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City updates Climate Equity Plan implementation; delivery teams, revolving fund and citywide solar advance

Climate, Water, Environment & Parks Committee · April 22, 2026

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Summary

Austin staff reported that community greenhouse-gas emissions fell to about 11.5 million metric tons in 2024 (20% down since peak), that more than 90% of Climate Equity Plan strategies are underway, and that the city is forming delivery teams, finalizing a climate revolving fund SOP and seeking council approval for a citywide solar portfolio with a tight July construction deadline to secure federal tax credits.

Zach Waller, director of Austin Climate Action & Resilience, and Braden Lisonbee Jones, climate program manager, updated the committee on progress implementing the Climate Equity Plan adopted in 2021. Lisonbee Jones said citywide community greenhouse-gas emissions for 2024 were about "11,500,000 metric tons," down roughly 20% from a 2011 peak and that per-capita emissions have fallen more than 30%.

Nut graf: Staff described an implementation structure (an office convening function, a climate cabinet, and delivery teams) to operationalize 46—6 actions prioritized in a biannual implementation plan and said the Climate Revolving Fund and a multi-site city solar program are moving forward with near-term deliverables.

Lisonbee Jones described a programmatic adjustment that added a climate cabinet (director-level oversight) and delivery teams (project-focused, outcomes-driven teams) as operational tools. He said four delivery teams have been approved or are forming, including a cooling/warming-center network, a climate resilience infrastructure design team, the climate revolving fund delivery team and a green building policy revision team.

On the Climate Revolving Fund, staff said the delivery team has drafted standard operating procedures that define fund administration, GHG calculation methods, revenue capture and departmental roles; the fund will invest in projects that both reduce greenhouse gases and create cost savings and will recycle savings into future investments. Council member Siegel asked whether council would see the final SOP; staff committed to bring the finalized SOP back to committee or council for review.

On city solar, staff said the city released an RFP, selected two vendors and is proposing a mix of city-owned solar projects and solar-standard-offer projects across roughly 100 sites over four years. Staff said construction must begin on some early sites by July 4 to secure investment tax credit eligibility; if approved they expect the portfolio to exceed the initial estimate of 25 MW AC and potentially surpass 30 MW AC across the portfolio.

Staff also reported a completed City of Austin facility refrigerant inventory and a draft management protocol; they are evaluating potential community-level refrigerant programs. On waste emissions, staff cautioned that recent landfill-reported increases likely reflect improved reporting methods rather than a genuine emissions spike.

Ending: Staff said the city manager has prioritized launching the Climate Revolving Fund in the current fiscal year and that the solar item was on the council agenda the next day; they committed to return with the finalized fund SOP and further implementation details in the coming months.