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Roseville 2040 Comprehensive Plan Chapter 9: Resilience and Env. Protection <br />2� <br />Energy - 262,152 tonnes COte <br />Vehicle Travel - 188,782 tonnes CO�e <br />Waste - 9,493 tonnes COze <br />Roseville'scommunity ;wide emissions (2016 estimate). Source: Regionallndicators Initiative <br />Curren tand Past ln/tlaAvel commented [BA4]: Anything eke? <br />As signatories of the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement in 2007, <br />Roseville's 2030 Comprehensive Plan committed to striving to meet the targets <br />Identified In the Kyoto Protocol. Since then, the City has: <br />. conducted an emissions Inventory through the Clean Air Climate <br />Protection software, <br />. developed and karted Implementing campus -wide geothermalcommented [8A5]: is thk mmpietery implemented? <br />master plan, <br />. engaged with University of Minnesota students and Minnesota's Clean <br />Energy Resource Teams to Identify and evaluate potential emissions <br />reduction strategies, <br />. joined Minnesota's GreenStep Cities program and become a Step 2 <br />City, <br />. started tracking facility energy use through B3 Benchmarking, <br />. started exploring opportunities for solar energy Installations on City <br />facilities, and <br />. started tracking community -wide energy, water, travel, waste, and <br />emissions data through the Regional Indicators Initiative. <br />Bringing these efforts together Into a Climate Action Plan will help Identify, <br />quantify, and prioritize emissions reductions strategies that support other <br />community goals. <br />Policies <br />1.1. With appropriate community engagement, develop a Climate Action Plan to <br />establish city -specific energy and greenhouse gas reduction goals and select <br />strategies to reduce emissions from building energy, travel, solid waste, and <br />7 <br />