San Diego Union-Tribune

SUPERVISOR­S TALK CLIMATE GOALS

Two sweeping plans in works to counter climate crisis, help sustainabi­lity

- BY DEBORAH SULLIVAN BRENNAN

San Diego County is launching aggressive efforts to counter climate change, with a new climate action plan and a sweeping sustainabi­lity plan designed to reduce net carbon emissions to zero by 2035.

The County Board of Supervisor­s received reports on both projects Wednesday and discussed the balancing act required to slash carbon emissions while preserving jobs and expanding housing.

Both plans must “address the urgency of climate change and the urgency of putting housing in the right place,” said Board Chair Nathan Fletcher. “It’s amazing if you address those correctly, how those two can align.”

County officials hope to craft plans that will enable San Diegans to live and work in close proximity, creating housing while eliminatin­g lengthy commutes. To achieve that, it will be essential to develop costeffect­ive regulation­s, they said.

“The more regulation­s we add, (housing) prices go up and our workforce moves further and further away,” said Supervisor Jim Desmond, noting the unwitting carbon contributi­ons of San Diego workers who commute to work from Temecula, Imperial County or Mexico.

The Climate Action Plan covers the portion of unincorpor­ated land under county jurisdicti­on and is a required component of its general plan.

Supervisor­s also authorized a separate sustainabi­lity plan called a Framework for Our Future, which spells out steps to “decarboniz­ation” by eliminatin­g carbon dioxide emissions, reducing “super-pollutants” such as soot and smog, and capturing pollution from the atmosphere.

That plan will be developed with cities, school districts and other agencies under guidance from UC San Diego’s School of Global Policy and Strategy and the University of San Diego’s Energy Policy Initiative­s Center.

“We are announcing this regional decarboniz­ation framework

to position the county as a leader in equity and climate change, and to define a collective vision for our future,” said Murtaza Baxamusa, the county’s program manager for regional sustainabi­lity and climate action.

The new efforts mark a reversal for the Board of Supervisor­s, which spent nearly a decade defending earlier versions of its climate plan against lawsuits from environmen­tal organizati­ons. The nonprofits argued successful­ly in a series of court challenges that the county failed to comply with state environmen­tal law; the groups won their most recent court battle in June 2020.

The Board of Supervisor­s, with three new board members elected last fall

and a new Democratic majority, abandoned efforts to defend its previous versions of the plan.

Instead supervisor­s directed county staff to develop a new plan that is legally enforceabl­e and doesn’t use carbon offset credits — which allow developers to pay for excessive emissions. The county’s plan must clear goals and measurable metrics for environmen­tal justice and chart steps to achieve zero carbon emissions by 2035, they said.

“One of the things I’m very interested in (is) whether we think there are improvemen­ts to the (Climate Action Plan) that were not litigated but could be improved,” said Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer. “How do we better establish protocols and make sure we’re doing the accounting we need to make sure our CAP is as effective as possible?”

The first step of the climate action plan is creating inventorie­s of greenhouse gas emissions by county government and the unincorpor­ated communitie­s it represents. That accounting includes activities such as water use, fuel consumptio­n and emissions from future developmen­ts in the unincorpor­ated area.

Then officials will recommend strategies to cut emissions from various sectors. For instance, plans for solid waste industries could include technologi­cal advances, job training, and public education to eliminate the need for landfills through reduced consumptio­n, increased reuse and sharing of materials and “100 percent waste diversion,” the board letter stated.

County staff will develop ways to quantify greenhouse gas reductions. And they’ll analyze whether the plans

improve environmen­tal justice for communitie­s historical­ly affected by pollution, providing such benefits as clean air and water and improved public health.

The plan may also identify “smart growth” zones that would encourage residentia­l and commercial mixed use. Those zones could feature elements such as environmen­tally friendly design, access to job centers and public transporta­tion options, the letter stated.

As they draw up the climate action plan update, county officials will seek input from community organizati­ons, advocacy groups, industry and profession­al organizati­ons, nonprofits and local residents.

Throughout the meeting, speakers referenced ongoing effects of climate change, including record heat waves, drought, wildfires, storms and sea level

rise. Those events affect everything, from ecosystems and food production to businesses and jobs, and require coordinate­d responses by public and private entities, officials said.

“Regional collaborat­ion between agencies, universiti­es, schools, businesses, workers, and communitie­s is essential to develop policies and programs to generate momentum, learn from each other, and provide a standardiz­ed regulatory structure,” wrote Deputy Chief Administra­tive Officer Sarah Aghassi in the report to the board.

The effects of climate change are worse for lower income communitie­s and workers, she wrote, adding that decarboniz­ation efforts are “intended to save lives, benefit underserve­d and frontline communitie­s, create high quality green jobs and ensure economic resilience.” The plan should be flexible enough to tap rapidly changing technology as it comes to market, Aghassi wrote: “One such example is the infrastruc­ture implicatio­ns of the adoption of hydrogen-fueled vehicle fleets for freight and passenger transport sectors.”

Strategies could include “negative emissions technology” that enables scientists to capture and store carbon. And they could incorporat­e natural carbon absorption through reforestat­ion, restorativ­e crop rotation and wetland restoratio­n.

“The goal is to achieve a balance of the carbon cycle in nature, so that the planet stops warming,” Baxamusa said. “That is the measure of our success.”

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