*>EPA

Climate Resilience Evaluation Tool (CREAT)
Building Water Utility Resilience

Climate change threats such as sea-level rise, shifting precipitation patterns, and temperature
changes affect water quality and availability, Managing these events will pose significant
challenges to water sector utilities in fulfilling their public health and environmental mission.

CREAT, developed under EPA's Creating Resilient Water Utilities initiative, assists drinking
water, wastewater, and stormwater utility owners and operators in assessing risk from these
events.

CREAT...

O Provides a flexible and customizable risk assessment
framework;

O Organizes available historical and projected climate
data;

O Guides users through a process of identifying threats,
vulnerable assets, and adaptation options;

O Supports utilities in considering impacts at multiple
locations, assessing multiple climate scenarios,
and documenting the social and energy
use impacts of adaptation measures; and

O Informs decision-making as users compare the

performance of adaptation options in multiple time
periods across climate scenarios.

Input

Utility location
Current concerns

Climate data
Threats

Utility information
Priority assets

Existing measures
Potential adaptive
measures

Projected scenarios
Consequence matrix
Assets

Adaptation plans

MI.



€5
P

Climate
Awareness

Scenario
Development

Consequences
& Assets

Adaptation
Planning

~	Q

~	43
»p

Output

• Awareness of potential
climate challenges

• Threat scenarios for
assessment

Consequence matrix

Critical/vulnerable

assets

• Plans for assessment

•	Monetized risk
reduction

•	Adaptation plan
comparison

Office of Water (4608-T) EPA 817-F-21-002

https://creat.epa.gov/

February 2021


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*>EPA

Climate Resilience Evaluation Tool (CREAT)
Building Water Utility Resilience

Conducting a Facilitated CREAT Exercise

EPA has collaborated with water utilities
across the country to help improve
resilience through facilitated CREAT
exercises. Each exercise demonstrates
CREAT's capabilities to assess diverse
challenges and provides a solid
foundation for
utilities to build
upon and fully
assess both their
long-term needs and
potential
performance of
resilience projects
and strategies.

Priorities for Water Utilities
Water Quality

Service Reliability

I Flooding

I Drought

| Ecosystem Changes

What does a CREAT exercise require from utilities?

Recognizing partner utilities' significant time constraints, EPA makes the process as
efficient as possible and provides substantial facilitation support throughout each exercise.
Utilities are typically asked to provide a lead that spends around 35 to 40 hours to serve as
a point-of-contact, participate in webinars and coordinate the working sessions. Other staff
and experts (such as hydrology modelers, engineers, and treatment plant managers) may
spend 5 to 15 hours collecting data and providing feedback on meeting notes and the final
report. The total process takes 4 to 6 months, depending on the frequency of meetings and
availability of utility staff and local partners.

What is the CREAT exercise process?

Kickoff Call

Working
Session 1

Call to understand context, introduce CREAT,
and start defining exercise objectives

Walk through CREAT platform and start
working through initial modules

Working
Sessions 2 & 3

Exercise
Wrap-up

Remote working sessions or field visit to
priority asset(s)

Call to integrate additional data and finalize
CREAT modules

Final Report

Comprehensive summary of process and
findings for stakeholders and decision-makers

Case Study

Two-page summary published on EPA's Case
Study and Information Exchange website

Office of Water (4608-T) EPA 800-F-19-003

https://creat.epa.gov/

February 2021


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