No; be as resistant to local environment change as you are to global climate change. If you’re not doing anything about the second then don’t do anything about the first. (If you are doing something about the second, you probably know better than to try and prevent housing being built in a location that is not threatened).
Climate change is going to make large, heavily populated areas somewhere between unattractive and uninhabitable even within the US. Likely outcomes of this are millions of people eventually trying to move from deserts in Texas and California to the PNW or the Midwest. The population of these areas is going to increase, barring the magical peaceful disappearance of half the country, or the unmagical violent disappearance of half the country. If you think you can prevent that climate change, or prevent inland California or Arizona etc from being waterless deserts, or somehow make it safe for everyone to continue living where they are today - go nuts. If you don't think that, start figuring out how your area will absorb more people. It's gonna need a bigger housing supply.