https://www.americancityandcounty.com/wp-content/themes/acc_child/assets/images/logo/footer-logo.png
  • Home
  • Co-op Solutions
  • Hybrid Work
  • Commentaries
  • News
  • In-Depth
  • Multimedia
    • Back
    • Podcast
    • Latest videos
    • Product Guides
  • Resources & Events
    • Back
    • Resources
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
    • IWCE 2022
    • How to Contribute
    • Municipal Cost Index – Archive
    • Equipment Watch Page
    • American City & County Awards
  • About Us
    • Back
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Statement
    • Terms of Service
American City and County
  • NEWSLETTER
  • Home
  • Co-op Solutions
  • Hybrid Work
  • Commentaries
  • News
  • In-Depth
  • Multimedia
    • Back
    • Podcasts
    • Latest videos
    • Product Guides
  • Resources/Events
    • Back
    • Webinars
    • White Papers/eBooks
    • IWCE Expo
    • Calendar of Events
    • How to Contribute
    • American City & County Awards
    • Municipal Cost Index
    • Equipment Watch Page
  • About Us
    • Back
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Stament
    • Terms of Service
  • newsletter
  • Administration
  • Economy & Finance
  • Procurement
  • Public Safety
  • Public Works & Utilities
  • Smart Cities & Technology
  • Magazine
acc.com

News


Pixabay

News

Report: Land use policies can reduce carbon emissions

Report: Land use policies can reduce carbon emissions

  • Written by Andy Castillo
  • 17th April 2023

As communities across the United States face an ongoing housing crisis, thoughtful land use policies make sense. Research from Urban Institute recently correlated relaxed zoning with increased “market rate” housing supply. But that’s not the only reason why American cities and counties are reconsidering their regulations—they can also cut down on a community’s carbon emissions.

Urban landscapes across the United States were designed around single-family homes and motor vehicles. Residents must drive to access basic necessities like groceries, or go to work and school. Because of this, transportation is the leading carbon-emitting sector in the nation, according to the new report “Urban Land Use Reform: The Missing Key to Climate Action Strategies for Lowering Emissions, Increasing Housing Supply, and Conserving Land,” published by the advocacy organization Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI).

“These policies have led to a chronic housing shortage, numerous harms for disadvantaged communities, and sprawling development patterns that exacerbate climate change and ecological harm,” reads a statement from RMI about the findings. While land use policies are often cited by researchers as effective means to increase housing supply, the report highlights that they’re not often referenced in relation to climate change mitigation, even though there’s an intrinsic relationship between suburban design and reliance on motor vehicles.

The land use policies report estimates that 70% to 90% of residential zoning in U.S. cities house single-family detached homes. Along with the increased energy needs of detached houses when compared to apartments or multi-family dwellings, the physical infrastructure and utilities required to support suburban dwellings are a drain on resources. Features like cul-de-sacs and street networks that funnel even short trips onto highways are “fundamentally at odds with compact and walkable neighborhoods, and it makes efficient and cost-effective public transportation challenging,” reads the report. The researchers call for consideration of “wholesale suburban retrofits.”

Retrofits could include the build-out of suburban centers. Cul-de-sacs could be connected with pathways, and neighborhoods could be infilled to improve walkability and reduce the need for travel. Bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure could be improved. Other suggestions noted in the report include converting general roadway lanes into express bus lanes and changing land use regulation.

Changes include increasing height limitations, minimum lot size, expanding parking requirements, and modifying setbacks and floor-to-area ratio requirements, among other things. Policy changes like these would encourage developers to build housing and amenities closer together. It would also reduce energy usage because more people would be living in one envelope, and it would curb urban sprawl, saving open space to be used for other necessary functions like farming, conservation and carbon sequestration.

In an analysis of three of the nation’s fastest-growing metropolitan areas—Austin, Tx., Charlotte, N.C., and Denver, Colo.—researchers found that land use reforms in those cities could reduce vehicle miles traveled by about 13%, cut down on building energy usage by 16%, and cut local greenhouse gas emissions by 14% (averaged across the three ares).

“Cities, regions, and states have great potential to reduce or avoid emissions over the next two decades through land use reform. This will be no small challenge, given the various policy reforms that need to be enacted to overcome the many barriers to more efficient land use,” the report says. “By building broad coalitions—including affordable housing and tenant advocates, real estate developers, environmental nonprofits, local community-based organizations, and others—in a concentrated endeavor to improve the status quo, it is possible.”

Tags: homepage-featured-1 homepage-featured-2 homepage-featured-4 Administration News News News

Most Recent


  • citizen
    How to move to a citizen-focused engagement model
    We know that engaged citizens play a critical role in helping make government agencies more transparent, more effective and more accountable. In fact, putting increased attention on digital government services and the citizen experience was ranked as one of the biggest changes that state chief information officers expected to continue post-pandemic. But too often, many […]
  • crisis
    Navigating crises with confidence: Five ways strategic plans support crisis response
    Some crises are short-lived, barging through our lives and routines, and before we can get a sense of what’s happened, we’re left dealing with the aftermath. But many crises build slowly, with many early warning signs, and once they’vehit their breaking point, panic and uncertainty overwhelm the ability of leaders to think clearly and mitigate […]
  • 2022 Crown Communities Award winner: Miami-Dade County Clerk of Courts' jury selection system
    The Miami-Dade County Clerk of Courts is revolutionizing the jury selection process.  In many jurisdictions, jury duty is perceived as an obligatory nuisance. On their appointed day, potential jurors arrive early and stay late. They read books or watch television to pass the time as judges and attorneys make in-person selections from the pool of […]
  • digital
    How to leverage digital tools to drive innovation in government
    The rapid evolution of digital technologies transformed the way governments function, making them more efficient, transparent and citizen-friendly. Rather than relying on crystal trophies, governments can leverage digital tools to drive innovation and streamline processes, benefiting the population they serve. Open data and crowdsourcing Open data refers to making government data available to the public, […]

Leave a comment Cancel reply

-or-

Log in with your American City and County account

Alternatively, post a comment by completing the form below:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Content

  • Report: Less-restrictive zoning can increase 'market rate' housing supply
  • Report: Concern among mayors over housing costs dwarfs other issues
  • Housing
    Report: Renters living at or below the poverty line face a 'severe shortage of housing'
  • Cybersecurity agencies publish guide of cybersecurity best practices for smart city networks

White papers


5 reasons why Plan Examiners need Objective Trapeze

30th May 2023

7 Permitting & Licensing Fails Slowing Community Growth

24th May 2023

The Secret Ingredient to Local Government Employee Retention

23rd May 2023
view all

Webinars


How to Centralize and Build a Grants Management Process at your Organization

24th May 2023

Making Permitting Easier: What We’ve Learned Helping America’s Largest Cities Improve Their Permitting Process

16th May 2023

Digital Property Tax Collection: Tales from the Trenches of Modernization

16th May 2023
view all

PODCAST


Young Leaders Episode 4 – Cyril Jefferson – City Councilman, High Point, North Carolina

13th October 2020

Young Leaders Episode 3 – Shannon Hardin – City Council President, Columbus, Ohio

27th July 2020

Young Leaders Episode 2 – Christian Williams – Development Services Planner, Goodyear, Ariz.

1st July 2020
view all

GALLERIES


10 best suburbs for city-like living

1st June 2023

Gallery: Annual index ranks America’s top performing cities; most are in the West

30th May 2023

Gallery: Top 10 American cities for seasonal and summer jobs

25th May 2023
view all

Twitter


Newsletters

Sign up for American City & County’s newsletters to receive regular news and information updates about local governments.

Resale Insights Dashboard

The Resale Insights Dashboard provides model-level data for the entire used equipment market to help you save time and money.

Municipal Cost Index

Updated monthly since 1978, our exclusive Municipal Cost Index shows the effects of inflation on the cost of providing municipal services

Media Kit and Advertising

Want to reach our digital audience? Learn more here.

DISCOVER MORE FROM INFORMA TECH

  • IWCE’s Urgent Communications
  • IWCE Expo

WORKING WITH US

  • About Us
  • Contact Us

FOLLOW American City and County ON SOCIAL

  • Privacy
  • CCPA: “Do Not Sell My Data”
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms
Copyright © 2023 Informa PLC. Informa PLC is registered in England and Wales with company number 8860726 whose registered and Head office is 5 Howick Place, London, SW1P 1WG.