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Lian Plass

Senior Manager

Lian Plass is a senior manager for the ULI Urban Resilience program.

Surge: Coastal Resilience and Real Estate, a ULI research report, documents the challenges associated with coastal hazards such as sea level rise, coastal storms, flooding, erosion, and subsidence, and provides best practices for real estate and land use professionals, as well as public officials, to address them.
According to the World Green Building Council, buildings currently account for a staggering 39 percent of global emissions, while trillions of dollars’ worth of real estate assets are at risk due to climate-related disasters. At the same time, utility providers are struggling to scale infrastructure to meet growing energy demands spurred by economic growth and development and unprecedented temperature extremes resulting in higher than usual utility charges and devastating outages. Now more than ever, the industry’s progress toward net zero emissions and resilience is critical.
Private enterprise that fails to strategize growth is likely to decline and be usurped by more deliberate competitors. Governments that introduce new policies without ensuring there are enough staff or resources to uphold them won’t be able to put them into practice. Faced with the imperative to run lean but remain agile, many organizations are seeking ways to integrate digital tools powered by generative AI into their workflows to innovate and help alleviate accumulated organizational debt.
Artificial Intelligence, or the general ability of computers to emulate human thought and learning processes and, ultimately, to perform tasks in real-world environments, has grown and evolved significantly in recent years. It’s an empirical fact: in 2022, the global AI market swelled to $136.55 billion, with projections hinting at a surge of $1.8 trillion to $2.6 trillion within the next 10 years.
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