Camden, New Jersey Uses Green Infrastructure to Manage Stormwater

Oepa.gov/arc-x/camden-new-jersey-uses-green-infrastructure-manage-stormwater

Camden County Municipal Utilities Authority (CCMUA) provides wastewater services (80 million gallons per day) to
approximately 500,000 people in 37 municipalities in Camden County, New Jersey. Historically, CCMUA has experienced
combined sewer flooding during intense rain events due to the age of their system and the lack of available funding for
infrastructure replacement. Realizing that climate change is expected to increase the frequency and intensity of storms,
CCMUA's utility operators decided to better understand the utility's current and future vulnerability.

Working with the EPA, CCMUA used the Climate Ready Evaluation and Awareness Tool (CREAT) to gain greater appreciation
of the magnitude of its Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) and other vulnerabilities and identify potential adaptation strategies.
CCMUA's operators formed a partnership.

Camden SMART Initiative, consisting of:

•	the local municipality

•	state environmental protection agency

•	local university

•	local non-profits

This partnership enabled the municipality to integrate water conservation and promote a comprehensive network of green
infrastructure programs and projects that can help Camden adapt to future conditions. Building off of the success of Camden
SMART, EPA partnered with the City of Camden, CCMUA, Cooper's Ferry Partnership and NJ DEP to form the Camden
Collaborative Initiative to use the collective impact model to address air quality, solid waste, and neighborhood revitalization
concerns, in addition to flooding.

While the site's operators did not explicitly use climate models to projected vulnerabilities, the actions taken increase resiliency
to current flooding threats and adapted the site to better manage risks associated with projected increases in the frequency
and intensity of future storms, including flooding. Overall, the site has adapted to climate change by repairing and raising
critical areas of the site to handle increased precipitation and flooding threats and reduce threat of contaminant release now
and into the future.

How did they do it?

Applicable EPA Tools

Assessed climate vulnerability

The Climate Resilience Evaluation and
Awareness Tool helps utilities determine climate
risk and assess vulnerability to projected climate
changes.

• Camden used the Climate Ready Evaluation and Awareness
Tool to understand the magnitude of climate vulnerability,
particularly for CSO vulnerability to projected precipitation
changes.

Climate Resilience Evaluation and Awareness
Tool

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Developed adaptation response recommendations to improve
water quality and reduce CSO's

The Climate Ready Water Utilities Adaptation
Strategies Guide assists utilities identify in
identifying potential next steps to adapt to
expected climate vulnerabilities.

• Identified adaptation actions including: enacting a water

conservation ordinance to reduce water inputs into the sewer

system; reducing impervious surface and runoff through
promoting rain gardens and parks; "daylighting" streams;

Climate Ready Water Utilities Adaptation
Strategies Guide

converting buildings to parkland; and cleaning inlets and
replacing netting systems.

• One SMART project disconnected a library's rooftop runoff from
the combined sewer system by designing two rain gardens to
capture, filter, and infiltrate the first one-inch of rainfall.

Formed local partnership to implement adaptation	Enhancing Sustainable Communities With Green

Similar Cases and More Information

To see how another northeastern community analyzed the impact of sea level rise on a water utility, view Manchester-by-the-
Sea. For a community that recognized the prohibitive cost of protecting a highly vulnerable facility and decided to move to a
safer facility, see Iowa City. To see how Washington, D.C. is using green infrastructure to reduce stormwater impacts and
combined sewer overflows view the DC Consent Decree.

• Camden formed a partnership group, SMART, to help
implement its network of green infrastructure adaptation
measures.

Infrastructure Guide provides a framework to
engage the community in implementing green
infrastructure projects that improve quality of life
and prepare for climate change impacts.

Enhancing Sustainable Communities With Green
Infrastructure Guide

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