HomeMy WebLinkAboutCM Climate Change Action Plan 2030 & GHG Report 2019 PPTClimate Change Action Plan 2030
MAY 6, 2019
4 Items for Consideration
➢Climate Change Action Plan 2030
➢Addendum to General Plan 2020 Environmental
Impact Report
➢2016 Greenhouse Gas Inventory Report
➢2-Year Priorities for Sustainability Workplan
State of the Climate
➢Last 4 years were the warmest 4 years on record
➢14 “billion dollar disasters” in 2018
➢First rise in world hunger in decades
➢Displacement of 2 billion people
➢31 consecutive years of glacier melt
➢Record lows for Arctic and Antarctic sea ice
➢New records for ocean heat
Local Impact
New Interim State Targets
40% x 2030
Background
➢20 Member Working Group
➢15 Months
➢Subject matter experts, community surveys and
presentations
➢Draft to Council October 15, 2018
➢Bay Area Air Quality Management Review January 2019
➢Planning Commission Presentation February 26, 2019
Jerry Belletto
Bill Carney
David Catalinotto
Maite Duran
Tim Gilbert
Jan Goldberg
Kay Karchevski
Sarah Loughran
Jesse Madsen
Anahi Mendieta
Bob Miller
Pam Reaves
Kif Scheuer
Thomas Wong
Chris Yalonis
Students
Cameron Evans
Eleanor Huang
Charlotte Kamman
Ana Ostrovsky
Jocelyn Tsai
Plan Structure: Local Actions
Low Carbon
Transportation
Energy
Efficiency
Renewable
Energy
Waste
Reduction
Water
Conservation
Sequestration
and
Adaptation
Community
Engagement
Implementation
and Monitoring
Local Actions:98,085 MTCO2e
Energy
Efficiency
19%
Low Carbon Transportation
38%Waste
Reduction
10%
Water
Conservation
1%
Renewable
Energy
32%
State Actions
38%
Local Actions
62%
Low Carbon Transportation
Key Actions:
1.Develop policies and programs to
encourage ZEV’s.
2.Expand the City’s EV charging
network.
3.Create more bicycle/pedestrian
infrastructure.
4.Encourage public transportation and
electric buses.
5.Work with rideshare and carshare
programs to utilize ZEV’s.
6.Transition City fleet to ZEV’s.
Energy Efficiency
Key Actions:
1.Create policies and programs to
educate and encourage energy
efficiency upgrades.
2.Apply energy efficiency building
requirements to smaller remodels
as well as rebuilds.
3.Incentivize building energy
reductions through financial
benefits or streamlined permitting.
4.Create policies for benchmarking
energy use for certain buildings.
Renewable Energy
Key Actions:
1.Increase promotion of 100%
renewable electricity options from
utilities.
2.Increase promotion of rooftop
solar to residents and businesses.
Waste, Water,
Sequestration & Adaptation
Key Actions:
1.Greywater/recycled water
2.Sequestration (plants, trees, soil)
3.Adaptation (lightly: plan!)
4.Mandatory recycling/composting
5.Recycling equipment
Economy and Equity
ENVIRONMENT
ECONOMY SOCIAL EQUITY
Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Inventory Update
COMMUNITY AND GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS
EMISSIONS FOR YEAR 2016
•In-boundary vs. consumption
•Consumption-based:
•Upstream emissions
•Mining, growing, producing, packaging, shipping
•Air travel
•Food production
GHG Inventories
17 MTCO2e
In-Boundary
44 MTCO2e
Consumption-based
Total Emissions: 389,000 MTCO2e
Community Emissions by Sector
Non-Residential
Energy
16%
Residential
Energy
17%
Waste 4%
Wastewater
<1%
Off-Road 1%Water <1%
Transportation
62%
Emissions Down 18% Since 2005
0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016MTCO2e 2020 State Goal
2020 Local Goal
2030 CCAP and
State Goal
2050 State Goal
Energy Use
➢Natural gas use up 4% between
2015 and 2016, but down 10%
since 2005.
➢Electricity use down 9% since
2005, and emissions down 45%
due to lower carbon
intensity of electricity.
Transportation
➢Transportation
emissions down 11%;
decline due to
improvements in fuel
efficiency.
➢Vehicle miles traveled
up 3% since 2005.
Waste & Water
➢Landfilled waste hit a low in
2011 but has since gone up.
➢Waste disposal increased 15%
between 2015 and 2016.
➢Waste emissions are 16% below
2005 levels.
➢Per capita water use has declined 25% since
2005.
➢Emissions from energy used to pump, treat
and convey water have declined 74%.
Government Operations
Buildings &
Facilities
19%
Vehicle Fleet
29%
Public Lighting 8%Water Delivery 2%
Waste
21%
Employee
Commute
21%
Government Operations Inventory
Sector 2005
MTCO2e
2016
MTCO2e
Change
MTCO2e % Change
Buildings & Facilities 799 725 -73 -9%
Vehicle Fleet 933 1,079 147 16%
Public Lighting 545 287 -258 -47%
Water Delivery 118 61 -57 -48%
Waste 711 781 70 10%
Employee Commute 1,337 807 -530 -40%
Total 4,442 3,742 -701 -16%
2-Year Sustainability
Priorities
EARLY ACTIONS FOR C.C.A.P. 2030
IMPLEMENTATION
2-Year Priorities
➢Develop online tool
➢Expand EV charging network
➢Develop policies and programs to encourage ZEV's
➢Incentivize building energy reductions
➢Increase promotion of rooftop solar and renewable electricity
➢Explore early adoption of mandatory recycling
➢Begin adaptation planning
➢Initiate local business engagement
1. Online Tool
Low Carbon Transportation
Early Actions: # 2 &3
2.Develop policies and programs to
encourage ZEV’s through streamlined
processes & matching incentives.
3.Expand the City’s EV charging
network at parking lots & garages.
Energy Efficiency
Early Actions: # 4
Work with County / MCEP to:
•Adopt new CalGreen building codes
•Incentivize building energy
reductions through financial
benefits or streamlined permitting.
Renewable Energy
Early Actions: # 5
•Work with MCE and PG&E to
increase adoption of Deep Green
and Solar Choice
•Assess local properties and facilities
for priority locations for solar +
storage + EV
Waste, Water,
Sequestration & Adaptation
Early Actions: # 6 & # 7
6.Work with County, Coastal
Conservancy, MCF, and local
stakeholders to identify funding for
adaptation planning efforts
7.Explore mandatory recycling /
composting ordinances in
conjunction with SB 1383 req’s
Community Engagement
Early Actions: # 8
QUESTIONS?
1.Adopt Addendum to General Plan 2020
Environmental Impact Report
2.Adopt new Climate Change Action Plan 2030
3.Accept 2016 Greenhouse Gas Inventory Report
4.Accept 2-Year Priorities for Sustainability Workplan
4 Items for Consideration