Skip to main content

LA launches own ‘Green New Deal’

Los Angeles, once a temple to the automobile, has followed the Democrats in launching its own Green New Deal – and the city has made big pledges on urban mobility investment The Democratic Party has started something. The Green New Deal, one of whose most high-profile supporters is new congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, intends to persuade the public that swift action is necessary to combat climate change. Now the city of Los Angeles has followed suit, releasing what it calls ‘LA’s Green New Deal’.
August 15, 2019 Read time: 4 mins
Los Angeles – like many other cities around the world – is gasping for cleaner air © Serban Enache | Dreamstime.com
%$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 9743 0 oLinkInternal <span class="oLinkInternal ">RSS</span> General false /rss/general/ true false%>Los Angeles, once a temple to the automobile, has followed the Democrats in launching its own Green New Deal – and the city has made big pledges on urban mobility investment


The Democratic Party has started something. The Green New Deal, one of whose most high-profile supporters is new congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, intends to persuade the public that swift action is necessary to combat climate change. Now the city of Los Angeles has followed suit, releasing what it calls ‘LA’s Green New Deal’. It is underpinned by the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change mitigation, from which president Donald Trump controversially removed the US in 2017 - although the country will not formally leave until after the 2020 presidential election, and the House of Representatives has just passed a bill in an attempt to stop this happening anyway.

Among the LA document’s primary – and rather pointed – aims, is to “demonstrate the art of the possible and lead the way, walking the walk and using the city’s resources - our people and our budget - to drive change”.

An update of the first Sustainable City pLAn in 2015, it “augments, expands, and elaborates in even more detail LA’s vision for a sustainable future and it tackles the climate emergency with accelerated targets and new aggressive goals”.

Transit expansion

Transit is at its heart – there is a pledge of $860 million per year to expand the transportation system – with electric vehicles to the fore: it promises an $8 billion upgrade to the city’s electricity grid by 2022, to help build the US’s “largest, cleanest and most reliable urban electrical grid to power the next generation of green transportation”.

Transport accounts for 19% of LA’s greenhouse gas emissions, and is therefore the top contributor to air pollution. “These trends cannot continue,” the document says. In a canny nod to the downsides of commuting in the city of the private car, it points out that public transit expansion plans have the power to cut time stuck in traffic by 15% per day. By 2035, half of all trips “will happen somewhere other than a single occupancy vehicle”.

The document also plays up the health angle, citing research which suggests the switch from driving to include 15 minutes of walking or biking on a work commute translates to a 23% reduced risk of heart disease and stroke, and a 15% reduced risk of Type 2 diabetes.

Generational battle

Modal shift is also the key to carbon neutrality, allowing the city to reduce today’s transportation emissions by a quarter - the equivalent, it claims, of removing 300,000 cars from the road for one year.

In LA, the document goes on, more people than ever are walking, biking, using scooters, ride-share, and other modes of transportation to get to and from home

and work: “Our streets today are testing grounds for new technology, first/last mile solutions and major innovations in mobility.”

City authorities will “expand electric car-sharing options” and support implementation of Metro’s first/last mile plans for the Blue Line, Purple Line and subsequent lines.

The new document “will put Los Angeles at the global centre of investment, innovation, and job creation in…green mobility”, the document says.

As Mayor Eric Garcetti concludes:

“The generational battle against climate change is a moral imperative, an environmental emergency and an economic opportunity.”

LA confidential: green targets
• Reduce municipal greenhouse gas emissions 55% by 2025, 65% by 2035 and reach carbon neutral by 2045
• Increase the percentage of all trips made by walking, biking, micromobility or transit to at least 35% by 2025, 50% by 2035 and maintain at least 50% by 2050
• Reduce vehicle miles travelled per capita by at least 13% by 2025, 39% by 2035, and 45% by 2050
• Convert all city fleet vehicles to zero emission where technically feasible by 2028
• Ensure Los Angeles is prepared for autonomous vehicles by the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games
• Reduce municipal energy use by 18% by 2025, 35% by 2035 and 44% by 2050
• Supply 55% renewable energy by 2025, 80% by 2036 and 100% by 2045

Source: Sustainable City pLAn 2019

%$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 9743 0 oLinkInternal <span class="oLinkInternal ">RSS</span> General false /rss/general/ true false%>

Related Content

  • Vehicle and Road Automation website launched
    February 18, 2014
    In order to promote the exchange of information and research on vehicle and road automation activities in Europe and beyond, the Vehicle and Road Automation (VRA) project has launched its website, together with other online tools to promote and expand the VRA community: The VRA wiki, www.vra-net.eu/wiki, is a user-edited shared resource for road vehicle automation activities around the world, containing details on around forty projects, with an abstract, contact point, website, sponsor, budget/funding an
  • Flashing LED from Ninghai Qinghua improves guard rail visibility
    March 26, 2014
    Increased road safety is claimed for a novel system from Ninghai Qinghua Electrical designed to improve the conspicuity of guard rails. This solar powered lighting system can be mounted on top of the barrier and features reliable LED technology, using flashing to ensure drivers can see the barriers clearly from a distance or in poor weather conditions with heavy rain or fog.
  • Former US DoT boss says job was sometimes like ‘sitting over trapdoor’
    November 30, 2018
    The political pressure on transit organisations was starkly highlighted by the distinguished former boss of Michigan Department of Transportation at a UK conference this week. Kirk Steudle, who joined Econolite recently after a career in the public sector, said he often felt as though there was “a trapdoor under your seat” while he was in charge of state transportation. Talking about the development of ITS solutions at regional authority level, he said: “The ability to move forward is largely dependen
  • Former US DoT boss says job was sometimes like ‘sitting over trapdoor’
    November 30, 2018
    The political pressure on transit organisations was starkly highlighted by the distinguished former boss of Michigan Department of Transportation at a UK conference this week. Kirk Steudle, who joined Econolite recently after a career in the public sector, said he often felt as though there was “a trapdoor under your seat” while he was in charge of state transportation. Talking about the development of ITS solutions at regional authority level, he said: “The ability to move forward is largely dependen