FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 12,
2005
CONTACT: Brian O’Malley,
202-675-6279
Glen Brand,
207-272-0484
SIERRA CLUB LAUNCHES NATIONAL COOL CITIES
CAMPAIGN
Working With Mayors To Solve Global
Warming One City At A
Time
[www.sierraclub.org/globalwarming/coolcities]
CHICAGO, IL -- At a
time when U.S. oil dependence is increasing, and the threat of global warming is
heating up, the Sierra Club has launched its new "Cool Cities" campaign that
encourages local leaders throughout the country to move forward with innovative
solutions to reduce heat-trapping global warming pollution. This campaign
showcases local leadership on the part of over 180 U.S. mayors to curb global
warming in stark contrast to the Bush administration's history of missed
opportunities and broken promises on global warming.
"Mayors around the
country aren't waiting on the federal government to move foward with real clean
energy solutions like hybrid cars and renewable energy," said Glen Brand,
Regional Representative for the Sierra Club’s Global Warming and Energy
Program. "These cities show that we can curb global warming and save money
at the same time."
Today, at the first event on the Cool Cities campaign
in Chicago, the
Sierra Club praised Chicago Mayor Richard Daley for signing
on to the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection agreement, which was launched in 2005
by Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels. Mayor Daley has joined 182 other mayors
nationwide, representing nearly 40 million Americans in 38 states, who have
pledged to reduce global warming carbon dioxide pollution in their cities to 7
percent below 1990 levels by 2012 (for full list of cities and background on the
agreement, see
www.seattle.gov/mayor/climate/).
"While
it is encouraging to see the growing list of cities supporting
action to curb
global warming, many mayors do not yet have the strategies in place to meet
these targets, said Brand. "This is why the Cool Cities campaign will tour
the country and advocate for local energy solutions that can help cities meet
their climate protection commitments. "
Today’s launch is the beginning
of a national fall tour to over 20 "Cool
Cities" in Illinois, Missouri,
Minnesota and Wisconsin in the Midwest;
Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New
Hampshire in New England; and North Carolina, Virginia and Kentucky in the
Southeast. Each tour stop will feature a rally where "Cool City" mayors
and local Sierra Club leaders will call for proven local energy solutions that
will re-energize our cities and help curb heat-trapping global warming
pollution.
To accompany the tour, the Sierra Club has released a new
guide, "Cool
Cities: Solving Global Warming One City at a Time." The guide
explains the steps toward making cities "cool" and tells success stories from a
broad range of cities, from greening municipal vehicle fleets with hybrid cars
in Houston and Charlotte; energy efficient street lights and buildings in Salt
Lake City and Scottsdale, Arizona; to renewable energy investments in Waverly,
Iowa and Columbia, Missouri. The guide is available online at
sierraclub.org/globalwarming/coolcities.
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