MAYOR ERIC GARCETTI
CITY OF LOS ANGELES
SOCIAL MEDIA CHANNELS
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December 12. 2015
STATEMENT FROM LOS ANGELES MAYOR ERIC GARCETTI AND 33 OTHER U.S. #CLIMATEMAYORS ON ADOPTION OF HISTORIC PARIS CLIMATE AGREEMENT
Moments ago, negotiators at the Conference of Parties (COP21) U.N. climate talks in Paris adopted a final agreement. We want to thank and congratulate President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry–along with their fellow world leaders–for succeeding in the difficult task of creating and adopting a deal that represents historic and meaningful progress to combat climate change.
The agreement will unlock innovation and investment to reduce emissions and help our communities adapt to climate change. We are far from done, however. Cities generate 80% of the world’s GDP, produce 70% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, and house more than 50% of the world’s population. The agreement’s ultimate success will depend on local leadership.
As mayors, we will redouble our efforts to protect our communities from diminishing air quality, flooding, fires, extreme weather, famine, drought, economic downturn and other profound risks posed by climate change. Last week in Paris, more than 500 mayors and municipal representatives from 115 countries gathered at Paris’s City Hall to make clear that cities can and will lead on climate by increasing the energy efficiency of our buildings, expanding renewable energy, adding electric vehicles to our fleets, and leading the search for other solutions besides.
Thanks to the latest additions of Pittsburgh, Pa. and Eugene, Ore., our domestic Mayors National Climate Action Agenda is now 34 mayors strong. Collectively we represent more than 27 million Americans, a mayor-to-mayor initiative that offers a collaborative forum to share best practices and lessons learned. By our example in reporting and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, we are building political will across the nation. And with this, we are bringing technical innovation, lower utility bills and new green jobs to the residents of our cities.
As “Climate Mayors”, we will implement the new agreement, as we continue to work tirelessly with those we represent to find bigger and bolder ways to combat climate change. We will also continue to push back against Congress’s shortsighted efforts to reverse course, most recently on President Obama’s Clean Power Plan. And we will continue to share our ideals globally through our work with the leadership of more than 400 cities worldwide which have signed the Compact of Mayors.
It is by leading on climate action in our cities that we will build a healthier, more prosperous, more competitive America.
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On the eve of his attendance of the Paris climate talks, Mayor Eric Garcetti released his Climate Action Report, which showed L.A. had achieved 20% greenhouse gas emission reductions as of 2013, nearly halfway to the target of 45% reduction by 2025, as put forth in his Sustainable City Plan. The Plan also sets a target of reducing Los Angeles’ greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent by 2050. In September, Mayor Garcetti hosted a landmark meeting between American and Chinese officials that led to the “U.S.-China Climate Leaders Declaration.” Mayor Garcetti also served as a member of President Obama’s Task Force on Climate Preparedness and Resilience, serves on the C40 Steering Committee, and has joined the Compact of Mayors.
The MNCAA — co-founded by Mayor Garcetti along with Houston Mayor Annise Parker and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter — is complemented at the international level by the Compact of Mayors, a global cooperative effort among city leaders committed to reducing local greenhouse gas emissions, enhancing resilience to climate change, and tracking progress transparently. Garcetti and MNCAA previously released the Compendium of City Climate Action (lamayor.org/compendium), detailing emission reduction targets, key policies, and new actions in 30 U.S. municipalities.
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