From New York to Houston to Anchorage, hundreds of mayors reacted to President Donald Trump’s announcement to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris climate agreement by reasserting or even intensifying their commitment to fighting climate change.
Editor’s Note: San Antonio Mayor-elect Ron Nirenberg will be signing the “We Are Still In,” statement on Thursday, June 22, during his first official day as mayor.
They represent a diverse group that is potentially large enough to contribute to reducing global greenhouse gas emissions. This is encouraging, but we must recognize that city efforts to curb emissions are not substitutes for national climate policy, and they pose several unique challenges and drawbacks.
First, due to their limited size, city climate initiatives neglect major emissions producing sectors. Agriculture was responsible for 9 percent of U.S. emissions in 2015, and it overwhelmingly takes place outside of city limits. Similarly, some of the most emissions-intensive industrial activities, such as cement production and natural resource extraction like fracking, are not concentrated in cities. Even many power plants that generate electricity are many miles from the cities they serve. Intercity freight transportation and air travel comprise a substantial fraction of national transportation emissions, but are unlikely to fall within the purview of city regulations.
Second, city policies would be rendered ineffective if sources of emissions relocate to evade them. Researchers use the term “carbon leakage” to describe a scenario in which stringent climate regulation in one country causes companies to move their production to countries with weaker regulations. If some U.S. cities adopt ambitious climate policies, a similar dynamic could unfold of companies relocating to other cities or to independent municipalities on the city’s periphery. The latter could exacerbate urban sprawl and increase vehicle travel, thereby raising emissions. Climate change is fundamentally different from local environmental problems such as air pollution that cities have historically confronted. The impact of carbon dioxide is the same no matter where on Earth it is emitted, so merely moving emissions around accomplishes nothing.
Finally, given their limited scope, cities often pursue untraditional mitigation strategies that are unlikely to be cost-effective. For example, Austin is currently overhauling its land development code in hopes of reducing emissions by creating denser urban neighborhoods that decrease vehicle travel. But research shows that higher population densities are associated with lower emissions only in places with densities far exceeding those present in Austin.
Preliminary findings of my current study show that smart growth regulations are a costly way to reduce emissions because they tend to raise housing prices. The feasibility of implementing broader, market-oriented policies like carbon prices or emissions trading systems in cities remains uncertain. These mechanisms are more cost-effective, but cities in conservative states can expect state governments to resist attempts to expand local policy action. Texas recently pre-empted Austin ordinances on ridesharing services and sanctuary cities, for instance, and we are likely to see similar city-state conflicts on climate change measures in the years ahead.
But despite these obstacles, cities can fight climate change effectively if leaders enact regulations that are logical at the city level. The most crucial role that cities should play is to enable and encourage residents to adopt environmentally friendly technologies and behaviors.
Electric cars are a useful example. Cities can install public charging stations, incentivize workplaces to offer them, or mandate their deployment through building codes. Perks such as access to HOV and express lanes or free street parking reserved for alternative fuel vehicles would make them more attractive to consumers. Cities can lead the way by incorporating alternative fuel vehicles into municipal fleets. Even within Texas, cities have made widely varying progress along this line. Whereas Dallas Area Rapid Transit has converted most of its buses to cleaner compressed natural gas, the Houston Metro fleet is dominated by diesel buses, although it unveiled its first electric bus late last year. By comparison, in China, Shenzhen has more than 10 million residents and will feature an entirely electric bus fleet by the end of this year. It is one area where American cities can and should improve dramatically. Other examples include offering incentives to residents to lower costs of rooftop solar or other energy efficiency improvements, and expanding bike lanes to make zero-carbon commuting more viable.
It is promising that our cities are stepping up to the plate, but city leaders need to carefully plan the policies they enact.


“… cities can fight climate change effectively if leaders enact regulations that are logical at the city level.” Amen to that! Thank you Ron Nirenberg.
I am hopeful about American cities creating their own paths in regard to environmental measures. Push-back against state and federal laws and decisions is a healthy thing.
But drawdown is drawdown. When I discuss human impact on the environment with friends and family I usually utter something like this: I could become the greenest, Gandhi-MLK-Dalai Lama-following individual on the planet, and my impact would not stop our culture from overshooting the landbase (destroying everywhere we go). Next, I could convert 50 million American citizens to becoming the greenest, Gandhi-MLK-Dalai Lama-following humans on the planet, and our impact would not stop this culture from committing this destruction. By extension, we could all drive electric cars and, yes, we would still be stuck with drawdown (taking more from the planet than that which we give back).
Why is this? Because we are attached to an industrial system that thrives on one thing, which is said destruction.
Unfortunately however, it is the industrialization system that also brings us our movie channels, our links to online gaming, the NBA playoffs (which lasts a quarter of a year), the NFL, porn, Dancing with the Stars, air-conditioning, and the list is really endless…
If we cannot have discussions about what we are willing to give up in exchange for real sustainability, then we cannot expect different outcomes. Ever.
Ever.
And just to be clear: sustainability = the absence of drawdown, not sustained profits and entitlements, which is how the word plays out today. Think otherwise? If so, then you also probably think that if everyone on the planet were getting their electricity from solar voltaics, then all would be fine, right? No. Drawdown. If you doubt this then you need to research rare-earths mines (particularly in China, but really anywhere – there’s one coming near us soon), and you then need to calculate an estimate of carbon emissions that are used to extract, process, and ship those resources to our rooftops and smartphones. Drawdown folks.
The way that we currently behave, we do not deserve this planet. We only shroud ourselves with lies. We must, or we wouldn’t allow this to happen.
Small patches of people buying organic food and clothing, riding bikes to work, planting cute boxed-in gardens, brewing beer at home from organically grown hops…doing these things only helps a few people sleep better at night. Until things like these and everything that is really needed to be sustainable become universal – not chick novelties – we are only lying to ourselves and solidifying some really nasty times to come for people younger than us.
Those of you who are half way connected to the past via the study of history, if it feels like pre-WWI era build-up, then you’ve got things rational and decently understood.
Is it more about cities like San Antonio defying an administration that is an easy target, or is it about really wanting to frame a way of life that stands up on the respectable side – the real meaning – of sustainability?
The answers to these questions are deliverable. Will San Antonio be sustainable in decades to come? Will it at least have a solid plan for sustainability in a few years? History says no to the former, and the second won’t matter unless it is results-based, not political platform-based, and not cut off when a right winger is intermittently elected in.
We have a lot of work to do. Largely, this is an information problem. Before you sit down and pick up that remote again, remember something: democratic government is supposed to be about what people want. If we prefer to engage in our leisure entitlements and allow the super elites to decide on too many things, then the nasty results will be on us as well as them.
On the other hand, everyone can contribute to a better way of life in their own unique way. A way of life that includes higher expectations for who we are and how we treat everything in God’s creation.
We have a lot of work to do, and a lot of soul searching. Individual soul searching, then culture-as-a-whole soul searching (this step cannot be skipped). Then a lot more work to do. We don’t have time to spar with each other on the individual level, and it is wasteful to attack someone who is really only the messenger.
Time to push back. Time to sacrifice. Make San Antonio worthy.