7b. K4C presentation
Joining K4C, the King County- Cities Climate Collaboration March 27, 2018 Item No. 7b_supp 1 Meeting Date: March 27, 2018 Why K4C? Regional Partnership consistent with Port-wide Environmental goals Recommendation of the Port Commission's Energy and Sustainability Policy Committee 2 Port of Seattle Commission Meeting March 27, 2018 Rachel Brombaugh, Energy Policy & Partnerships Specialist, King County K4C Highlights: Who we are K4C: Benefits of Collaboration Identify goals and hold ourselves accountable Share resources staff time and expertise, training, and funding Speak with a collective voice for greater impact Coordinate outreach and messaging to advocate for solutions Raise the profile of local governments' climate work Engage elected officials and other leadership on action Five K4C Elected Official Summits since 2014 K4C Partner Staff in 2016 K4C Highlights: "Carbon Wedge" Analysis Doing the math to know what it will take to achieve shared GHG reduction targets 6 Individual Interests and Actions November Staff Retreat Top Shared K4C Interests Greenhouse Gas Inventory Climate Action/Stewardship Plan Urban Tree Canopy Improving Facilities: efficiency and/or renewables Green Building Standards Strengthening Energy Codes EV Infrastructure/Green Fleets K4C Workplan: 2018 Projects Expanded GHG measurement and tracking Green Building Training Updating public-facing communications materials Sustainable Cities Roundtables Potentially: Energy efficiency challenge Green leasing study EV charging study Wrap Up: Actions and Thank you! Rachel Brombaugh, Energy Policy and Matt Kuharic, Climate Change Program Coordinator Partnerships Specialist 206-477-4554 2062639633 Matt.Kuharic@kingcounty.gov Rachel.Brombaugh@kingcounty.gov K4C Benefits Information sharing and collaboration Policy discussion and alignment for elected officials Sustainable Cities Roundtable Urban Forestry Climate Communications Training and Support 10
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