Green Seattle
More than Just Recycling, Green is a Lifestyle in Seattle
At a time when words such as "green" and "eco-friendly" have become little more than
buzzwords, Seattle's government, businesses and residents have made sustainability a
part of everyday life.
At the highest levels of city government, Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels has been one of
the most progressive mayors in the country in terms of city environmental policy. While
the United States declined participation in the Kyoto Protocol, Mayor Nickels pioneered
an effort to encourage city governments around the nation to embrace the new
standards. Mayor Nickels' plan, called the U.S. Mayors' Climate Protection Agreement,
encourages other mayors to pledge to reduce greenhouse gas emissions seven percent
from 1990 levels by 2012, as Seattle has pledged to do. By Nov. 1, 2007, more than
710 mayors representing more than 64 million Americans have signed on and followed
Seattle's lead.
Another way the city government is directly investing in environmental awareness is
through its spending policy. Seattle's Sustainable Purchasing Program requires Seattle
city government to consider factors such as pollution, waste generation, energy
consumption, recycled material content and potential impact on health and nature
when making all purchases on behalf of the city. This allows the city to pursue more
contracts with local businesses, small and minority-owned businesses and companies
with responsible environmental practices.
Seattle's publicly-owned utility, City Light, has also taken a leading role in sustainability,
becoming the nations first major ‘zero-sum emissions' utility in 2005. Since then the
city has maintained a carbon neutral footprint. Through a network of partnerships and
purchases of emission offsets, City Light became the first large electric utility in the
country to effectively eliminate its contribution of harmful greenhouse gas emissions.
Also, approximately half of City Light's electricity comes from hydroelectric power
produced by projects on the Skagit and Pend Oreille Rivers.
Transportation organizations made large contributions to Seattle's environmental
programs, making it easier for commuters and visitors to get around using biodiesel
fuel blends. King County Metro Transit has received two national awards for their
efforts in biodiesel and hybrid buses that use electric power in the city and switch to
diesel fuel in the surrounding areas. Currently, Metro has 236 buses in its fleet using a
biodiesel/ultra low sulfur diesel blended fuel and expects to have 271 in 2009. Seattle's
Department of Fleets and Facilities also has approximately 300 trucks running on a
biodiesel fuel blend and the Washington State Ferries have conducted pilot tests using
biodiesel.
Other buildings around Seattle designed with a focus on sustainability are part of a
specialty tour offered by the Seattle Architectural Foundation. The foundation offers
tours of some of Seattle's first and most prominent green buildings. The tours include
lectures by architects, engineers, project managers and developers of these structures,
as well as information about sustainable building certifications such as LEED and
BuiltGreen. The tours cost $10 per person in advance and are offered for different green
structures around the city.
A group of Seattle volunteers created a one-stop resource which references the city's
sustainable resources and other noteworthy green locations. Included on the “Seattle
Green Map” are green businesses, alternative transportation options, cultural centers,
recreation, public art, ecological restoration sites, recycling centers and more. Another
feature of the map allows users to see what percentage of people drove alone to work
in each part of the city, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The website,
http://www.seattlegreenmap.net features both interactive and printable Seattle Green
Maps.
# # #
Contacts:
David Blandford - (206) 461-5806
Heather Bryant - (206) 461-5805
Updated: 12/08
|