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Geos Institute helps communities build resilience in the face of climate change

Southeast Florida’s Regional Climate Action: Scaling Solutions Across Communities

January 25, 2026

Beyond individual cities, Alicia Betancourt’s work in Southeast Florida is laying the foundation for sweeping regional climate action. As a Navigator, a trained climate expert for Climate Ready America, hosted by the University of Florida IFAS Extension, Alicia operates within the Southeast Florida Climate Compact, a pioneering multi-county partnership spanning Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and Monroe counties. This region, home to 117 municipalities, is both deeply vulnerable to climate impacts and uniquely positioned to lead. Alicia’s role helps bridge local needs with regional strategy, ensuring that small and under-resourced communities have a seat at the table.

Alicia is part of Climate Ready America’s Southeast Demonstration Project, an initiative led by Geos Institute and supported by the Walmart Foundation. The goal is to demonstrate what is possible when trusted relationships, technical expertise, and community-driven strategies are supported by Navigators like Alicia, acting as key connectors between local leaders and the tools they need to build long-term resilience.

With Alicia’s support, the Compact secured a $1 million grant to develop a Priority Climate Action Plan (PCAP), completed in December 2024. This plan includes a regional greenhouse gas (GHG) inventory, a critical tool for tracking emissions and identifying reduction strategies. For communities that lack the staff or resources to conduct their own inventories, the PCAP provides baseline data and shared methodologies, enabling every municipality in the region to act from the same foundation.

“We made sure that smaller communities could use this plan without having to start from scratch,” Alicia said. “That is the whole point, leveling the playing field so everyone can participate.”

 

The Compact aligned regional strategies with local concerns using detailed survey data from governments across the four counties. The result is a toolkit of plug-and-play resources: ready-made emissions data, grant-ready templates, measurable goals, and regionally relevant policy frameworks. The Compact has become a resource hub for dozens of communities working to implement climate solutions at their own pace, with shared support.

Alicia and her partners have been diligently developing the next-phase Comprehensive Climate Action Plan (CAP). This roadmap goes beyond emissions tracking and digs deeper into adaptation, equity, and community engagement. In parallel, Alicia continues to support implementation workshops across the region, helping local governments translate high-level plans into grounded, actionable projects.

Designed to lower the barrier to entry for small communities, these gatherings connect local leaders with subject matter experts, introduce user-friendly tools, and ensure that insights from one city can quickly inform work in another. The goal is simple: make climate action practical, peer-informed, and within reach for all.

Workshops have included topics like Resilient Florida grant navigation, solar energy readiness, resilience planning for property owners, and interdepartmental coordination. Each session is tailored to the specific needs of Southeast Florida municipalities, offering practical tools that can be applied immediately. These convenings are not just about information sharing; they are about capacity-building, connecting peers, and ensuring communities can access the millions of dollars in funding available for climate resilience.

One of Alicia’s standout contributions is the Compact Climate Assessment Tool (CCAT), an annual self-assessment she helped develop and now facilitates. CCAT allows municipalities to track their progress against regional climate goals, while also surfacing areas where more support or technical assistance may be needed. “It is not just about checking boxes,” she explained. “It is about helping communities see how far they have come and what they need next.”

What sets this regional model apart is its intentional structure. The Compact is not a top-down program; it is a collaborative network with flexible entry points and a shared commitment to lifting all boats. The emphasis on shared data, shared learning, and shared success makes it easier for small communities, those often left out of the climate conversation, to fully participate and benefit.

“We are not reinventing the wheel for every city,” Alicia said. “We are building a system where people can plug in, get what they need, and keep moving forward.”

This regional approach amplifies what works locally and scales it for broader impact. Through Alicia’s efforts, Geos Institute and Climate Ready America are demonstrating that effective climate action does not hinge on isolated pilot projects. It thrives on collaboration, shared learning, and structures that enable even the smallest community to take meaningful steps forward.

The Southeast Florida Climate Compact is fast becoming a national model for how to build a climate-ready region, not by asking communities to go it alone, but by showing what is possible when they have support to move together.

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