
San Diego County is on track to meet 2020 greenhouse gas reduction targets through actions including reducing water use, planting thousands of local trees and acquiring open and agricultural space, the County’s first Climate Action Plan update reported this week.
The Climate Action Plan 2018 Annual Monitoring Report, which can be found on the County’s Climate Action Plan website, states that the County cut 103,643 metric tons of carbon dioxide between 2014 and 2018. That equals 78% of the 132,205 metric-ton target the County intends to meet by 2020. Metric tons of carbon dioxide are the standard used to measure greenhouse gas emissions. The County conducted its first inventory of greenhouse gas emissions in 2014 and uses the 2014 inventory as its baseline for measuring success.
The County’s Board of Supervisors approved the Climate Action Plan in February 2018. The plan was designed to shrink greenhouse gas emissions in the County’s unincorporated communities and County facilities through 26 enforceable, achievable, quantifiable measures. The measures were built around increasing water efficiency, decreasing air pollution and waste, conserving agricultural and open space, and improving access to sustainable transportation such as electric vehicles.
The plan’s environmental impact report is being challenged in court. However, the report states, with the physical effects of climate change becoming increasingly evident, the County is continuing to implement the plan’s strategies and measures to cut greenhouse gases and meet state targets.
County officials said the Climate Action Plan’s greenhouse gas reduction actions build off of efforts already in place and create new opportunities to meet sustainability goals while considering the unincorporated County’s suburban, semi-rural and rural character.
The plan was created with input from residents and more than 50 diverse environmental, business, and community stakeholder groups, collected by the County in more than 100 public workshops, meetings and events.
For more information, go to the County Climate Action Plan website.