Mayor Ted Wheeler | Mayor Ted Wheeler Official Photo
Mayor Ted Wheeler | Mayor Ted Wheeler Official Photo
BPS announced publication of a progress report highlighting the progress made in the first year of the Climate Emergency Workplan. The CEW outlines 47 priority actions that multiple City bureaus identified as necessary to complete in three years in order to meet 2030 and 2050 Climate goals.
In the first of its three-year plan, City staff successfully completed two of the 47 actions and 92% remain on track. City bureaus notably advanced the priorities of the CEW in the following areas:
- Transportation: Advancements in decarbonizing the transportation sector
- Resilience: Made Portland more resilient to extreme flooding and heat events
- Equity: Strategic investments in East Portland
The need to address the climate crisis is clear. Portlanders experienced record-shattering heat, choking smoke from increasing wildfires, more frequent floods, and other extreme climate events over the past several years. Scientists also recently published a warning that the next five summers will be the hottest on record. In fact, Earth is likely to pass 1.5 degrees Celsius of warming over pre-industrial levels, a key climate threshold, by 2027.
There is still time to avert the worst impacts of climate change if we take the actions outlined in the CEW, but the window grows ever smaller. We have a plan, the necessary technologies, and the time to change the course of events for the Portlanders today and for the future. We simply must keep doing more.
View the report and learn more about the City’s progress in the Climate Emergency Workplan 2023 Progress Report on our website.
Original source can be found here