New York City: PlaNYC and GreeNYC

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NYC GHG Inventory and Carbon Mitigation Strategy City Climate Leadership Awards

September 5, 2013


Mayor Bloomberg released PlaNYC in 2007, a comprehensive sustainability plan to create a greener, greater New York City. The 2011 Update focuses on 10 issues:

Housing and Neighborhoods Parks and Public Space

Brownfields Waterways Water Supply

Transportation Energy Air Quality Solid Waste Climate Change


The culminating goal of PlaNYC is to reduce citywide greenhouse gas emissions by 30% from 2005 levels by 2030.

Source: NYC Mayor’s Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability and M.J. Beck Consulting, LLC


You can’t manage what you can’t measure. New York City has conducted annual GHG emissions inventories since 2007 •

Citywide GHG emissions

Emissions from City government facilities and operations

Updates reflect new or revised data and updated methodologies


New York City tracks GHG emissions by sector and source

Source: New York City Mayor’s Office


Calculating GHG Emissions from Electricity NYC calculates its own electricity emissions coefficient •

Power plant emissions data from U.S. databases

Information from local utilities •

Total electricity demand

Contracts for imported electricity

Steam generation


2011 Results: NYC’s GHG emissions are 16% below 2005 levels 2005 Baseline

Changes in the electricity supply account for 68% of the decrease in GHG emissions since 2005

- 16%

Source: New York City Mayor’s Office


New Yorkers are becoming more efficient. Total energy consumption remained flat even as the city grew.

Source: NYC Mayor’s Office, US Bureau of Economic Analysis, US Census Bureau, NYC Department of Finance


The carbon intensity of the electricity supply decreased by 31%

31%


Fuel switching and efficient generation accounted for reductions in the electricity sector Fuel Purchases for In-City Power Generation

Fuel Prices for Electricity Generation in NY


Existing buildings dominate New York City’s GHG footprint.

75%

85%

of citywide emissions come from buildings

of existing buildings will still be here in 2030

Source: NYC Mayor’s Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability; AP Worldwide Photos


New York City has five major initiatives to help mitigate GHG emissions from buildings The Greener, Greater Buildings Plan • Comprehensive plan to increase the efficiency of NYC’s largest buildings

NYC Green Codes Task Force • 111 proposals to green local building codes, with 51 aimed at reducing energy use

30x17 and Mayor’s Carbon Challenge 30x17

3017

• City government and targeted sectors will achieve accelerated GHG reductions of 30% in 10 years

NYC Clean Heat • Regulations and assistance to eliminate heavy heating oil in NYC

GreeNYC • Public engagement arm of PlaNYC to encourage behavior change


The Greener, Greater Buildings Plan Landmark package of laws to address 13,000 large properties that make up half of the city’s square footage and 45% of the energy used in buildings.

New York City Energy Code

Benchmarking

Audits and Retro-commissioning

Lighting Upgrades and Submetering


More than 2 billion square feet of space has undergone benchmarking. Citywide Energy Use by Sector

Source Energy Use Intensity (EUI) in Large Buildings

Source: NYC Mayor’s Office

Results •

The highest energy users consume 3-5 times more energy than lowest energy users

Reaching average energy use would reduce citywide GHG emissions by 9%

Up Next: Mandatory energy audits and retro-commissioning, beginning 2013


Resources were developed to support the Greener, Greater Buildings Plan • FINANCING: New York City Energy Efficiency Corporation • Provides $37 million in loan products for energy efficiency retrofits • www.nyceec.com • LEASE LANGUAGE: Energy Aligned Clause • Solves the “split incentive” problem for commercial leases • www.nyc.gov/eac • OUTREACH AND EDUCATION: Green Light New York • Provides trainings for code compliance, benchmarking, auditing, lighting, etc. • www.greenlightny.org


The Mayor’s Carbon Challenge Certain sectors are voluntarily reducing building-based GHG emissions at an accelerated pace.

Six early achievers: No single pathway to 30% Barnard College: -34.1%

The Rockefeller University: -30.6%

Fashion Institute of Technology: -40.0%

New York Hospital Queens: -30.9%

New York University: -30.0%

Weill Cornell Medical College: -30.1% Emissions by Fuel Type (lbs/ft2) 90 80 70 60

Steam

50 40 30 20 10 0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Electricity


Eliminating the Use of Heavy Heating Oil Eliminating No.6 heating oil will reduce GHG emissions by more than 1 million metric tons and is one of the highest impact strategies to improve air quality.

Heating Oil Regulations •

Phase out No. 6 oil by 2015

All buildings on cleanest fuels by 2030

NYC Clean Heat Program •

Information

Technical assistance

Financing & incentives

Outcomes •

Completed over 2,000 oil conversions

Halfway to goal to reduce PM2.5 by 50%

Reaching goal will save ~120 lives and prevent ~300 hospital visits each year


GreeNYC: New York City’s public engagement arm Approach to engaging residents: • Strong brand

• Data-driven campaign content • Strategic messaging • Traditional and city-owned media • Unify the City’s voice • Develop NGO and private sector partnerships


Behavior change can achieve significant GHG reductions Consumer Study 1. Which actions will have the biggest impact on the environment? 2. What messages are most effective? 3. How can we measure our success? Top PlaNYC Levers for Reducing GHG Emissions

Top 10 Actions to Reduce GHG Emissions

1. Replace car with hybrid 2. Switch to energy produced from cleans sources 3. Perform a home energy audit 4. Replace car with electric

5. Weatherize your home 6. Air dry clothes and use cold water to wash 7. Replace light bulbs 8. Eat produce in season 9. Turn down thermostat in winter 10.Regularly tune up car


Monitoring and Evaluation Example: Anti-Idling Campaign GreeNYC campaign media tagged “To report idling, call 311.” Call Service experienced a 111% increase in calls about idling during period of the campaign

Idling-Related 311 Call Volume Campaign Period 800

2008 2009

700 600 500 Number of Calls

400 300 200 100 0 JAN

FEB

MAR

APR

MAY

JUN

JUL

AUG

For more info email Roya Kazemi: rkazemi@cityhall.nyc.gov Visit nyc.gov/greenyc

SEP

OCT

NOV

DEC


www.nyc.gov/planyc www.nyc.gov/gbee Jenna Tatum jtatum@cityhall.nyc.gov


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