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Website Comment Summary
Many comments in this category are qualitatively similar and synergistic
with those offered for other goals, especially air quality, congestion,
and energy. Nearly all comments are supportive of the overall climate
change goal, but some concerns are clear regarding whether NYC can
truly make a meaningful difference in the climate realm, and whether
a 30% reduction may be too conservative a goal for 2030.
Reducing emissions from the transportation sector represents the
largest proportion of comments. Many wish to accomplish the overall
goal of reducing traffic through congestion pricing, higher bridge
tolls, a citywide carbon tax, promoting carpooling and transit use,
and creating incentives and infrastructure for cycling. To reduce
emissions of the cars that remain, suggestions include tightening
automobile emissions standards and promoting hybrid and alternative-fuel
vehicles.
Encouraging efficiency, conservation, and green energy are three
consistently voiced goals. Comments present a diverse list of potential
targets for new efficiency standards and incentives, such as appliances,
insulation, lighting, heating, air conditioning, and thermostats.
Inventive comments suggest that the city require electricity prices
to change on an hourly basis, conduct energy audits for all property
transfers, require efficient lighting on all scaffolding throughout
the city, and impose an enhanced sales tax (or ban) on incandescent
bulbs. Many encourage incentives for green buildings, stronger energy
codes, increased education, enhanced recycling, tree planting, and
green roofs. Finally, many support the creation of incentives for
renewable energy technologies such as residential and commercial
solar, rooftop wind, tidal turbines, and distributed generation.
To best promote these activities, comments advocate developing strategic
partnerships between government and business, and advertising all
available funding sources and opportunities to developers and the
public.
Others focused on what the city government itself can do to reduce
its carbon emissions. Suggestions include requiring city buildings
to meet green building standards, mandating the use of hybrid and
alternative-fuel cabs and city vehicles, upgrading city vehicle
emissions controls, turning off lights at night, requiring a city
renewable portfolio standard, and publicizing the city’s own climate
change efforts in order to encourage private actions.
Town Hall Comment Summary
Reduce Vehicular Emissions
The greatest number of suggestions for this goal addressed the reduction
of vehicle emissions by: incentivizing vehicles using cleaner fuels
or hybrid technology (with particular mentions of targeting city
fleets, taxis and buses), promoting biking and walking by improving
bike and pedestrian infrastructure, enforcing idling laws, increasing
the use of mass transit, and reducing car usage.
Reduce Emissions from Buildings
Participants from all boroughs also voiced support for improving
the energy efficiency and environmental performance of buildings.
The most common suggestions included: "build more green roofs,"
"expand and enforce the Green Building Law," encourage or require
the use of compact fluorescent lighting, improve efficiency of heating
and cooling systems, turn lights off in city/school/commercial buildings
at night, and generally retrofit buildings to be more energy efficient.
There was an individual suggestion to "increase education amongst
developers and landlords."
Promote Conservation, Recycling and Education
The next most common category of suggestions involved the promotion
of environmental education and consciousness, with a focus on educating
the public about global warming and its effects (with particular
mention of students and landlords), promoting composting (with a
suggestion that composting be "specifically managed by the Department
of Sanitation), increasing and improving recycling, emphasizing
conservation and reuse of products, and encouraging businesses and
the city (which "should be a role model") to purchase "recycled
goods" or "green supplies." An individual also suggested that "green
purchasing patterns" be encouraged in general.
Miscellaneous
Numerous calls were made to "expand tree plantings" and other vegetative
cover throughout the City. Policy-oriented suggestions included:
implement a carbon tax, "use market-based techniques to control
emissions," and "promote environmental pricing versus market pricing
of goods." Several participants also pointed to increasing alternative
energy sources such as solar ("give major tax breaks or incentives"),
vertical wind turbines, hydro, tidal, and waste-to-energy. With
respect to increased violent storms or rising sea levels due to
global warming, participants called for better preparedness measures
and education.
Community Leader Comment Summary
Reduce Vehicular Emissions
Community leaders from four boroughs provided numerous ideas for
reducing vehicular emissions by lessening "overall car usage in
NYC." Ideas echoed those expressed for Goal 2 (Improve Travel Times),
including more bike infrastructure, "end free parking in Manhattan,"
and congestion pricing. In addition, several ideas were provided
for minimizing vehicular emissions through the promotion of lower-emissions
vehicles (such as "small cars," hybrid vehicles, electric buses
or other vehicles using bio-fuels) and the establishment/enforcement
of emissions regulations.
Reduce Emissions from Other Sources
Regarding other sources of greenhouse gas emissions, community leaders
highlighted cleaner industries, improved waste handling/recycling
performance, more efficient green buildings, and cleaner energy
sources. Several suggestions were made to establish more incentives
or regulations to "cap industrial emissions" and "encourage green
industries in NYC." Individual comments were made to lessen consumer
impact on greenhouse gas emissions by encouraging shopping bag re-use
and taxing plastic goods.
Other Policy Support
Policy suggestions included: establish or participate in carbon
markets, plant more trees, push for federal policy change, increase
regional cooperation, increase public education, and "equitably
distribute benefits throughout all initiatives."
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