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2021 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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 192851 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59563 | City of Takoma Park, MD | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Target setting | 5.2 | Is your city-wide emissions reduction target(s) conditional on the success of an externality or component of policy outside of your control? | 0 | 0 | Yes | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 192852 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58483 | City of Surrey, BC | Canada | North America | 5. 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. | 11 | Description of stakeholder engagement process | 5 | INTERNAL ENGAGEMENTThrough 2014, we consulted with City staff, senior management and Council on the Charter update. A staff survey with over 700 City staff responding sInternal engagement also included interviews with Council, the senior management team, and a number of staff involved in related initiatives. COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENTCommunity input for the Charter update was obtained in 2015 and 2016. The focus of the engagement was on the eight organizing themes and under each theme, the overarching goals, desired outcomes and strategic directions. Engagement began with a series of stakeholder workshops held in April and May 2015. To kick off the engagement, all City Advisory Committees members were invited to attend a workshop held in April 2015. This was followed by seven theme based stakeholder workshops held in April and May, attended by over 160 stakeholders and City staff. Surrey citizens also had a chance to engage in the Charter update at the April 2015 Party for the Planet event and through City Speaks and social media. A subsequent stakeholder workshop was held in October 2015, focused on the draft desired outcomes and strategic directions. A public Open House was held at City Hall in November 2015 to present these draft goals, outcomes and strategic directions. In addition to a November 2015 panel event featuring the Ecofiscal Commission, a public event with SFU brought together 125 Surrey citizens in a “residents lab” to discuss what the City could look like in the future; this event was organized around the draft outcomes for the new Charter and provided innovative ideas and helpful feedback for the Charter 2.0. A final stakeholder workshop was held in February 2016 focused on revised strategic directions and indicators, and opportunities for collaboration in implementation. This was followed by final consultations on the draft Charter in March and April 2016, which included sharing the Charter 2.0 with all stakeholders and through the sustainability website; seeking feedback from City Advisory Committee meetings; providing information through social mediaand the sustainability e-newsletter; obtaining feedback through City Speaks; and meeting with individual community members to nreview their detailed comments and suggestions. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192853 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54048 | City of Knoxville, TN | United States of America | North America | 4. 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) | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192854 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59667 | City of Port Coquitlam, BC | Canada | North America | 4. 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 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192855 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 74531 | Santa Fe County, NM | United States of America | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.2 | Please identify and describe the factors that most greatly affect your city’s ability to adapt to climate change and indicate how those factors either support or challenge this ability. | 1 | Factors that affect ability to adapt | 4 | Community engagement | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192856 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35884 | City of San Diego, CA | United States of America | North America | 5. 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. | 1 | Publication title and attach document | 1 | Climate Action Plan | CAP.pdf | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192857 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 43910 | City of Columbus, OH | United States of America | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Goals | 3.3 | Please describe the main goals of your city’s adaptation efforts and the metrics / KPIs for each goal. | 1 | Adaptation goal | 12 | Columbus Climate Adaptation Plan - Develop an emergency plan that can be implemented during a flood to ensure adequate transportation and logistics for critical resources | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192858 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 43909 | City of Orlando, FL | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.11 | Please provide city-wide average air pollution metrics from the monitoring sites within your city for the most recent three years. | 1 | Most recent years available (select year) | 5 | NO2 (1 year (annual) mean) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192859 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 862673 | City of Selkirk, MB | Canada | North America | 4. 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 | 30 | Total Generation of grid-supplied energy | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192860 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54088 | City of Peterborough, ON | Canada | North America | 2. 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 | 2 | The City of Peterborough is experiencing an increase in average rainfall precipitation making the city more prone to localized flooding. There have been multiple events of localized flooding from extreme rainfall over the last 20 years. Extreme rainfall events are projected to heighten for Peterborough due to increasing humid weather conditions in summer months and raising the likelihood that more acute flooding will impact the community in the future. To counteract this risk, the City has put in place measures to help prevent the risk of flooding through the promotion of low impact development (LID) for residential properties. This initiative supports the naturalization of properties to absorb rain and retain the precipitation as long as possible before discharging it into receiving infrastructure. Along with rain gardens, rain barrels have also been encouraged to be adopted by residents to store rainfall as well as utilizing the rain for watering gardens and lawns. In addition to the LID, Green UP, a local community environmental organization has been actively working towards depaving driveways, curbs, and dead-end roads with permeable materials to aid in absorbing rainfall. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192861 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54098 | City of Thunder Bay, ON | Canada | North America | 10. Transport | 10.7 | How many public access EV charging points do you have in your city and/or metropolitan area for the following types. | 2 | Number of charging points in your metropolitan area | 2 | Fast 7-22kw | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192862 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 31177 | Salt Lake City, UT | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | GCoM Emission Factor and Activity Data | 4.14a | Please provide a summary of emissions factors and activity data used in your inventory. | 5 | Gas | 0 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192863 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 74463 | Village of Park Forest, IL | United States of America | North America | 4. 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) | 15 | Waste > Biological treatment | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192864 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54029 | City of Spokane, WA | United States of America | North America | 13. Waste | 13.4 | What is the amount of solid waste being treated (tonnes/year) through the methods listed. | 1 | Tonnes/year | 2 | Recycling | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192865 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50544 | City of Aurora, IL | United States of America | North America | 4. 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. | 2 | Where data is not available, please explain why | 2 | Stationary Energy: energy use – Scope 2 (I.X.2) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192866 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35393 | City of St Louis, MO | United States of America | North America | 5. 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. | 5 | Base year | 1 | 2005 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192867 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 43912 | City of Edmonton, AB | Canada | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | Historical emissions inventories | 4.13 | Please provide details on any historical, base year or recalculated city-wide emissions inventories your city has, in order to allow assessment of targets in the table below. | 9 | Comments | 1 | Annual inventory preparation includes update of baseline emissions for any methodology changes / updates. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192868 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50550 | City of Buffalo, NY | United States of America | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Planning Process | 3.4 | Does your local/regional government apply a Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) system for monitoring the implementation of adaptation goals and targets as part of the climate adaptation plan (or integrated climate action plan)? | 2 | Description of Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) system applied | 1 | Monitoring & Evaluation (M&E) system | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192869 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58626 | City of Racine, WI | United States of America | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Risk and Vulnerability Assessment | 2.0a | Please select the primary process or methodology used to undertake the risk and vulnerability assessment of your city. | 2 | Description | 1 | Risk assessment methodology | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192870 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 61790 | City of Emeryville, CA | United States of America | North America | 5. 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. | 12 | Is this target considered to be your cities most ambitious target? | 1 | Yes | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192871 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 863412 | City of Tumwater, WA | United States of America | North America | 4. 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 | 14 | Waste > Solid waste disposal | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192872 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 49334 | City of Richmond, VA | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.11 | Does your city have a strategy, or other policy document, in place for how to measure and reduce consumption-based GHG emissions in your city? | 1 | Response | 6 | Aviation | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192873 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58357 | City of West Hollywood, CA | United States of America | North America | 3. 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 | 4 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 192874 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59552 | City of Davis, CA | United States of America | North America | 2. 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. | 7 | Please identify which vulnerable populations are affected | 2 | Indigenous population | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192875 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 848568 | Metropolitan Council, Twin Cities | United States of America | North America | 2. 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 | 1 | Extreme Precipitation > Rain storm | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192876 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59644 | City of Culver City, CA | United States of America | North America | 5. 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. | 17 | Total cost provided by the majority funding source (currency) | 8 | 5200000 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192877 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35475 | City of Calgary, AB | Canada | North America | 2. 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. | 7 | Please identify which vulnerable populations are affected | 6 | Persons living in sub-standard housing | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192878 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54105 | City of Duluth, MN | United States of America | North America | 7. Local Government Emissions | Local Government Operations GHG Emissions Data | 7.2 | Please indicate the category that best describes the boundary of your local government operations emissions inventory. | 0 | 0 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 192879 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35884 | City of San Diego, CA | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.1 | What is the mode share of each transport mode in your city for passenger transport? | 7 | Taxis or shared vehicles (i.e. for hire vehicles) | 1 | Please complete | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 192880 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 49333 | City of Louisville, KY | United States of America | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Goals | 3.3 | Please describe the main goals of your city’s adaptation efforts and the metrics / KPIs for each goal. | 2 | Climate hazards that adaptation goal addresses | 3 | Extreme hot temperature > Heat wave | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192881 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50555 | City of Hamilton, ON | Canada | North America | 4. 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. | 5 | Global Warming Potential (select relevant IPCC Assessment Report) | 1 | IPCC 5th AR (2013) | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192882 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54114 | City of Asheville, NC | United States of America | North America | 5. 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. | 7 | Intensity unit (Emissions per) | 0 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192883 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 834096 | City of Richmond, BC | Canada | North America | 4. 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 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192884 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 52897 | City of Aspen, CO | United States of America | North America | 8. Energy | 8.4 | Please report the following energy access related information for your city. | 1 | Electrification ratio of the city | 1 | Energy access | 100 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192885 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54119 | City of Palo Alto, CA | United States of America | North America | 2. 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 | 5 | Wild fire > Forest fire | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192886 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 63562 | City of South Bend, IN | United States of America | North America | 2. 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 | 2 | Increased resource demand | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192887 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 848568 | Metropolitan Council, Twin Cities | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.4 | Provide information on GHG emissions from the transport sector. | 2 | Inventory year (numerical year) | 6 | Freight transport | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192888 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58621 | Town of Blacksburg, VA | United States of America | North America | 4. 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) | 11 | Transportation > Aviation | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192889 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54128 | City of Reno, NV | United States of America | North America | 4. 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 | 30 | Total Generation of grid-supplied energy | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192890 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59605 | City of Colton, CA | United States of America | North America | 7. Local Government Emissions | Local Government Operations GHG Emissions Data | 7.8 | Please indicate if your local government operations emissions have increased, decreased, or stayed the same since your last emissions inventory, and please describe why. | 1 | Change in emissions | 1 | Please explain | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192891 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54048 | City of Knoxville, TN | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.4 | Provide information on GHG emissions from the transport sector. | 3 | Comment | 5 | Passenger Transport: Taxi/TNC | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192892 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 49345 | City of Birmingham, AL | United States of America | North America | 4. 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 | 29 | Generation of grid-supplied energy > Local renewable generation | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192893 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54105 | City of Duluth, MN | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.4 | Provide information on GHG emissions from the transport sector. | 1 | GHG emissions (tonne CO2e) | 5 | Passenger Transport: Taxi/TNC | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192894 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50578 | City of Windsor, ON | Canada | North America | 3. 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. | 10 | Majority funding source | 37 | Local | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192895 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50544 | City of Aurora, IL | United States of America | North America | 4. 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 | 1 | Stationary energy > Residential buildings | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192896 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58868 | Regional Municipality of Durham, ON | Canada | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Target setting | 5.0b | Please provide details of your total fixed level target(s). | 11 | Is this target considered to be your cities most ambitious target? | 0 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192897 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50566 | City of Anchorage, AK | United States of America | North America | 5. 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 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192898 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35894 | Ville de Montreal, QC | Canada | North America | 9. Buildings | 9.1 | Does your city have emissions reduction targets (government operations, city wide targets) or energy efficiency targets for the following building types? | 3 | Energy efficiency target | 1 | Commercial | Yes | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 192899 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 31090 | District of Columbia, DC | United States of America | North America | 4. 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 | 5 | Stationary energy > Agriculture | NO | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 192900 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 63941 | Broward County, FL | United States of America | North America | 2. Climate Hazards and Vulnerability | Climate Hazards | 2.3a | Please report on how climate change impacts health outcomes and health services in your city. | 4 | Identify the climate-related health issues faced by your city | 1 | Heat-related illnesses | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 |
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Description
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 2021. The platform is still open and the dataset is updated daily to reflect new submissions.
To view the cities 2021 questionnaire guidance, including all questions asked to cities in 2021, visit https://www.cdp.net/en/guidance/guidance-for-cities.
For any questions, including guidance on how to reference this data in your own work, please contact cities@cdp.net.
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 some regional councils.
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.
This dataset contains data pulled from the CDP Cities North America Authority Region.
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