San Diego Climate Action Plan

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Seal of San Diego, California

The San Diego Climate Action Plan was adopted by the city of San Diego in December 2015. It is a local climate action plan whose rules are defined by the California global warming Solutions Act of 2006 (AB 32), with the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.[1] Through this plan, the city set goals of eliminating half of all greenhouse emissions and sourcing all energy from renewable sources by the year 2035. With a coalition of business owners, environmental advocates, and community leaders, Mayor Kevin Faulconer approved the Climate Action Plan. The Climate Action Plan consists of several policies to ensure the economic and environmental growth of the city of San Diego.[2] It was referred to in The San Diego Union-Tribune as "the most aggressive climate action plan in California."[3]

Strategies[]

The plan identifies five specific sectors:

  1. Efficient building usage of water and energy
  2. Renewable sources of energy
  3. Transportation and land allocation
  4. Waste elimination
  5. Adaptation to climate stresses

Transportation was considered the largest sector of concern due to its overall contribution to greenhouse emissions and due to widespread reliance on high-emissions transportation methods.[4] To ensure progress of the plan, there are three phases of the Climate Action Plan: Phase 1: Early Action 2016-2017, Phase 2: Mid-Term 2018-2020, and Phase 3: Long-Term 2021-2035. Several departments within the local government and community will be involved to achieve the desire goal of a better future.[5] A Climate Action Campaign has begun in response to this plan with the help of organizations such as the Sierra Club. Yearly reports are to be made to track progression of this plan.[6]

Goals[]

Goals focused on emissions reductions (measured in MT e, or metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent) through 2035. The baseline used for the action plan was based on a 2010 report in which the total emissions were 12,984,993 MT of e. The projected emissions, if no changes were implemented, for the year 2020 is 14,124,690 MT of e, the year 2030 projection is 15,856,604 MT of e, and the year 2035 projection is 16,716,020 MT of e.[2] The climate action plan for the city of San Diego estimated reductions to 11,037, 244 MT of e by the year 2020, 7,790,996 MT of e by the year 2039, and 6,492,497 of MT of e by the year 2035.[2] Additionally, green job creation is one of the goals outlined in the action plan specifically for creating jobs in innovation and continuing the "green initiative" for the city. San Diego leaders emphasized job creation as the city was number seven on the 2017 U.S Clean Tech Leadership Index.[7]

Implementation[]

2018 Report[]

The 2018 San Diego Climate Action annual report outlines the progress of each of the five sectors. For the built environment and transportation sector, the three actions listed in the 2018 Climate action report exceeded the 2020 goal. The irrigation pumps did not produce any data, but the agriculture and conservation sector was seventy trees short of achieving the 14,000 trees planted goal. Water and waste water was able decrease the county's water consumption by 13% and the energy sector installed 38,510 home solar systems on existing houses. This is made possible in part by the Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE), which allows owners to pay for their solar installation on their property taxes.[8]

2018 Climate Action Report[9]
Category Action MT e Reduction
Environment / Transportation Conservation Land 4,621
Environment / Transportation Agricultural Easements 509
Environment / Transportation Reduce County Emissions (cars) 2,796
Agriculture / Conservation Electric irrigation pumps 0
Agriculture / Conservation Plants more trees 493
Energy Reduce county energy use 8,692
Energy Solar on existing homes 84,350
Energy County renewable energy (on-site) 1,931
Water / Waste Water Reduce county water consumption 190
Water / Waste Water Rain barrel increase 61
Total Reduction through 2018 103,643

2020[]

The 2020 Climate Action Plan report stated that greenhouse gas emissions had been reduced by 25% compared to 2010, but this claim may be exaggerated because it relies on baseline assumptions that do not take into account reduced vehicle operation following the 2008 recession.[10][11]

Assessing the state of implementation, environmental campaigner Nicole Kapretz said, "There’s been some progress, but it’s not even close to what we need. It’s baby steps when we need leaps."[12]

2021 Audit[]

A 2021 city auditor's report found a lack of cost estimates, poor progress tracking, ambiguous responsibilities, and little communication, with interdepartmental meetings only occurring once a year in 2019 and 2020.[13] While the city agreed to implement recommendations from the auditor, the delay of the release of the mobility action plan was criticized by environmental groups.[13][14]

References[]

  1. ^ "California Fights Global Warming". State Legislatures. 35 (3): 8–8. March 2009 – via EBSCOhost.
  2. ^ a b c "Climate Action Plan".
  3. ^ Garrick, David (2019-01-09). "Assemblyman Gloria announces 2020 run for San Diego mayor". San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved 2021-08-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ "2016 Annual Report Climate Action Plan" (PDF).
  5. ^ "Fiscal Year 2017 Climate Action Plan Budget and Implementation Report" (PDF).
  6. ^ "Climate Action Campaign". Climate Action Campaign. Retrieved 2017-08-06.
  7. ^ Lieb, Gabriel (2017-05-08). "2017 U.S. Clean Tech Leadership Index". Clean Edge. Retrieved 2020-08-25.
  8. ^ Hooven, Cody (2017-02-23). "Property assessed clean energy". American City & County Exclusive Insight: 1–1 – via EBSCOhost.
  9. ^ "San Diego County Climate Action Plan 2018 Annual Monitoring Report" (PDF).
  10. ^ Stone, Ken (2020-12-29). "San Diego Halfway to 2035 Emissions-Lowering Goal, Climate Report Says". Times of San Diego. Retrieved 2021-08-24.
  11. ^ Emerson Smith, Joshua (2020-12-30). "San Diego continues to tout greenhouse-gas reductions that never happened". San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved 2021-08-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ "The Rise and Fall (for Now) of Georgette Gómez". Voice of San Diego. 2020-11-16. Retrieved 2021-08-24.
  13. ^ a b "Audit Faults San Diego For Poor Implementation Of Climate Action Plan (KPBS Midday Edition Segments) | KPBS". www.kpbs.org. Retrieved 2021-08-15.
  14. ^ Garrick, David (2021-07-13). "San Diego enhancing city's fight against climate change after critical audit". San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved 2021-08-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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