SYRACUSE — Municipal operations for the City of Syracuse reduced their greenhouse-gas emissions by 67 percent, while the overall Syracuse community posted an emissions reduction of 29 percent, both when compared to emissions back in 2010. Those figures are “exceeding the targets by a wide margin,” the office of Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh announced on […]
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SYRACUSE — Municipal operations for the City of Syracuse reduced their greenhouse-gas emissions by 67 percent, while the overall Syracuse community posted an emissions reduction of 29 percent, both when compared to emissions back in 2010.
Those figures are “exceeding the targets by a wide margin,” the office of Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh announced on July 24.
The findings from the 2010 Greenhouse Gas Emission Inventory (GHGI) provided information that the city needed to set emission-reduction targets of 40 percent for municipal operations and 7 percent for the community by 2020.
Walsh released the 2024 GHGI, described as “an important step toward the sequential development of a consolidated municipal and community Climate Action Plan.”
These efforts are a part of the city’s recently launched Sustainable Syracuse Initiative and its “commitment to develop a comprehensive and strategic list of actions for city government and the Syracuse community to implement around sustainability.”
“The Syracuse community should be proud of these results and the collective work that went into achieving these unprecedented measures,” Walsh contended in the announcement. “These reductions stem from years of private and public investments in climate resiliency. With this updated GHGI report, we can build on these findings with new and existing partners to make Syracuse a more sustainable and prosperous community for all.”
The 2024 GHGI report was funded in part by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Climate Smart Communities Program and completed by C&S Companies.
Several city departments, National Grid, and both community and government agencies collaborated to help collect the data, Walsh’s office noted.


