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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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 158551 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 53879 | City of Jersey City | 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. | 2 | Category | 39 | Indirect emissions from the use of grid-supplied electricity, heat, steam and/or cooling | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158552 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 73666 | Cuyahoga County | 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. | 14 | Majority funding source | 2 | Other, please specify: Residents | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158553 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 31117 | City of Toronto | Canada | North America | Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Target setting | 5.0c | Please provide details of your total city-wide base year intensity target. An intensity target is usually measured per capita or per unit GDP. If you have an absolute emissions reduction target, please select “Base year emissions (absolute) target” in question 5.0. | 12 | Percentage of target achieved | 0 | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158554 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 55419 | City of Miramar | 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) | 19 | IPPU > Industrial process | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158555 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35857 | City of Cincinnati | United States of America | North America | Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Target setting | 5.0d | Please provide details of your total city-wide baseline scenario target(s), including projected business as usual emissions. | 5 | Year of target introduction | 0 | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158556 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59535 | Town of Vail, CO | 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. | 4 | Number of freight vehicles | 1 | Total fleet size | 90 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158557 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54108 | City of Durham | 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 | 22 | AFOLU > Livestock | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 158558 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 53921 | City of Tempe, AZ | 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. | 8 | Who owns the data? | 2 | PM2.5 (Maximum 24-hour average) | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158559 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 58310 | City of Roanoke | United States of America | North America | Energy | 8.5a | Please provide details on your city’s energy efficiency targets. | 10 | Please indicate to which energy sector(s) the target applies (Multiple choice) | 0 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||||
| 158560 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 49327 | City of Providence | 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 | 31 | Total Emissions (excluding generation of grid-supplied energy) | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158561 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59537 | City of Denton, TX | United States of America | North America | Introduction | 0.1 | Please give a general description and introduction to your city including your city’s reporting boundary in the table below. | 1 | Administrative boundary | 1 | Please complete | City / Municipality | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158562 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35883 | City of San José | United States of America | North America | Waste | 13.6 | Does your city have any of the following initiatives, policies and/or regulations. | 1 | Response | 4 | Target(s) on reducing food waste to disposal (landfill and incineration) | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158563 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 43909 | City of Orlando | 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. | 4 | Number of freight vehicles | 4 | Plug in hybrid | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 158564 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 57616 | City of Lake Forest, IL | 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. | 2 | Document title and attachment | 1 | Lake Forest Energy+Emissions Profile 2007-2009 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158565 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35860 | City of Dallas | 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 | 1 | Biological hazards > Air-borne disease | The CECAP was unanimously approved by the Dallas City Council in May 2020. Implementation of the plan has now started. For information and updates on implementation go to https://www.dallasclimateaction.com/ | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 158566 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54109 | City of Bloomington | 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. | 12 | Please describe the impacts experienced so far, and how you expect the hazard to impact in the future | 5 | The Purdue Climate Change assessment states that Indiana is expected to see fewer days with extremely cold temperatures, which have historically helped control pest populations. These extreme cold events provide a natural control on the number and extent of some species of nuisance pests such as ticks and mosquitoes. As temperatures rise, these pests are better able to survive the winter, increase their populations and expand their ranges. This puts Indiana at risk for some invasive species and insect pests that historically would not survive Indiana’s coldest winter temperatures.On farms, cold winters help keep pests and pathogens in check. But warmer winters will allow pests to spread north and exacerbate disease pressures. U.S. corn producers spend more than $1 billion per year controlling pests, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists report. A study from Purdue University suggests that climate change and its effect on corn pests will substantially increase seed and insecticide costs for those growers and reduce crop yields. (https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/3/4/044007) https://ag.purdue.edu/indianaclimate/indiana-climate-report#events | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158567 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 37241 | City of Berkeley | 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 | Extreme hot temperature > Heat wave | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158568 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 58483 | City of Surrey | Canada | 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. | 1 | Climate Hazards | 2 | Extreme hot temperature > Extreme hot days | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158569 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54075 | City of Lakewood | 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. | 14 | Web link | 3 | https://www.lakewood.org/files/assets/public/planning/sustainability/planning-for-sustainability/lakewoodco-sustainability-plan-2015.pdf | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158570 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 50568 | City of Saskatoon | Canada | North America | Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Target setting | 5.0a | Please provide details of your total city-wide base year emissions reduction (absolute) target(s). In addition, you may add rows to provide details of your sector-specific targets, by providing the base year emissions specific to that target. | 15 | Target meets initial GCoM validation criteria | 1 | Automatically validate target | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158571 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 74466 | Village of South Barrington, IL | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | Historical emissions inventories | 4.13 | Please provide details on any historical and base year city-wide emissions inventories your city has, in order to allow assessment of targets in the table below. | 6 | Methodology | 0 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 158572 | 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. | 7 | Please explain any excluded sources, identify any emissions covered under an ETS and provide any other comments | 29 | Generation of grid-supplied energy > Local renewable generation | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158573 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59657 | City of Beaverton, OR | 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) | 16 | Waste > Incineration and open burning | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158574 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 55799 | Arlington, VA | United States of America | North America | Transport | 10.6 | How many buses has your city procured in the last year? | 2 | Comment | 2 | Electric buses | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158575 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35883 | City of San José | 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. | 1 | Number of private cars | 1 | Total fleet size | 823755 | We have not been able to find data sources for the columns left empty. Taxi data are from the airport taxi fleet database. The database only notes whether taxis are conventional ICE vehicles or alternative fuel vehicles. The number of alternative fuel vehicles was split equally between electric, hybrid, and plug in hybrid as an estimate. Bus data are from the local public transit agency, the Valley Transportation Authority, and municipal fleet data are from the City Fleet Manager. Freight vehicle data are from the EMFAC fleet database (https://arb.ca.gov/emfac/fleet-db) and represent 2018 counts of medium and heavy duty vehicles registered in ZIP codes that lie within San Jose city boundaries. These data do not distinguish between gasoline and gas hybrid vehicles. Private car data are directly from the CA Department of Motor Vehicles, from the most recent dataset available at the city level, from October 2018. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 158576 | 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. | 4 | If you have no indirect emissions to report, please select a notation key to explain why | 27 | Generation of grid-supplied energy > CHP generation | N/A | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 158577 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35393 | City of St Louis | 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 | 8 | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158578 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59572 | District of Saanich, BC | Canada | North America | Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Risk and Vulnerability Assessment | 2.0c | Please explain why your city does not have a climate risk and vulnerability assessment. | 1 | Reason | 1 | Please explain | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 158579 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 53921 | City of Tempe, AZ | 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. | 7 | Sectors/areas adaptation action applies to | 3 | Spatial Planning | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158580 | 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. | 4 | Current magnitude of hazard | 3 | High | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158581 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35874 | City of Phoenix | 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 | |||
| 158582 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 50571 | City of Victoria | Canada | 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. | 2 | Did this hazard significantly impact your city before 2020? | 5 | Yes | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158583 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35870 | City of Miami | United States of America | North America | Waste | 13.6 | Does your city have any of the following initiatives, policies and/or regulations. | 1 | Response | 4 | Target(s) on reducing food waste to disposal (landfill and incineration) | No | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158584 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54111 | City of Iowa City | 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 | 31 | Total Emissions (excluding generation of grid-supplied energy) | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 158585 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35393 | City of St Louis | 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. | 3 | Focus area of plan | 1 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 158586 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 31117 | City of Toronto | 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. | 8 | Timescale of reduction / savings / energy production | 15 | Projected lifetime | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158587 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54114 | City of Asheville | 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. | 1 | Collaboration area | 5 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 158588 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35859 | City of Cleveland | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | Re-stating previous emissions inventories | 4.14a | Please provide your city’s recalculated total city-wide emissions figures for any previous inventories along with Scope 1, 2 and 3 breakdowns where applicable. | 7 | File name and attach your new inventory | 6 | City of Cleveland - Inventory Report Updated Jan 2021 2010-2018.xlsx | City of Cleveland Inventory Report 2010-2018 Upd Jan2021.xlsx | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 158589 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35870 | City of Miami | 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. | 8 | Timescale of reduction / savings / energy production | 3 | Other, please specify : By 2030 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158590 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 55799 | Arlington, VA | United States of America | North America | Energy | 8.2 | What scale is the electricity mix data reported above? | 0 | 0 | Utility electricity mix reported | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||||
| 158591 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59631 | City of San Leandro, 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 | 2 | Electric | "0" denotes unknown for question 11.4 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158592 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 63999 | City of Miami Beach, FL | United States of America | North America | Adaptation | Adaptation Actions | 3.1 | Describe how your city identified and prioritized adaptation actions to implement. | 2 | Comment | 1 | Identifying and prioritizing adaptation actions | Multiple channels for stakeholder engagement along all steps of adaptation action implementation have been utilized to help prioritize projects including: informational stakeholder meetings, open houses, and public meetings along with the city's own analysis helped to prioritize adaptation actions.To streamline the process, in 2019, Jacobs was awarded the Miami Beach Master Design Consultant for Integrated Water Management and three priority tasks were assigned to Jacobs including, Task 3 Neighbourhood Project Prioritization, an objective evaluation system to prioritize implementation of the City of Miami Beach’s various capital infrastructure projects. The City requested that the neighbourhood project prioritization consider flood risk management, public safety, and the supply reliability of key City services. .The Project Evaluation Framework was publicly vetted and then applied to individual capital improvement projects. It included the following categories: • Coastal flooding risk management • Potable water distribution/fire suppression • Emergency/critical facilities and roads • Sanitary sewer delivery • Rain stormwater management • Environmental benefits • Economic development • Pedestrian and bicycle mobility • Road classification • Road conditions • Aesthetics Weight factors for each category were established to align with the management goals of City leadership.Projects were scored and ranked and then logically grouped into geographical Project Group Areas, each of which formed the basis for a future DCP. At the City’s request, Jacobs developed two planning scenarios for the PGAs to identify the range of options for implementation: Scenario 1: Flood Risk and Scenario 2: Flood Risk with Water & Sewer (to minimize construction disruption).Each scenario was further evaluated based on total project score and total project score normalized by population served. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 158593 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54026 | City of Tacoma | 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. | 7 | Customer-drive carshares (e.g. Car2Go, Drivenow) fleet size | 3 | Hybrid | Don't have this data available. | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158594 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35274 | City of Portland, ME | United States of America | North America | Governance and Data Management | Governance | 1.0a | Please detail which goals and targets are incorporated in your city’s master plan and describe how these goals are addressed in the table below. | 1 | Goal type | 2 | Renewable energy targets | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158595 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 59633 | City of Santa Cruz, CA | United States of America | North America | Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Target setting | 5.0a | Please provide details of your total city-wide base year emissions reduction (absolute) target(s). In addition, you may add rows to provide details of your sector-specific targets, by providing the base year emissions specific to that target. | 10 | Percentage of target achieved so far | 1 | 100 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158596 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 848568 | Metropolitan Council, Twin Cities | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.4 | Which gases are included in your city-wide emissions inventory? | 0 | 0 | N20 | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||||
| 158597 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 841964 | City of Hallandale Beach, FL | United States of America | North America | City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.6c | Please provide a breakdown of your GHG emissions by scope. Where values are not available, please use the comment field to indicate the reason why. | 3 | Scope 1 emissions from grid-supplied energy generation within the city boundary | 1 | City-wide emissions | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | ||
| 158598 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 54113 | City of Flagstaff | United States of America | North America | Transport | 10.3 | What are the total number of journeys made in your city each year by each mode below? | 1 | Number of journeys made each year | 5 | Walking | Question not applicable | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158599 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 35894 | Ville de Montreal | Canada | 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. | 1 | Climate hazards | 1 | Extreme Precipitation > Rain storm | 07/16/2021 01:47:15 | |||
| 158600 | Cities 2020 | 2020 | 58513 | City of Medford | 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. | 9 | Activity level (per emission factor unit denominator) | 5 | 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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