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NYC to spend $3.1b to cut greenhouse gases
Tue, Jul 08, 2008
Reuters

NEW YORK, US - NEW York City will spend US$2.3 billion (S$3.1 billion) to cut greenhouse gas emissions from municipal buildings and operations by 30 per cent in 30 years, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said.

The city aims to cut 1.68 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalents a year from 2006 levels by 2017, with measures ranging from improved heating and cooling systems to fixing methane leaks at at water treatment plants and using that gas to run electric generation equipment.

'The city is doing its part, I hope the private sector follows our example and finds conservation savings of their own,' Mr Bloomberg said in a statement on Monday. The city's government consumes about 6.5 per cent of the city's total energy use, and 10 per cent of its peak electricity demand.

'It's a cost that, as we know, is likely to grow as energy prices never seem to stop climbing,' Mr Bloomberg said at a news conference, saying he believes the city can achieve the results with existing technology.

Mr Bloomberg said the city should break even on its investments, on an annual cash flow basis, by 2013.

'By 2015, we project we will have saved more on our energy bills than we will have spent on all our planned investments to that point,' Deputy Mayor Ed Skyler said.

The programme will partly be funded with 10 per cent of the city's energy budget - about US$100 million in the current fiscal year.

Improved heating, cooling and ventilation systems in city buildings will be used to accomplish 57 per cent of the total reductions, Mr Bloomberg said in a statement.

Emissions at firehouses, police precincts, offices, court houses and sanitation garages will also be reduced via repairs, ranging from leaky pipes and broken windows to inefficient pumps, along with correcting wasteful systems.

Another 17 per cent of the reductions will come at water plants that treat sewage and storm water runoff, by fixing methane leaks and using that gas to run electric generation equipment.

Other steps include buying more vehicles that get better gas mileage. And Mr Bloomberg, who jests with reporters about replacing the light bulbs at his Upper East Side townhouse with more efficient ones, plans to do the same with street lights.

Asked how much he could accomplish before his second and last four-year term ends, Mr Bloomberg noted he only had 542 days left to serve.

'You'll be living here, you'll be breathing the air, and it'll be your children who will suffer. If you believe this is the right way to go, you'll have to pressure whoever so they continue on.'

New York City has already committed US$900 million for the programme and it spent US$80 million in its previous budget. The mayor also hopes to tap federal and state dollars, private foundations and so-called energy performance contracts. -- REUTERS

 

 
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