Scrapbook Photo 04/22/24 - 117 New Stories - REAL Environmental & Conservation Leadership In PA: http://tinyurl.com/9bh4zbtr
Philadelphia Joins Global Climate Action Summit In Fight Against Climate Change
Photo

The City of Philadelphia furthered its commitments to fighting climate change this week during the Global Climate Action Summit in San Francisco.

The Summit brings people from around the world together to celebrate climate action by cities, business and citizens. City Sustainability Director Christine Knapp is in attendance and is speaking about Philadelphia’s clean energy and climate plans.

The Summit challenged participants to sign on to further climate commitments and the City of Philadelphia is pleased to announce it signed on the following:

-- Deadline 2020 – Develop an inclusive climate mitigation and adaptation plan compatible with the Paris Agreement by 2020.

-- Advancing towards Zero Waste – Reduce municipal solid waste generation per capita by at least 15 percent, reduce solid waste disposed to landfill or incineration by at least 50 percent, and increase the diversion rate away from landfill and incineration by at least 70 percent by 2030. This commitment is in line with the City’s Zero Waste and Litter Plan.

-- Achieving an equitable low-carbon transformation – Increase action on community-led development, inclusive climate action, and infrastructure projects to achieve environmental, health, social and economic benefits especially in low-income and vulnerable neighborhoods.

-- Just transition – Include workers and jobs as part of city climate strategy

-- Edmonton Declaration – Recognize need for urgent action, to coordinate and integrate efforts, and to establish formal science-based policy and decision-making processes.

-- Renewable Energy – Commit to 100 percent renewable electricity by 2035 and 100 percent renewable energy by 2050. Mayor Kenney signed the Sierra Club’s “Ready for 100” pledge in June of 2017.

-- Cities4Forests – Integrate forests into city development plans and programs.

“Philadelphia is proud to stand alongside so many other cities in leading the way on climate change. Nearing the end of one of our hottest and wettest summers on record, we’re already feeling the harmful effects of climate change and are committed to doing our part in this fight,” said Mayor Jim Kenney.

Additionally, Philadelphia was recognized as one of the 27 international cities whose greenhouse gas emissions have peaked, even while population has grown.

Scientists have calculated that global greenhouse gas emissions need to peak by 2020 at the latest and then come down very steeply, which is why it’s important that Philadelphia is already on the right path.

Locally, the City’s Office of Sustainability issued a Clean Energy Vision Action Plan that outlines near term opportunities to ramp up progress on reducing carbon emissions in the City’s built environment, as identified in Powering Our Future: A Clean Energy Vision for Philadelphia.

The City also published the SOLAR rooftops application to help residents, businesses and city agencies understand the solar potential from existing rooftops.

For more information, visit Philadelphia’s Office of Sustainability webpage.

NewsClips:

Philadelphia Signs New Climate Action Agenda

It Would Cost $145 Million To Air Condition Philadelphia Schools

Tropical Lagoon, Ice Rink Proposed For North Shore Development In Pittsburgh

Editorial: Florence Is Our Climate Change Frankenstein; Now What?

Unexpected Outages, Intense Heat Behind ISO-NE Labor Day Price Spike

UN Chief Warns Of A Dangerous Tipping Point On Climate Change

Climate Change Activists Defy Trump’s Inaction With Their Own SF Summit

Thinktank: Global Demand For Fossil Fuels Will Peak In 2023

Maykuth: Trump Rollback Would Ease Rules On Climate-Changing Methane

Legere: As EPA Weakens Methane Rules For Gas Well Sites, PA Maintains Stricter Standards

Reuters: EPA Proposes Weaker Methane Rules For Oil & Gas Wells

EPA Admits Scrapping Oil & Gas Regs Will Put More Methane Into Atmosphere

Editorial: Rolling Back Standards For Coal-Fired Power Plants Poisonous Regulating

EIA: Coal Losing Market Share In U.S. As Source Of Electricity

Baker-Shultz Carbon Fee Most Ambitious Climate Plan In History

North Carolina Politicians Didn’t Like Science On Rising Sea Levels So They Passed A Law Against It

North Carolina Politicians Have Decried Climate Change Science That Makes Hurricane Florence So Dangerous

The Bipartisan Shadow Government On Climate Change

Related Story:

Penn State’s Michael Mann Receives 2018 AGU Climate Communications Prize

[Posted: Sept. 13, 2018]


9/17/2018

Go To Preceding Article     Go To Next Article

Return to This PA Environment Digest's Main Page