Sustainable Columbus  
910 Dublin Road
Columbus, OH 43215 

Alana Shockey
Deputy Director, Sustainable Columbus
[email protected]

Erin Beck
Assistant Director
[email protected]

David R. Celebrezze
Resilience and Behavior Change Manager
[email protected]

Bethany Bella
Building and Energy Coordinator
[email protected]

Sara Ernst
Natural Resource Protection Coordinator
[email protected]

Teneah Chambers
Green Jobs & Aggregation Coordinator
[email protected]

Abby Pope
One Water Coordinator
[email protected]

Shanikka Flinn
Equitable Engagement Coordinator
[email protected]

Report illegal dumping to [email protected]

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Sustainable Columbus is taking our climate action planning to new heights, and we need your input!

The Climate Pollution Reduction Grant (CPRG) is an Environmental Protection Agency program that supports communities tackling climate change and air pollution. This planning grant offers funds to create strategies for reducing greenhouse gasses and other identified pollutants. Sustainable Columbus, in partnership with the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission (MORPC), Power A Clean Future Ohio (PCFO), IMPACT Community Action, and The Ohio State University, has received $1 million to support these efforts in the Central Ohio region. This planning effort will cover 10 counties: Franklin, Delaware, Licking, Fairfield, Union, Pickaway, Madison, Perry, Morrow, and Hocking counties. Our focus is on regional climate action, with a special emphasis on benefiting low-income and disadvantaged communities, in line with federal Justice40 goals.

The CPRG program has two phases. The first planning phase requires both a Priority Climate Action Plan, due March 1, 2024, and a Comprehensive Climate Action Plan, due two years after the planning grant award, in July 2025. The work for the grant’s Comprehensive Climate Action Plan will support the 2025 update of the Columbus Climate Action Plan (2021). A second phase of implementation grants through the CPRG will be available on a competitive basis for all entities who completed a Priority Climate Action Plan, with a total of $4.6 billion allocated nationwide for climate action implementation programs. 

As we progress with this effort, we need your input on how to best involve you as community members throughout the project. Please take this survey to stay updated on our climate planning initiatives and help guide our communication and engagement efforts over the next two planning years.

Now comes the hard work of implementing, which has already begun in many respects, but will truly kickoff in 2022. Updates on progress toward the goals in the plan will be disclosed to the public on at least an annual basis to provide transparency and accountability to the community. The Plan is a living document, with an update planned for 2025 to ensure further accountability and ability to stay aligned with the latest climate science.
Thank you again for engagement and partnership!

Background In February 2020, Mayor Ginther announced a bold and ambitious goal for the Columbus community to be carbon neutral by 2050. 
The City of Columbus, along with community stakeholders and the public, created a Climate Action Plan to impart environmental justice and serve as a roadmap to meet the 2050 carbon neutrality goal set by the Mayor. Community feedback was, and will continue to be essential helping us define and achieve our climate goals and creating a more equitable and just future. We are committed to centering and investing in our BIPOC communities and envision an inclusive, prosperous, sustainable future together. To see how the Plan progressed, you can review slides summarizing changes made by September 2021 to Draft Plan here: CAP Work Group Slides (PDF)

Photo of a house with a big tree and street out front.

Sustainable Neighborhoods Columbus has a diverse mix of neighborhoods offering residents a unique sense of pride and ownership. Affordable, safe and resource efficient communities are necessary throughout Columbus. Responsible solutions to reduce unsheltered populations, provide equitable access to transportation and services, and connectivity to good job will be required to sustain a thriving community in the face of climate change.
Learn more
about the water adaptation strategies, equitable access to greenspace, urban heat island, Urban Forestry Master Plan, local foods, and more.

Coleman center for webpage

Buildings Columbus’ buildings are a major consumer of energy from the local utilities and the largest single source of GHG emissions community-wide; they must be fine-tuned to optimize each kilowatt of energy used. By 2050, buildings must be carbon neutral operating on 100% clean power to achieve the CAP goals.
Learn more about energy and water benchmarking, home energy efficiency services, high performing buildings, and Clean Energy Columbus.

Recycling symbol on city cart

Waste Reduction GHG emissions from the waste sector are directly tied to methane emissions, which are 25 times as harmful as CO2e. As the population of Columbus is projected to continue growing, landfill space becomes more constrained. It will be the most efficient use of public dollars to reduce the volume of waste and amount of physical space needed to contain it.
Learn more about Keep Columbus Beautiful, residential recycling, food waste, the Waste Wizard, Recycle Right, Com-Til, and yard waste disposal.

CoGo bikes

Transportation Columbus is already setting examples for best practices in large cities that have traditionally been car-centric with the foundational work of Smart Columbus. The transportation sector has many emerging technologies currently under development, and future CAP updates will reflect advancements. Zero emission vehicles (ZEVs) include electric vehicles, hydrogen vehicles and allow for technology advances for any other solution that may provide an emission free tailpipe transportation option.
Learn more about LinkUS, equitable electric vehicle adoption, Columbus Green Fleet Report, and biking around CBUS.