Will McDow
Associate Vice President, Climate Resilient Coasts and Watersheds
Work
Areas of expertise:
environmental markets, mitigation policy, working lands conservation
Description
Will McDow is a senior director for EDF’s Climate Resilient Coasts and Watersheds strategic initiative. In this work, Will engages communities, farmers, businesses, academics and public agencies to develop shared and equitable solutions to increase climate resilience.
Will has broad expertise on environmental market design, mitigation policy and working lands conservation. He serves on the board of the Ecological Restoration Business Association.
Since joining EDF in 2003, he has focused on market-based incentives to expand environmental benefits on America’s working lands, including prior work on state tax policy, farm bill program design, bioenergy markets and habitat exchanges.
Background
Will has spent 10 years specializing in economic incentives and rural land management, with an emphasis on energy markets, farm bill programs and tax policy. He led EDF’s multi-year effort to pass legislation in North Carolina that gives property tax relief to landowners who undertake conservation activities on their property. Will has coauthored Standing Tall: A New Path for North Carolina’s Private Forests [EDF, 2006] and Shades of Green: Measuring the Value of Urban Forests in the Housing Market [J. Forest Econ 11(3):177-199, 2005].
Education
- Master of Forestry, Duke University
- Master of Environmental Management (Resource Economics and Policy), Duke University
- Bachelor of Arts (Biology), Lawrence University
Latest pieces
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North Carolina’s coastal wetlands and marshlands are a critical lifeforce for hunters and anglers
Growing Returns, November 3, 2023 -
Five years after Hurricane Florence, EDF looks back at efforts to build resilience in North Carolina
Growing Returns, September 14, 2023 -
4 strategies for policymakers to get more natural infrastructure in the ground, fast
Growing Returns Blog, July 29, 2021 -
NC’s resilience plan confronts climate change
EDF Growing Returns, June 1, 2021 -
4 ways North Carolina’s Legislature can build lasting flood resilience
Growing Returns Blog, April 15, 2021 -
Policy Agenda to Build Flood Resilience Across North Carolina
Source, March 31, 2021 -
Pathways to Sustainability
Source, July 12, 2012 -
European power from U.S. forests
Source, July 12, 2012
Press materials
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On Fourth Anniversary of Hurricane Florence, NC, is Taking Important Proactive Steps to Protect Against Climate Change
September 16, 2022 -
North Carolina Leaders Invest in a More Flood Resilient Future
November 16, 2021 -
North Carolina Legislature expands state’s flood protection and climate resilience
June 26, 2020 -
Release of North Carolina Resilience Plan an Essential Step to Address Climate Change and Protect Vulnerable Communities on the Frontlines
June 2, 2020 -
Governor Cooper Proclaims Resiliency Week in North Carolina
October 8, 2019 -
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper Commits to “Rebuilding Smarter and Stronger"
October 10, 2018 -
N.C. Senate regulatory bill ‘boggles the mind,’ increases flood risk
December 15, 2016 -
Secretary Jewell Does Status Check One Year after Sage-Grouse Decision
September 21, 2016