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2020 Full Cities Dataset for Excel - North America
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| Row number | Questionnaire | Year Reported to CDP | Account Number | Organization | Country | CDP Region | Parent Section | Section | Question Number | Question Name | Column Number | Column Name | Row Number | Row Name | Response Answer | Comments | File Name | Last update |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 126801 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 848567 | Mid-America Regional Council | United States of America | North America | Transport | 10.14 | Please provide city-wide average air pollution metrics from the monitoring sites within your city for the most recent three years. | 2 | Average concentration for most recent year available (ug/m3) | 7 | SO2 (Maximum 24-hour average) | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126802 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 848567 | Mid-America Regional Council | United States of America | North America | Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.1 | Please list the most significant climate hazards faced by your city and indicate the probability and consequence of these hazards, as well as the expected future change in frequency and intensity. Please also select the most relevant assets or services that are affected by the climate hazard and provide a description of the impact. | 9 | Future change in intensity | 4 | Increasing | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126803 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 52897 | City of Aspen | United States of America | North America | Local Government Emissions | Local Government Operations GHG Emissions Data | 7.5 | Please give the total amount of fuel (refers to Scope 1 emissions) that your local government has consumed this year. | 4 | Units | 2 | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126804 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 43908 | City of Milwaukee | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 5 | Emissions occurring outside the city boundary as a result of in-city activities (metric tonnes CO2e) | 6 | Stationary energy > Fugitive emissions | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126805 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54082 | City of Hollywood, FL | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.5 | Please attach your city-wide inventory in Excel or other spreadsheet format and provide additional details on the inventory calculation methods in the table below. | 3 | Emissions factors used | 1 | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126806 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 43905 | City of San Antonio | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6b | Please provide a summary of emissions by sector and scope as defined in the Global Protocol for Community Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventories (GPC) in the table below. | 1 | Emissions (metric tonnes CO2e) | 9 | Waste: waste generated within the city boundary – Scope 3 (III.X.2) | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126807 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59633 | City of Santa Cruz, CA | United States of America | North America | Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.1 | Please list the most significant climate hazards faced by your city and indicate the probability and consequence of these hazards, as well as the expected future change in frequency and intensity. Please also select the most relevant assets or services that are affected by the climate hazard and provide a description of the impact. | 6 | Most relevant assets / services affected overall | 5 | Residential | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126808 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 74418 | Town of Breckenridge, CO | United States of America | North America | Buildings | 9.1 | Does your city have emissions reduction targets or energy efficiency targets for the following building types? | 3 | Energy efficiency target | 1 | Commercial | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126809 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59642 | City of Dublin, CA | United States of America | North America | Adaptation | Adaptation Goals | 3.3 | Please describe the main goals of your city’s adaptation efforts and the metrics / KPIs for each goal. | 4 | Description of metric / indicator used to track goal | 0 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 126810 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 74546 | City of Milwaukie, OR | United States of America | North America | Local Government Emissions | Local Government Operations GHG Emissions Data | 7.6 | Please provide total (Scope 1 + Scope 2) GHG emissions for your local government operations, in metric tonnes CO2e. | 4 | Comment | 1 | Local government emissions breakdown | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126811 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 10894 | City of Los Angeles | United States of America | North America | Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 13 | Total cost provided by the local government | 7 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 126812 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54104 | City of Boulder | United States of America | North America | Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Planning | 5.5a | Please attach your city’s climate change mitigation plan below. If your city has both mitigation and energy access plans, please make sure to attach all relevant documents below. | 12 | Does your plan include policy goals that explicitly reflect one of the following principles? | 1 | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126813 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 53959 | City of Fayetteville, AR | United States of America | North America | Adaptation | Adaptation Actions | 3.0 | Please describe the main actions you are taking to reduce the risk to, and vulnerability of, your city’s infrastructure, services, citizens, and businesses from climate change as identified in the Climate Hazards section. | 8 | Action description and implementation progress | 4 | Conduct an assessment to determine heat island mitigation feature distribution across the city to identify locations with disproportionate heat island effects. This is coupled a tree canopy assessment conducted every five years. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126814 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35870 | City of Miami | United States of America | North America | Adaptation | Adaptation Planning | 3.2a | Please provide more information on your plan that addresses climate change adaptation and attach the document. Please provide details on the boundary of your plan, and where this differs from your city’s boundary, please provide an explanation. | 4 | Climate hazards factored into plan that addresses climate change adaptation | 2 | Flood and sea level rise > Groundwater flood | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126815 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 14344 | City of Park City, UT | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 6 | If you have no emissions occurring outside the city boundary to report as a result of in-city activities, please select a notation key to explain why | 7 | Total Stationary Energy | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126816 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 50551 | City of Long Beach | United States of America | North America | Opportunities | Finance and Economic Opportunities | 6.5 | List any mitigation, adaptation, water related or resilience projects you have planned within your city for which you hope to attract financing and provide details on the estimated costs and status of the project. If your city does not have any relevant projects, please select 'No relevant projects' under 'Project Area'. | 1 | Project area | 1 | No relevant projects | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126817 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59537 | City of Denton, TX | United States of America | North America | Transport | 10.14 | Please provide city-wide average air pollution metrics from the monitoring sites within your city for the most recent three years. | 10 | Completeness of data (%) | 2 | PM2.5 (Maximum 24-hour average) | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126818 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35894 | Ville de Montreal | Canada | North America | Buildings | 9.0 | What is the total tCO2e emissions per capita from existing commercial, institutional and residential buildings in your city? | 1 | Total tonnes of CO2e emissions per capita | 1 | Commercial | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 126819 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 50572 | City of Saint Paul, MN | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 7 | Please explain any excluded sources, identify any emissions covered under an ETS and provide any other comments | 6 | Stationary energy > Fugitive emissions | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126820 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 31108 | City of Houston | United States of America | North America | Buildings | 9.1 | Does your city have emissions reduction targets or energy efficiency targets for the following building types? | 2 | Please provide more details and/or link to more information about the emission reduction target. | 3 | Residential | The City launched its Climate Action Plan April 2020 which has an overall goal to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. The City is in the process of establishing 'specific' targets' to include:CAP Target 7. Adopt the 2021 International Code Council (ICC) model codes by 2025 with a minimum 5-year update. The City will also establish a plan to achieve 85% energy code compliance by 2030. (B1.1 Update energy code and increase compliance; B1.2 Develop programs that improve building energy efficiency to include developing benchmarking and audit programs for commercial, industrial and residential buildings; and B1.3 reduce water and wastewater energy consumption by 10% through optimization of facility operations and water conservation.)CAP Target 8 includes a complimentary initiative B2.2 to expand utility energy financing and incentive programs. This includes promoting weatherization programs to reduce residential energy consumption and focus on reducing energy burden of low-income populations and supporting and participating in CenterPoint's portfolio of energy efficiency programs.http://www.greenhoustontx.gov/climateactionplan/CAP-April2020.pdf | The City launched its Climate Action Plan April 2020 with a focus area on building optimization. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126821 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 74558 | Summit County, UT | United States of America | North America | Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.1 | Please list the most significant climate hazards faced by your city and indicate the probability and consequence of these hazards, as well as the expected future change in frequency and intensity. Please also select the most relevant assets or services that are affected by the climate hazard and provide a description of the impact. | 5 | Social impact of hazard overall | 3 | Population displacement | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126822 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 50550 | City of Buffalo | United States of America | North America | Transport | 10.2 | What is the mode share of each transport mode in your city for freight transport? | 1 | Mode share | 5 | Rail | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126823 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54070 | City of Eugene | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 2 | If you have no direct emissions to report, please select a notation key to explain why | 10 | Transportation > Waterborne navigation | Not Estimated | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126824 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 53829 | City of Kingston, ON | Canada | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 7 | Please explain any excluded sources, identify any emissions covered under an ETS and provide any other comments | 2 | Stationary energy > Commercial buildings & facilities | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126825 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54060 | City of Greater Sudbury / Grand Sudbury | Canada | North America | Transport | 10.14 | Please provide city-wide average air pollution metrics from the monitoring sites within your city for the most recent three years. | 4 | Average concentration for third most recent year available (ug/m3) | 4 | PM10 (Maximum 24-hour average) | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126826 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 63862 | City of Ashland, OR | United States of America | North America | Transport | 10.4 | Please provide the total fleet size and number of vehicle types for the following modes of transport. | 8 | Comment | 2 | Electric | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 126827 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 57616 | City of Lake Forest, IL | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.1 | Please state the dates of the accounting year or 12-month period for which you are reporting your latest city-wide GHG emissions inventory. | 1 | From | 1 | Accounting year dates | 2007-01-01 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126828 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 61790 | City of Emeryville, CA | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 1 | Direct emissions (metric tonnes CO2e) | 23 | AFOLU > Land use | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126829 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 74546 | City of Milwaukie, OR | United States of America | North America | Adaptation | Adaptation Actions | 3.0 | Please describe the main actions you are taking to reduce the risk to, and vulnerability of, your city’s infrastructure, services, citizens, and businesses from climate change as identified in the Climate Hazards section. | 12 | Total cost provided by the local government (currency) | 1 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 126830 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 50541 | City of Greensboro | United States of America | North America | Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.1 | Please list the most significant climate hazards faced by your city and indicate the probability and consequence of these hazards, as well as the expected future change in frequency and intensity. Please also select the most relevant assets or services that are affected by the climate hazard and provide a description of the impact. | 11 | When do you first expect to experience those changes in frequency and intensity? | 4 | Long-term (after 2050) | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126831 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 32550 | City of Denver | United States of America | North America | Transport | 10.14 | Please provide city-wide average air pollution metrics from the monitoring sites within your city for the most recent three years. | 10 | Completeness of data (%) | 4 | PM10 (Maximum 24-hour average) | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126832 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 31182 | City of San Francisco | United States of America | North America | Adaptation | Adaptation Actions | 3.0 | Please describe the main actions you are taking to reduce the risk to, and vulnerability of, your city’s infrastructure, services, citizens, and businesses from climate change as identified in the Climate Hazards section. | 3 | Action title | 2 | Implement a Coastal Multimodal Resilience Strategy | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126833 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 63601 | Township of Maplewood, NJ | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.8 | Please indicate if your city-wide emissions have increased, decreased, or stayed the same since your last emissions inventory, and describe why. | 3 | Please explain and quantify changes in emissions | 1 | Please explain | Electricity use was down for all four quarters. Natural Gas use was especially lower in the second quarter. Continued shutting down of coal generation in the eastern portion of PJM lowered the emissions factor for electricity. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126834 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54088 | City of Peterborough | Canada | North America | Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 21 | Attach reference document | 1 | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126835 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 20113 | City of Vancouver | Canada | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 3 | Indirect emissions from the use of grid-supplied electricity, heat, steam and/or cooling (metric tonnes CO2e) | 16 | Waste > Incineration and open burning | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126836 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54092 | City of Ann Arbor | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 4 | If you have no indirect emissions to report, please select a notation key to explain why | 18 | Total Waste | Not Occurring | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126837 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59644 | City of Culver City, CA | United States of America | North America | Transport | 10.4 | Please provide the total fleet size and number of vehicle types for the following modes of transport. | 8 | Comment | 1 | Total fleet size | Number of buses: 54 - all CNGMunicipal Fleet - 2858 electric14 Hybrid2 Plug-in Hybrid48 CNG | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126838 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 63999 | City of Miami Beach, FL | United States of America | North America | Opportunities | Finance and Economic Opportunities | 6.12 | Does your city have its own credit rating? | 1 | Does your city have a credit rating? | 2 | Domestic | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126839 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 73666 | Cuyahoga County | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 3 | Indirect emissions from the use of grid-supplied electricity, heat, steam and/or cooling (metric tonnes CO2e) | 23 | AFOLU > Land use | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126840 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 31090 | District of Columbia | United States of America | North America | Opportunities | Collaboration | 6.2a | Please provide some key examples of how your city collaborates with business in the table below. | 3 | Description of collaboration | 6 | To support BEPS implementation and setting the standard for BEPS period, DOEE, in partnership with the DC SEU and Baumann Consulting is offering free data verification for 2019 data, for private buildings required to comply (50,000 square feet and larger). Data verification is a new benchmarking requirement established in the Clean Energy DC Omnibus Act of 2018 and will need to be conducted by a third-party licensed professional in future reporting years. However, DOEE is offering a one-time no-cost data verification for 2019 benchmarking data. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126841 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 2430 | City of Burlington | United States of America | North America | Opportunities | Finance and Economic Opportunities | 6.7 | Has your city received/secured funding for any low carbon projects (e.g. energy efficiency, renewable energy, low emission vehicles, bus rapid transit, waste management) or climate adaptation projects from a development bank (e.g. World Bank, Asian Development Bank, etc.)? | 2 | Comment | 1 | Funding received/secured | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126842 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 73295 | City of La Crosse, WI | United States of America | North America | Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 13 | Total cost provided by the local government | 3 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 126843 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 73669 | San Luis Obispo | United States of America | North America | Water Security | Water Supply | 14.2a | Please identify the risks to your city’s water security as well as the timescale and level of risk. | 5 | Risk description | 2 | The state of California continues to be threatened by lower participation and the possibility of enduring drought. Fortunately, the City has groundwater and surface water resources as redundant resilience measures, but with bad enough climate change, these could also be put at risk. Note that the Utilities division does include climate projections in their safe water yield allocation calculations. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126844 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 74418 | Town of Breckenridge, CO | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 5 | Emissions occurring outside the city boundary as a result of in-city activities (metric tonnes CO2e) | 29 | Generation of grid-supplied energy > Local renewable generation | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126845 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59644 | City of Culver City, CA | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 2 | If you have no direct emissions to report, please select a notation key to explain why | 5 | Stationary energy > Agriculture | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126846 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 31182 | City of San Francisco | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | GCoM Emission Factor and Activity Data | 4.15 | Please provide a summary of emissions factors and activity data used in your inventory. | 3 | Fuel type or activity | 30 | Diesel oil | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126847 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35859 | City of Cleveland | United States of America | North America | Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Actions | 5.4 | Describe the anticipated outcomes of the most impactful mitigation actions your city is currently undertaking; the total cost of the action and how much is being funded by the local government. | 13 | Total cost provided by the local government | 6 | For all emission reduction activities, the anticipated emissions reductions are for annual emission reductions in the year 2030. These are not cumulative emission reductions up to 2030. In 2019-2020, the City will be developing a pathway to 100% renewable by 2050, which will provide more detailed reduction estimates out to 2050.Assumptions:1) An assumptions of constant energy demand from 2017 through 2030 is made for energy efficiency calculations. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 126848 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 50555 | City of Hamilton | Canada | North America | Opportunities | Finance and Economic Opportunities | 6.5 | List any mitigation, adaptation, water related or resilience projects you have planned within your city for which you hope to attract financing and provide details on the estimated costs and status of the project. If your city does not have any relevant projects, please select 'No relevant projects' under 'Project Area'. | 9 | Total investment cost needed | 3 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 126849 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 73301 | City of Gretna, LA | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6a | The Global Covenant of Mayors requires committed cities to report their inventories in the format of the new Common Reporting Framework, to encourage standard reporting of emissions data. Please provide a breakdown of your city-wide emissions by sector and sub-sector in the table below. Where emissions data is not available, please use the relevant notation keys to explain the reason why. | 6 | If you have no emissions occurring outside the city boundary to report as a result of in-city activities, please select a notation key to explain why | 12 | Transportation > Off-road | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 126850 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 10495 | City of Las Vegas | United States of America | North America | Opportunities | Finance and Economic Opportunities | 6.5 | List any mitigation, adaptation, water related or resilience projects you have planned within your city for which you hope to attract financing and provide details on the estimated costs and status of the project. If your city does not have any relevant projects, please select 'No relevant projects' under 'Project Area'. | 7 | Project description and attach project proposal | 1 | The city of Las Vegas launched the state’s first Commercial Property Assessed Clean Energy (C-PACE) program, a new effort designed to provide long-term investments in clean energy for commercial property owners. C-PACE was enabled by the 2017 Nevada Legislature and adopted in November 2018 by the Las Vegas City Council. Under this program, which is commonly found in other parts of the country, owners of existing commercial properties will be able to finance up to 100 percent of the cost of energy efficiency improvements and renewable energy projects for up to 25 years through a special assessment placed on the property. Project financing is provided by private capital providers in an open market and repaid through the assessment. Since the financing is tied to the property, the owner is not required to sign a personal guarantee and the C-PACE assessment can transfer to a new owner upon sale. For a project to be eligible, the project’s estimated energy cost savings must exceed the financing amount, providing a positive cash flow for the property owner; property owners, in turn, reduce their energy costs and may improve the value of their building—all with no upfront, out-of-pocket costs. The City selected Sustainable Real Estate Solutions (SRS) to serve as the third-party administrator of the C-PACE program. SRS will handle outreach, education, project underwriting and quality assurance services and is launched the program in August 2019. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 |
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This data is collected through the CDP-ICLEI Unified Reporting System. When using this data, please cite both organisations using the following wording: ‘This data was collected in partnership by CDP and ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability’.
This dataset contains the full responses of publicly disclosing cities in 2020. To view the complete cities 2020 questionnaire guidance, including all questions asked in 2020, visit https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/guidance-for-cities. Please contact cities@cdp.net if you have any questions.
When using the inventory data for aggregation, comparison and trend analysis, please note that the inventory data is based on non-verified self-reported city inputs. The reported inventory may not include all emission sources within the city boundary.
Please note that this dataset may contain data from cities or, in some instances, groups of cities at different administrative levels. This includes metropolitan areas, combined authorities, and 5 American regional councils, which are: Chicago Metropolitan Mayors Caucus; Denver Regional Council of Governments; Metropolitan Council, Twin Cities; Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments; and Mid-America Regional Council.
This view contains data from the CDP Cities North America Authority Region.
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