My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Browse
Search
Res13 15258
RedwoodCity
>
City Clerk
>
Resolutions
>
City Council
>
Working
>
2010-2019
>
Res13 15258
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
10/11/2019 7:48:58 AM
Creation date
10/11/2019 7:48:47 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
CC Index
CC Index - Document Type
Resolution
Meeting Type
Regular
Agency Type
City Council
Date
4/22/2013
Description
RESOLUTION OF THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF REDWOOD CITY TO ADOPT THE REDWOOD CITY CLIMATE ACTION PLAN
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
59
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
04/22/2013 <br /> Redwood City has consistently been ahead of the curve on solid waste diversion, achieving a <br /> 55 percent diversion rate in the 2005 baseline year and exceeding 60 percent in recent years. <br /> The City has adopted an ordinance banning polystyrene foodware and a single use bag <br /> ordinance effective in 2013. Because of ineasures like these, not only is the AB 341 mandate of <br /> a 75 percent diversion rate by 2020 achievable for Redwood City, but this Plan proposes setting <br /> an 85 percent diversion rate goal for 2020. To help promote and meet that goal, the Plan <br /> proposes incrementally implementing a zero waste policy for municipal operations for marketing <br /> in advance of community programs and ordinances aimed at zero waste. Zero waste refers to <br /> an approach to minimizing solid waste through a variety of source reduction, reuse, recycling, <br /> and composting policies and programs. Actions would include, but are not limited to, <br /> developing an Environmentally Preferred Purchasing (EPP) policy, establishing a Zero Waste <br /> policy for municipal events, and requiring municipal recycling of construction and demolition <br /> debris. <br /> �.2 Community Measures <br /> As with the municipal measures, the measures for reducing communitywide emissions are <br /> divided into the same three categories corresponding to the major emissions sectors: energy, <br /> transportation and land use, and solid waste. The applicable General Plan goals are again <br /> included before the descriptions of the community measures. The City of Redwood City is <br /> likewise already in the process of implementing many of the community measures proposed <br /> below, and in some cases, this Plan simply recommends continuing implementation of existing <br /> measures. <br /> �.2.� Community Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy <br /> In the communitywide sector, as in the municipal sector, energy use in buildings and facilities <br /> provides the greatest opportunity for affordable emissions reductions. Because of the relative <br /> affordability of energy efficiency measures and the fact that the same principle of"reduce, then <br /> produce" applies in the community as in municipal operations, these measures focus on energy <br /> efficiency rather than renewable energy. Reducing energy use by implementing energy <br /> efficiency measures first means that renewable energy systems can be smaller and less <br /> expensive. This section identifies the related General Plan goal and describes the <br /> communitywide measures that will promote energy and water efficiency in both new and <br /> existing residential and commercial buildings. <br /> General Plan Goal (NR-4): Maximize energy conservation and renewable energy <br /> production to reduce consumption of natural resources and fossil fuels. <br /> 12 <br /> RESO.#15258 <br /> MUFF#205 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.