Current & Upcoming Work Plan
Electrify the City
Currently most buildings run on multiple power sources. They use electricity to power lights, refrigerators, and electronic devices, and they consume fossil fuels such as natural gas or propane to power furnaces, boilers and water heaters. If we can all switch our appliances to 100% electric, we can power our buildings with clean energy such as wind and solar which does not contribute to greenhouse gasses.
Learn more about this process at All Electric Building.
Reduce Transportation Demand and Increase Green Alternatives
Transportation is currently our city's largest contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. This is from our cars, trucks, and motor vehicles as well as larger commercial vehicles that travel through Cupertino. If we all change our method of transportation to shared rides, public transportation, bicycles, scooters, or electric vehicles then we can stop the pollution from the tailpipes.
Learn more about this process at Transportation.
Natural Systems and Biodiversity
Trees and nature are essential to a healthy and resilient community. The City plans to determine how many more trees we can plant and sustain, where those trees should go, and how best to manage and protect them. Trees naturally capture and store carbon from the air through photosynthesis, reducing our greenhouse gas impact.
Learn more about this process at City Street Trees.
Improve Community Resilience to Drought and Wildfire (and other climate related disasters)
Although water consumption does not have a large increase in greenhouse gas emissions, we all need to play our part to help conserve this precious resource. Worsening drought conditions lead to longer fire season and poor air quality.
Learn more about what you can do to help at Drought.
Reduce our Waste
By reducing unnecessary consumption and increasing our waste diversion from landfill, we can help to reduce greenhouse emissions and stop landfills from filling up. This means that we need to shop smart, reduce our demand for plastics and other problem materials, repair and reuse whenever possible, and recycle everything possible.
Learn more about waste diversion at Garbage and Recycling
Long-Term work plan
There is much more work to be done. You can view the entire list of measures and actions in Cupertino's Climate Action Plan 2.0(PDF, 10MB) . This plan was adopted in August 2022.
View Progress Reports to see our recent work
From 2010 to 2018, the City has reduced our greenhouse gas emissions from 408,176 Metric Tons CO2e to 346,998 Metric Tons CO2e. View the progress reports below to see how we accomplished that!