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2021 Full Cities Dataset for Excel - North America
This is a filtered view based on 2021 Full Cities Dataset.
| 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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 219551 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35853 | City of Baltimore, MD | 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 | 14 | Waste > Solid waste disposal | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219552 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 841964 | City of Hallandale Beach, 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. | 10 | Completeness of data (%) | 6 | O3 (Daily maximum 8 hour mean) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219553 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 74414 | Boulder County, CO | United States of America | North America | 8. Energy | 8.0a | Please provide details of your renewable energy target(s) and how the city plans to meet those targets. | 6 | Percentage renewable energy of total energy in base year | 0 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 219554 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 49330 | Kansas City, MO | United States of America | North America | 6. 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'. | 8 | Total cost of project | 4 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 219555 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 52894 | City of Winston-Salem, NC | 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) | 20 | IPPU > Product use | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219556 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50572 | City of Saint Paul, MN | United States of America | 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 | 2 | This is the City of Saint Paul's total emissions for 2018. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219557 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59572 | District of Saanich, BC | Canada | North America | 10. Transport | 10.1 | What is the mode share of each transport mode in your city for passenger transport? | 5 | Walking | 1 | Please complete | 8 | in 2020 for 2019 reporting year i'm now using the 2017 stats from the climate plan page 34. in 2018 I realized that was not the right measurement and am now using the 2011 mode share split in the Active Transportation Plan. in 2017 I used I'm using the "within district" trips by travel mode over the 24 hours of the study: https://www.crd.bc.ca/docs/default-source/regional-planning-pdf/transportation/crd-2017-od-survey-report-20180622-sm.pdf?sfvrsn=4fcbe7ca_2 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219558 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 848568 | Metropolitan Council, Twin Cities | 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. | 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 | 30 | Total Generation of grid-supplied energy | NE | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219559 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54113 | City of Flagstaff, AZ | United States of America | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Planning | 3.2a | Please provide more information on your plan that addresses climate change adaptation and/or resilience 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. | 5 | Year of adoption of adaptation plan by local government | 1 | 2012 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219560 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 49339 | City and County of Honolulu, HI | 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. | 7 | Sectors/areas adaptation action applies to | 19 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 219561 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54096 | City of Saint John, NB | Canada | North America | 6. 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 | 7 | Relocating Saint John Energy substation at Smythe Street out of flood risk area. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219562 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 31090 | District of Columbia, DC | 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. | 12 | Action description and implementation progress | 16 | Sustainable DC has set a goal of reducing the number of commuter trips made by car to 25% by 2032, and the Clean Energy DC plan looks at electrifying those remaining vehicles as strategies to reduce emissions from motor vehicles.The District has reduced registration fees for hybrids and electric vehicles, and exempts electric vehicles from the excise tax. Title V of the Clean Energy DC Omnibus Act required incorporating fuel economy of motor vehicles into the excise tax calculation, and new changes became effective February 1, 2021 (see https://dmv.dc.gov/node/155452 for more details.) Residents claiming the District Earned Income Tax Credit are exempt from these modifications. DOEE continues to gather EV and hybrid registration data from the Department of Motor Vehicles, to help prioritize sites for the deployment of EV chargers. In May 2018, Mayor Bowser signed an order to implement the Clean Cars Act of 2008 to maintain strong vehicle standards even as the current national government prepares draft regulations to roll back vehicle emissions and fuel economy standards. In July 2020, the District signed a Memorandum of Understanding to work collaboratively with 15 states to advance and accelerate the market for electric medium- and heavy-duty vehicles, to ensure that 100% of all new heavy vehicle sales are zero emission vehicles by 2050, and reaching 30% by 2030.The Department of For-Hire Vehicles offered an incentive program -- $10,000 to help cab owners purchase electric vehicles -- to encourage the purchase of electric vehicles. The purchase of an EV or a plug-in hybrid vehicle is also one of four limited pathways to obtaining a city taxi license (H tag). Today there are 135 electric and 885 hybrid taxis operating in the city and two charging stations at Union Station (a large taxi hub) for their use.The Clean Energy DC Omnibus Amendment Act of 2018 requires the District to develop a transportation electrification program, requiring all public buses, private fleets with a capacity of 50+, and taxis to be zero-emission vehicles by 2045. Furthermore, it requires the District’s Department of Transportation to submit a plan for achieving 100% replacement of public buses, including school buses, with electric buses upon the end of their useful life, by calendar year 2021.Finally, in its own procurement, District Government has multiple strategies to reduce GHG emissions from its municipal fleet. The Department of Public Work’s (DPW) multiyear capital improvement plan establishes yearly goals for vehicle replacement set to attain maximum fuel efficiency and meet or exceed emissions standards, including goals to increase electric and hybrid vehicles. DPW is installing a 50 new electric charging stations per year at District agency facilities with a proposed six-year budget of $1M. Station locations will coincide with those District agencies that purchase electric vehicles. The District uses biodiesel blends in all of its diesel vehicles. The district’s anti-idling regulation (20 DCMR 900) applies to government-owned vehicles and limits idling to 3 minutes or less. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219563 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 20113 | City of Vancouver, BC | 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. | 3 | Current probability of hazard | 9 | Do not know | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219564 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59657 | City of Beaverton, OR | 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. | 6 | End year of action | 1 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 219565 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 31182 | City of San Francisco, CA | United States of America | North America | 4. City-wide Emissions | City-wide GHG Emissions Data | 4.2 | Please indicate the category that best describes the boundary of your city-wide GHG emissions inventory. | 2 | Excluded sources / areas | 1 | Please explain | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219566 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 73669 | San Luis Obispo, CA | United States of America | North America | 8. Energy | 8.4 | Please report the following energy access related information for your city. | 2 | Average electricity consumption per commercial establishment (MWh/annum) | 1 | Energy access | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 219567 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35268 | City of Boston, MA | 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. | 12 | Please describe the impacts experienced so far, and how you expect the hazard to impact in the future | 7 | Dams on the Charles, Mystic and Neponset Rivers could be overtopped in case of riverine floods, causing extensive damage in surrounding neighborhoods. Historic flooding on the Charles led to infrastructure improvements along the Charles River Esplanade, leading to a mitigation of the risk. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219568 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50554 | City of Mesa, AZ | United States of America | North America | 13. Waste | 13.6 | Does your city have any of the following initiatives, policies and/or regulations. | 2 | Please provide more details and/or a link to more information about any of the proposed initiatives/policies/regulations | 7 | Criteria to design for durability, reparability and recycling in public procurement | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219569 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59707 | Town of Princeton, NJ | 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. | 9 | Target year | 1 | 2030 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219570 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50400 | City of Newark, NJ | 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. | 2 | Indicate if this factor either supports or challenges the ability to adapt | 9 | Challenges | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219571 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 57616 | City of Lake Forest, IL | 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. | 1 | Area affected by climate change | 0 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219572 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 49347 | City of Omaha, NE | 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 | 6 | Increased resource demand | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219573 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 31108 | City of Houston, TX | 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. | 5 | Number of monitoring stations | 3 | PM10 (1 year (annual) mean) | 1 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219574 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58636 | City of Bellingham, 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. | 5 | Emissions occurring outside the city boundary as a result of in-city activities (metric tonnes CO2e) | 26 | Generation of grid-supplied energy > Electricity-only generation | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219575 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50401 | City of Madison, WI | United States of America | North America | 13. Waste | 13.6 | Does your city have any of the following initiatives, policies and/or regulations. | 1 | Response | 6 | Sanitary landfill with leachate capture and landfill gas management system | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219576 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59536 | City of Kitchener, ON | Canada | North America | 3. Adaptation | Adaptation Planning | 3.2a | Please provide more information on your plan that addresses climate change adaptation and/or resilience 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. | 1 | Publication title and attach the document | 1 | Corporate Climate Action Plan | Corporate_Climate_Action_Plan.pdf | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219577 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 841964 | City of Hallandale Beach, FL | 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 | Marginalized groups | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219578 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 3417 | New York City, NY | United States of America | North America | 1. Governance and Data Management | Governance | 1.7 | Please provide information specifically on the impact of the COVID-19 economic response on climate action in your city and synergies between COVID-19 recovery interventions and climate action. | 2 | COVID-19 recovery interventions and climate action synergies | 1 | Response | Recovery interventions that develop or strengthen health/health care services in your city that enhance resilience to shocks, including climate change | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219579 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 50550 | City of Buffalo, NY | 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. | 11 | Description of stakeholder engagement process | 1 | The planning process engages stakeholders most actively through two means. A Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) that informs the development and production of anticipated project deliverables, including top leadership and senior management from departments and divisions that are accountable for transforming the Mayor’s vision into reality, specifically those that will have responsibility for implementing the Climate Resilience Plan. The City of Buffalo’s CSC Task Force includes local government, academic, and community representatives, and as such acts as the community advisory committee for the project. The primary objective for the CSC Task Force is to facilitate communication between the TAC and the community, especially as it relates to sharing knowledge of the project/components and encouraging public participation. In addition to the CSC Task Force, the City will invite external contributors to participate in the project, to provide expertise and capacity that is not readily available among existing sources, which may including consultant firm representatives; energy management providers; and local climate scientists. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219580 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59653 | City of Manhattan Beach, CA | United States of America | North America | 14. Water Security | Water Supply Management | 14.4a | Please provide more information on your city’s public Water Resource Management strategy. | 3 | Web link | 2 | https://www.citymb.info/departments/public-works/utilities-division/master-plans | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219581 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 43905 | City of San Antonio, TX | 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. | 5 | Means of implementation | 5 | Development and implementation of action plan | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219582 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35859 | City of Cleveland, OH | United States of America | 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 | 3 | Slow 3kw or below | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219583 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35860 | City of Dallas, TX | 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. | 1 | Emissions (metric tonnes CO2e) | 15 | TOTAL Scope 3 emissions | 569381 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219584 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 841964 | City of Hallandale Beach, FL | 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. | 1 | Emissions (metric tonnes CO2e) | 11 | Industrial Processes and Product Use – Scope 1 (IV) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219585 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 58357 | City of West Hollywood, 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. | 4 | Explanation of boundary choice where the inventory boundary differs from the city boundary (include inventory boundary, GDP and population) | 1 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 219586 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 49333 | City of Louisville, KY | 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 | 16 | Waste > Incineration and open burning | GHG emissions from the Incineration and Open Burning Sub-Sector are known to be occurring, but there is insufficient data to quantify these GHG emissions. | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219587 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59535 | Town of Vail, CO | United States of America | North America | 6. Opportunities | Finance and Economic Opportunities | 6.6 | Has your city tested their climate actions through pilot/demonstration projects? | 1 | Pilot/demonstration projects | 1 | Tested by city government | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219588 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 55419 | City of Miramar, FL | 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. | 1 | Sector | 0 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219589 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59572 | District of Saanich, BC | Canada | 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. | 6 | Emission factor value | 30 | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219590 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 35884 | City of San Diego, CA | United States of America | North America | 8. Energy | 8.2 | For each type of renewable energy within the city boundary, please report the installed capacity (MW) and annual generation (MWh). | 3 | Year data applies to | 1 | Solar PV | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 219591 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54113 | City of Flagstaff, AZ | 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 | 12 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 219592 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59535 | Town of Vail, CO | 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. | 1 | Emissions (metric tonnes CO2e) | 12 | Agriculture, Forestry and Land Use – Scope 1 (V) | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219593 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 53921 | City of Tempe, AZ | 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. | 1 | Direct emissions (metric tonnes CO2e) | 2 | Stationary energy > Commercial buildings & facilities | 989475.55 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219594 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 49333 | City of Louisville, KY | 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. | 6 | Most relevant assets / services affected overall | 5 | Water supply & sanitation | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219595 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 73666 | Cuyahoga County, OH | 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. | 4 | Average concentration for third most recent year available (ug/m3) | 3 | PM10 (1 year (annual) mean) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219596 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 852443 | Ferndale, MI | 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. | 1 | Climate hazards | 1 | Extreme Precipitation > Rain storm | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219597 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 848568 | Metropolitan Council, Twin Cities | United States of America | North America | 8. Energy | 8.1a | Please indicate the source mix of thermal energy (heating and cooling) consumed in your city. | 11 | Year data applies to | 1 | Thermal energy consumption | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||||
| 219598 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 59124 | City of Natchez, MS | United States of America | North America | 10. Transport | 10.4 | Provide information on GHG emissions from the transport sector. | 3 | Comment | 4 | Passenger Transport: Powered two/three wheelers (e.g. motorcycles) | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | |||
| 219599 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 54119 | City of Palo Alto, CA | United States of America | North America | 5. Emissions Reduction | Mitigation Planning | 5.5b | Please explain why you do not have a city climate change mitigation plan and any future plans to create one. | 2 | Comment | 1 | Please explain | Question not applicable | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 | ||
| 219600 | Cities 2021 | 2021 | 73530 | Town of Lexington, MA | 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. | 1 | Direct emissions (metric tonnes CO2e) | 8 | Transportation > On-road | 118073 | 01/20/2022 02:27:05 |
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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 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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