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Thread: United States' Top 50 Greeniest Cities of 2008

  1. #1

    United States' Top 50 Greeniest Cities of 2008

    Popular Science used raw data from the US Census Bureau and the National Geographic Soceity's Green Guide, collecting survey data and government statistics for American cities of over 100,000 people in more than 30 categories, including air quality, electricity use and transportation habits.

    The stats were then compiled into four categories, each scored out of either 5 or 10 possible points. The sum of these four scores determined the city's place in how green they were compared to other cities across the country. Did your city make the list?

    How the Rankings Work:

    * Electricity (E; 10 points): Cities score points for drawing their energy from renewable sources such as wind, solar, biomass and hydroelectric power, as well as for offering incentives for residents to invest in their own power sources, like roof-mounted solar panels.
    * Transportation (T; 10 points): High scores go to cities whose commuters take public transportation or carpool. Air quality also plays a role.
    * Green living (G; 5 points): Cities earn points for the number of buildings certified by the U.S. Green Building Council, as well as for devoting area to green space, such as public parks and nature preserves.
    * Recycling and green perspective (R; 5 points): This measures how comprehensive a city’s recycling program is (if the city collects old electronics, for example) and how important its citizens consider environmental issues.
    And the winners are....

    1. Portland, Ore. 23.1

    * Electricity: 7.1 Transportation: 6.4 Green Living: 4.8 Recycling/Perspective: 4.8

    America’s top green city has it all: Half its power comes from renewable sources, a quarter of the workforce commutes by bike, carpool or public transportation, and it has 35 buildings certified by the U.S. Green Building Council.

    2. San Francisco, Calif. 23.0

    * Electricity: 6.8 Transportation: 8.8 Green Living: 3.5 Recycling/Perspective: 3.9
    * See how San Francisco turns wasted roof space into power, here.

    3. Boston, Mass. 22.7

    * Electricity: 5.7 Transportation: 8.7 Green Living: 3.4 Recycling/Perspective: 4.9
    * CASE STUDY: Grass Power
    Boston has preliminary plans for a plant that would turn 50,000 tons of fall color into power and fertilizer. The facility would first separate yard clippings into grass and leaves. Anaerobic bacteria feeding on the grass would make enough methane to power at least 1.5 megawatts’ worth of generators, while heat and agitation would hasten the breakdown of leaves and twigs into compost.

    4. Oakland, Calif. 22.5

    * Electricity: 7.0 Transportation: 7.5 Green Living: 3.1 Recycling/Perspective: 4.9
    * See how Oakland's hydrogen-powered transit helps the city cut pollution, here.

    5. Eugene, Ore. 22.4

    * Electricity: 10.0 Transportation: 4.7 Green Living: 2.9 Recycling/Perspective: 4.8
    * CATEGORY LEADER: Electricity
    Much of the wet Pacific Northwest draws its energy from hydroelectric dams. But Eugene draws an additional 9 percent of its municipal electricity from wind farms. It also buys back excess power from residents who install solar panel

    6. Cambridge, Mass. 22.2

    * Electricity: 6.1 Transportation: 7.5 Green Living: 3.9 Recycling/Perspective: 4.7

    7. Berkeley, Calif. 22.2

    * Electricity: 6.2 Transportation: 8.4 Green Living: 2.9 Recycling/Perspective: 4.7

    8. Seattle, Wash. 22.1

    * Electricity: 6.2 Transportation: 7.3 Green Living: 4.7 Recycling/Perspective: 3.9

    9. Chicago, Ill. 21.3

    * Electricity: 5.4 Transportation: 7.3 Green Living: 5.0 Recycling/Perspective: 3.6
    * CATEGORY LEADER: Green Space
    In addition to the 12,000 acres Chicago has devoted to public parks and waterfront space, the U.S. Green Building Council has awarded four city projects with a “Platinum” rating, its highest award.
    See how Chicago's power plants produce twice the energy with a third the carbon, here.

    10. Austin, Tex. 21.0

    * Electricity: 6.9 Transportation: 5.9 Green Living: 3.3 Recycling/Perspective: 4.9

    11. Minneapolis, Minn. 20.3

    * Electricity: 7.8 Transportation: 7.4 Green Living: 2.8 Recycling/Perspective: 2.3
    * CASE STUDY: Citizen Enviro-Grants
    If you’ve got a world-saving idea, the City of Lakes will give you, your church or your community group the money to get it done. Twenty $1,000 mini-grants and five $10,000 awards were distributed last year to programs ranging from household power-consumption monitors to “block club talks” about global warming. A similar initiative has sprung up in Seattle.

    12. St. Paul, Minn. 20.2

    * Electricity: 8.0 Transportation: 4.0 Green Living: 3.5 Recycling/Perspective: 4.7

    13. Sunnyvale, Calif. 19.9

    * Electricity: 7.3 Transportation: 6.8 Green Living: 2.2 Recycling/Perspective: 3.6

    14. Honolulu, Hawaii 19.9

    * Electricity: 6.0 Transportation: 7.8 Green Living: 2.6 Recycling/Perspective: 3.5

    15. Fort Worth, Tex. 19.7

    * Electricity: 8.3 Transportation: 4.6 Green Living: 2.4 Recycling/Perspective: 4.4

    16. Albuquerque, N.M. 19.1

    * Electricity: 7.6 Transportation: 5.5 Green Living: 2.4 Recycling/Perspective: 3.6

    17. Syracuse, N.Y. 18.9

    * Electricity: 7.0 Transportation: 4.9 Green Living: 2.6 Recycling/Perspective: 4.4

    18. Huntsville, Ala. 18.4

    * Electricity: 6.2 Transportation: 4.1 Green Living: 3.6 Recycling/Perspective: 4.5

    19. Denver, Colo. 18.2

    * Electricity: 5.9 Transportation: 5.2 Green Living: 3.0 Recycling/Perspective: 4.1
    * CASE STUDY: Green Concrete
    Fly ash, a by-product of coal-burning power plants, usually ends up in landfills. Researchers at the University of Colorado Denver found a way to reuse this industrial by-product. They add it at concentrations of about 20 percent to a new green concrete mix. The addition of fly ash also reduces the amount of sulfur- and carbon-spewing concrete production needed to finish a job. The mayor has signed an executive order requiring the use of green concrete in new city projects, and a $550-million infrastructure bond makes demand for the mix likely to grow.

    20. New York, N.Y. 18.2

    * Electricity: 2.8 Transportation: 10.0 Green Living: 3.4 Recycling/Perspective: 2.0
    * CATEGORY LEADER: Transportation
    More than 54 percent of New Yorkers take public transportation to work, beating the next-best metropolis, Washington, D.C., by 17 percent.
    See how New York City turns its tides into electricity, here.

    21. Irvine, Calif. 18.1

    * Electricity: 4.2 Transportation: 6.8 Green Living: 2.9 Recycling/Perspective: 4.2

    22. Milwaukee, Wis. 17.3

    * Electricity: 5.0 Transportation: 4.9 Green Living: 3.1 Recycling/Perspective: 4.3

    23. Santa Rosa, Calif. 17.2

    * Electricity: 7.0 Transportation: 3.4 Green Living: 2.4 Recycling/Perspective: 4.4
    * See how Santa Rosa taps geysers for watts, here.

    24. Ann Arbor, Mich. 17.2

    * Electricity: 4.6 Transportation: 4.8 Green Living: 2.9 Recycling/Perspective: 4.9

    25. Lexington, Ky. 16.8

    * Electricity: 5.9 Transportation: 3.6 Green Living: 2.3 Recycling/Perspective: 5.0
    * CATEGORY LEADER: Recycling and green perspective
    Lexingtonians recycle everything from surplus electronics to scrap metal, and they listed the environment as their third most important concern (behind only employment and public safety)—the highest ranking in our survey.

    26. Tulsa, Okla. 16.7

    * Electricity: 5.0 Transportation: 3.9 Green Living: 3.4 Recycling/Perspective: 4.4

    27. Rochester, N.Y. 16.1

    * Electricity: 4.5 Transportation: 4.4 Green Living: 3.1 Recycling/Perspective: 4.1

    28. Riverside, Calif. 16.0

    * Electricity: 7.5 Transportation: 3.1 Green Living: 2.1 Recycling/Perspective: 3.3

    29. Springfield, Ill. 15.7

    * Electricity: 5.3 Transportation: 3.0 Green Living: 3.2 Recycling/Perspective: 4.2

    30. Alexandria, Va. 15.7

    * Electricity: 2.7 Transportation: 6.3 Green Living: 3.1 Recycling/Perspective: 3.6

    31. St. Louis, Mo. 15.0

    * Electricity: 2.7 Transportation: 5.0 Green Living: 3.7 Recycling/Perspective: 3.6

    32. Anchorage, Alaska 14.4

    * Electricity: 2.7 Transportation: 4.7 Green Living: 2.1 Recycling/Perspective: 4.9
    * CASE STUDY: Power-Saving Streetlights
    Since Anchorage spends a good part of the year buried under highly reflective snow, it doesn’t make sense to keep the street lamps at full bore when moonlight can do the job. The fix? Install citywide dimmers. On top of that, the city is planning to upgrade its 16,000 streetlamps to either LED or induction bulbs, depending on the results of computer simulations designed to find the type of light that helps humans see best and disturbs wildlife the least. The swap should be complete by year’s end, and the initial $5-million investment is expected to save up to $3 million in energy costs annually.

    33. Athens-Clarke, Ga. 14.1

    * Electricity: 2.4 Transportation: 4.7 Green Living: 3.2 Recycling/Perspective: 3.8

    34. Amarillo, Tex. 14.0

    * Electricity: 5.2 Transportation: 2.9 Green Living: 2.3 Recycling/Perspective: 3.6

    35. Kansas City, Mo. 13.8

    * Electricity: 2.7 Transportation: 3.7 Green Living: 2.7 Recycling/Perspective: 4.7

    36. Salt Lake City, Utah 13.5

    * Electricity: 3.6 Transportation: 4.1 Green Living: 2.3 Recycling/Perspective: 3.5
    * See how Salt Lake City heats homes from waste, here.

    37. Pasadena, Calif. 13.2

    * Electricity: 5.8 Transportation: 3.1 Green Living: 1.8 Recycling/Perspective: 2.5

    38. Norwalk, Calif. 13.0

    * Electricity: 3.5 Transportation: 3.1 Green Living: 2.5 Recycling/Perspective: 3.9

    39. Laredo, Tex. 12.9

    * Electricity: 4.4 Transportation: 2.5 Green Living: 1.7 Recycling/Perspective: 4.3

    40. Joliet, Ill. 12.0

    * Electricity: 1.3 Transportation: 4.3 Green Living: 2.6 Recycling/Perspective: 3.8

    41. Newport News, Va. 11.9

    * Electricity: 2.7 Transportation: 2.7 Green Living: 2.7 Recycling/Perspective: 3.8

    42. Louisville, Ky. 11.9

    * Electricity: 1.3 Transportation: 4.0 Green Living: 2.5 Recycling/Perspective: 4.1

    43. Concord, Calif. 11.9

    * Electricity: 3.0 Transportation: 3.2 Green Living: 2.2 Recycling/Perspective: 3.5

    44. Fremont, Calif. 11.3

    * Electricity: 3.0 Transportation: 3.0 Green Living: 1.5 Recycling/Perspective: 3.8

    45. Elizabeth, N.J. 10.5

    * Electricity: 2.6 Transportation: 2.8 Green Living: 1.8 Recycling/Perspective: 3.3

    46. Livonia, Mich. 10.2

    * Electricity: 2.7 Transportation: 2.1 Green Living: 1.8 Recycling/Perspective: 3.6

    47. San Bernardino, Calif. 10.2

    * Electricity: 2.8 Transportation: 2.3 Green Living: 1.6 Recycling/Perspective: 3.5

    48. Thousand Oaks, Calif. 10.2

    * Electricity: 2.9 Transportation: 2.9 Green Living: 1.6 Recycling/Perspective: 2.8

    49. Stockton, Calif. 10.1

    * Electricity: 2.8 Transportation: 2.5 Green Living: 1.0 Recycling/Perspective: 3.8

    50. Greensboro, N.C. 10.0

    * Electricity: 2.0 Transportation: 2.0 Green Living: 2.1 Recycling/Perspective: 3.9


    I'm actually surprised to see a few of the cities on the list. Guess Los Angeles is just bad period

    Source: Popular Science
    Lance
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  2. #2

    Re: United States' Top 50 Greeniest Cities of 2008

    Good to see SF up there.

    The LA Times ran a story (http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...,3893052.story) about how LA is trying to compete with SF for green-city status, but LA's efforts are a joke.

  3. #3

    Re: United States' Top 50 Greeniest Cities of 2008

    Hey Athens, Ga made it up there, good deal. Thats where the University of Georgia is located for all of you college football fans. (Although everyone knows where UGA is in the SEC, and if its not in the SEC....well then it isn't football)

    -Chris
    2004 DoubleCab Tacoma PreRunner: 3.4 V6-Auto, DD/Tow Rig
    1997 Lexus LX450: 4.5 I6-Auto, DD
    1984 4Runner: 22R-5 speed, 14 inch bob, 5.29's, lincoln locked rear, lockright front, Armored and Caged by Mossyrocks Fabrication, total disregard for body damage.
    1997 4Runner: GONE
    1996 FZJ80 Land Cruiser: GONE

  4. #4

    Re: United States' Top 50 Greeniest Cities of 2008

    im surprised at san bernardino. riverside i can understand, but san bernardino is the compton of the inland empire... what the hell? how about less green and more boys in blue? haha.

    alot of those cities surprise me, but the top 2 spots dont.
    2005 Lexus LX470 - Stock for now...

    1998 Toyota 4Runner SR5 V6 4x4 + a bunch of goodies. Lifted, Locked, Illuminated and Armored. Winner,"Best Offroad Truck" - 2010 Pismo Jamboree. It's been upside down and still drives me to work.

  5. #5

    Re: United States' Top 50 Greeniest Cities of 2008

    boston is #3?! wow.
    -Lee
    2013 BMW X6 50i

  6. #6

    Re: United States' Top 50 Greeniest Cities of 2008

    It's good to see some Texas cities in there considering were probably the #1 consumer of full size trucks.
    95 4Runner- 3.0- A/T- 4.88's- MC rear bumper- Downey skid plate- BJ spacers- LC coils- 32" BFG A/T's- FROR front bumper and frame brace on the way

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