbox tool mbutil
to convert those tiles to .pbf
format.
For back-end data analysis/transformation of NetCDF
and TIF
files, we used Python and R. Those rasters were then converted to Zarr
pyramids using CarbonPlan's ndpyramid
package.
This site's interface and functionality rely heavily on code developed by CarbonPlan. Specifically, we used the maps
, components
, and layouts
libraries. We took inspiration from CarbonPlan's forest-risks-web
code repository to create an updated and modified user interface for this data viewer. Additionally, we modified the <ExpandingSection />
component from the prototype-maps
repository. You can read more about CarbonPlan's research and software development work here.