Pages

Friday, January 9, 2015

Shoreline joins ten cities and King County in an agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions

Executive Constantine and elected officials from the nine founding cities of the King County-Cities Climate Collaboration (K4C) – which together represent 63 percent of the County’s 2 million residents – celebrated formal adoption of ambitious joint county-city commitments to reduce greenhouse gas emissions at an event on Thursday. 

King County and eleven cities — Bellevue, Burien, Issaquah, Kirkland, Mercer Island, Redmond, Renton, Seattle, Shoreline, Snoqualmie, and Tukwila — are collaborating through the King County-Cities Climate Collaboration (K4C) to coordinate and enhance the effectiveness of local government climate and sustainability action.

“Elected leaders from across King County are working together to confront perhaps the greatest threat our region has ever faced,” said Executive Constantine. “We’re identifying specific actions that we can take to achieve ambitious, achievable goals that will reduce climate pollution.”

Through the King County-Cities Climate Collaboration (K4C), county and city staff are partnering on:

  • Outreach – to develop, refine, and utilize messaging and tools for climate change outreach to engage decision makers, other cities, and the general public
  • Coordination – to adopt consistent standards, benchmarks, strategies, and overall goals related to responding to climate change
  • Solutions – to share local success stories, challenges, data and products that support and enhance climate mitigation efforts by all partners
  • Funding and resources – to secure grant funding and other shared resource opportunities to support climate related projects and programs

The event was hosted at the Weyerhaeuser-King County Aquatic Center in Federal Way, which has recently undergone major energy renovations, including the largest installation of a made-in-Washington solar array. Replacing the 20-year-old boiler also reduced the facility’s energy consumption.

“Taken together, we estimate that these projects will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than 500 metric tons per year – the equivalent of taking 100 cars off the road,” said Christie True, Director of King County’s Department of Natural Resources and Parks.

Executive Constantine is also making Metro's bus fleet more efficient, which has decreased fuel consumption and carbon emissions. Metro will use a federal grant to test heavy-duty battery-powered buses.

True said the improvements reflect King County’s commitment to reducing the carbon footprint of its operations. They are the types of projects that are outlined in the Joint County-City Climate Commitments.

The projects were identified as part of a comprehensive energy audit of the building and were funded in part by two solar and energy grants totaling $975,000 from the Washington State Department of Commerce.


2 comments:

  1. Does this mean we'll finally shut down all of the drive through coffee joints? Come on people, get out of your car and stretch your legs as you get your coffee.

    ReplyDelete
  2. How much will this cost the taxpayers of King County?

    ReplyDelete

We encourage the thoughtful sharing of information and ideas. We expect comments to be civil and respectful, with no personal attacks or offensive language. We reserve the right to delete any comment.