Parramatta to Join C40 Global Network in Effort to Achieve Net Zero Emissions
The mayor of Parramatta, Australia’s largest city council, is set to sign up for C40, a global collective of nearly 100 mayors around the world advocating for climate change measures.
Currently, Sydney and Melbourne are the only Australian cities in the global network, along with other cities such as New York, Rome, Stockholm, and Jakarta.
City of Parramatta Lord Mayor Cr Pierre Esber said the C40 network’s goals fit with the wider vision for the future of the city.
Mr. Esber said Parramatta has become “the first council in Australia to achieve carbon neutral certification for services in a public domain for Parramatta Square and earned a 6-star Green Star rating for our civic hub, PHIVE.”
He said the council has also been powered by 100 percent renewable energy since 2022 and aims to cut its carbon emissions by 60 percent by 2048, based on 2015 levels.
“We want a sustainable future for Parramatta, and we walk the talk,” Mr. Esber noted in a press release.
He added that the council’s food organics garden organics (FOGO) waste program will be up and running by the end of 2024 to “help divert food waste from landfill and reduce emissions even further.”
What Are C40’s Policies?
C40’s website outlines its goal to “influence the global agenda” and target “sectors that are the most significant contributors to the climate crisis” including transportation, buildings, and waste.
C40 said the world “must deliver, at the minimum,” the goals to halve global fossil fuel use by 2035 and stop any further investment in new fossil fuel projects, as well as tripling renewable energy by 2030.
Its air quality policies include “supporting a shift to cleaner cooking” by banning household combustion of solid fuels, such as wood and coal, replacing household cookstoves (fuelled by kerosene, coal, and biomass) with “more efficient models that use clean fuels,” ideally electricity.
It also advises cities to shift city fleets and public transport fleets to electric vehicles as soon as possible.
The group also called for a shift from private vehicles to public transport, walking, and cycling.
In terms of urban planning, the group aims to “reduce or eliminate” single-family residential zoning to allow for multi-family development, and “eliminate parking minimums to disincentivise private vehicle use.”
Radical Measures, Wealthy Financial Backers
However, some of the policies proposed by C40 have met with criticism.
In London, the mayor has faced backlash over the implementation of their version of the measures put forward by the C40 network.
The plan implements one of the world’s harshest climate standards, with some zones prohibiting vehicles that do not meet emission standards.
Critics described the plan as a cash-raising exercise that is unlikely to deliver air quality improvements as it promised.
The plan has even led Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to urge the London mayor to “think twice” on the expansion, warning the plan would add “unnecessary extra tax” and burden to families.
The C40 website notes, “Each of the affiliates may be data controllers of your personal information, and it may be shared internally between these affiliates to achieve the purposes set out.”