File #: 2016-0489    Version: 1
Type: Ordinance Status: Passed
File created: 10/31/2016 In control: Budget and Fiscal Management Committee
On agenda: Final action: 11/7/2016
Enactment date: 11/17/2016 Enactment #: 18392
Title: AN ORDINANCE relating to the Strategic Climate Action Plan; amending K.C.C. chapter 18.25, Strategic Climate Action Plan, in accordance with the 2015/2016 Biennial Budget Ordinance, Ordinance 17941, Section 104, Proviso P1, as amended; and amending Ordinance 17270, Section 2, and K.C.C. 18.25.010 and Ordinance 17166, Section 2, as amended, and K.C.C. 18.50.010.
Sponsors: Dave Upthegrove
Indexes: Climate Change
Code sections: 18.25 - ., 18.25.010 - ., 18.50.010 - .
Attachments: 1. 18392.pdf, 2. 2016-0489 legislative review form.pdf, 3. 2016-0489 Fiscal Note.xls, 4. 2016-0489 Transmittal Letter.doc, 5. 2016-0489_SR_SCAP.docx
Staff: Giambattista, Jenny
Drafter
Clerk 10/26/2016
title
AN ORDINANCE relating to the Strategic Climate Action Plan; amending K.C.C. chapter 18.25, Strategic Climate Action Plan, in accordance with the 2015/2016 Biennial Budget Ordinance, Ordinance 17941, Section 104, Proviso P1, as amended; and amending Ordinance 17270, Section 2, and K.C.C. 18.25.010 and Ordinance 17166, Section 2, as amended, and K.C.C. 18.50.010.
body
PREAMBLE:
Climate change is one of the paramount challenges of our generation. King County is already experiencing the impacts of a changing climate: warming temperatures, acidifying marine waters, rising seas, increasing flooding risk, decreasing mountain snowpack, and less water in the summer. Climate change will have long-term consequences for the economy, the environment and public health and safety in King County.
King County has a long record of innovation, leadership and investment in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and preparing for the impacts of climate change. Consideration of climate change impacts and opportunities to reduce energy use and greenhouse gas emissions are deeply embedded throughout the work plans and capital investments of county departments and lines of business. Since 2007, the investments in energy efficiency and changes in operations have reduced normalized building energy use by more than twenty percent, generating over three million dollars in annual savings. King County Metro has pioneered the use of hybrid bus technology, and the county is on track to have an all-hybrid or electric bus fleet by 2018. King County is now producing renewable energy equivalent to more than one hundred percent of total operational energy use, excluding public transit vehicles.
The county's first Strategic Climate Action Plan was adopted in 2012 and updated in 2015, consistent with K.C.C. chapter 18.25. The 2015 update to the Strategic Climate Action Plan maps specific pathways and actions needed to achieve the ambitious countywide climate goals of ...

Click here for full text