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Boston's 2030 Climate Action Plan: Executive Summary

The City of Boston released the second draft of the Climate Action Plan for public comment. Read the highlights below.

The City of Boston is setting bold climate goals for 2030 to put us on the path to carbon neutrality by 2050, while also strengthening our communities and infrastructure against the impacts of climate change. To achieve this, we’re developing the 2030 Climate Action Plan - a five-year roadmap for how Boston will cut carbon emissions, build climate resilience, and create a healthier, more equitable city for all. We want your feedback to help shape this plan and ensure it reflects the needs and priorities of our communities.

The second draft of the 2030 Climate Action Plan is now out for public comment. This is an opportunity to share your ideas, feedback, and experiences related to climate action in Boston. The final Climate Action Plan will be available in Spring 2026 and your feedback will help shape the final product.

This form will close on Monday, March 30, at 9 a.m.

PROVIDE PUBLIC COMMENT

For more information on the Climate Action Plan, the full Plan, and the development process to date, please visit the Climate Action Plan page.

WHAT CLIMATE ACTION MEANS FOR BOSTON

The City of Boston has a long-standing history of climate leadership, pairing ambitious goals with decisive local action to reduce greenhouse emissions and increase resilience against climate hazards. The 2030 Climate Action Plan is the City of Boston’s roadmap for achieving these ambitious climate goals and targets while advancing affordability and creating healthier places to live, work, and learn for all Bostonians - outcomes that go hand in hand with effective climate action. 

This Plan is grounded in two core and interconnected areas of work: mitigation and resilience – which frame every strategy and action included. Mitigation efforts focus on rapidly reducing emissions from the sectors that contribute most to Boston’s carbon footprint, particularly buildings, transportation, and energy. Resilience strategies are designed to protect people, infrastructure, open space, and neighborhoods from the growing impacts of climate change, while strengthening the City’s ability to adapt over time and creating pathways to good green jobs that support resilience and mitigation investments. 

In addition to tracking progress on mitigation and resilience, we acknowledge the broader impacts of climate work across three deeply interconnected areas: public health outcomes, climate justice, and the intersection of mitigation and resilience benefits. This approach recognizes that effective climate action must deliver healthier living and working environments, address historic inequities, and maximize co-benefits, ensuring that investments reduce emissions while also protecting communities most exposed to climate risks. Climate justice is embedded throughout the Plan, recognizing that the impacts of climate change will not affect neighborhoods equally and that climate action presents an opportunity to correct past harms. Communities that have been and will be adversely affected by climate change must be prioritized in both decision-making and investment. 

As part of the 2030 Climate Action Plan, the City is releasing its first Climate Justice Framework,  a vision and set of principles to guide the City of Boston’s climate action efforts.

The City of Boston’s vision is to center climate justice in all our work. 

First, this means recognizing that: 

  • Climate change does not impact everyone in the same way and is likely to continue historical patterns that have benefited some at the cost of others.
  • Climate action can produce benefits and burdens, distribute resources, and impact our environment with inequitable consequences across communities.
  • Climate action can be used to repair past harm and contribute to a more just and prosperous Boston for our people and environment. 

Second, it means grounding our work in the following key principles, which describe the future we want for Bostonians …

A Healthy City A Fair and Inclusive City A Care-full City A Shared City A Green City
Improving everyone's health and quality of life. Sharing benefits and burdens in a fair way. Caring for each other. Knowing and doing together. Respecting and connecting with nature.

The City will continue to engage residents on the Climate Justice Framework to determine how to utilize them in practice and keep the City and its implementation partners accountable for equitable climate action.

The 2030 Climate Action Plan was developed through an all-of-city approach that reflects all Bostonians. No single City department, sector, or community can deliver climate solutions alone – so the Plan was developed in coordination with many voices. The City worked in close collaboration with residents, delivery partners, community-based organizations, advocates, and technical experts to shape the strategies outlined in this document. This collaborative process helped ensure that the Plan responds to on- the- ground realities, aligns with community priorities, and leverages the strengths of partners across the public, private, and nonprofit sectors to accelerate implementation. The priorities outlined in this Plan intersect with and reinforce other City initiatives, ensuring that climate action is integrated into how Boston plans, builds, and governs. 

This Plan introduces several important updates that reflect how Boston’s approach to climate action has evolved since prior Climate Action Plans and the first draft of this document, released in Summer 2025. Together, these updates strengthen accountability, better integrate equity, and provide a clearer foundation for implementation. 

  • First fully integrated Climate Action Plan that addresses climate mitigation, climate resilience, and climate justice together in a single, coordinated framework 
  • Climate justice centered throughout the Plan, elevating equity impacts of strategies and actions 
  • Multi-draft, iterative planning process that creates intentional opportunities for reflection, community input, and refinement ahead of the final Plan being released in Spring 2026
  • Metrics that track progress toward climate goals while also measuring impacts on residents’ health, affordability, and daily lived experience.

HOW THE CLIMATE ACTION PLAN IS STRUCTURED

 

Climate justice embedded throughout the Plan, from how we define our goals to how we will be tracking success

Goals: The outcomes the City aims to achieve by 2030 to advance emissions reductions, resilience, and climate justice.

Targets: Sector-specific, quantitative benchmarks that define what success looks like by 2030.

Strategies and Actions: The priority areas of work the City and its partners will advance over the next five years to meet these targets.

Metrics: The indicators the City will track annually to measure progress, assess impacts, and ensure accountability.

Goals and Targets Through 2030

To understand where Boston stands today and where action is most needed, the City relied on a combination of data analysis, modeling, and extensive community engagement. Engagement efforts were designed to reflect neighborhood-specific priorities and lived experiences, with workshops and discussions conducted primarily in environmental justice neighborhoods. These discussions were designed to elevate community-identified concerns related to heat, flooding, housing conditions, energy affordability, public health, public transportation, and other topics to ensure that the Plan responds to the impacts of climate change as they are truly experienced by Boston residents across neighborhoods.

Boston's Climate Goals
Climate Mitigation
  • Reduce community-wide greenhouse gas emissions by 50% in 2030 and 100% in 2050.
  • Reduce municipal emissions by 60% in 2030 and 100% in 2050
Climate Resilience
  • Implement coastal resilience projects to close near-term flood pathways along Boston’s 47-mile coastline.
  • Reduce urban heat and expand cooling access.
  • Minimize disruption and damage from severe precipitation.
Climate Justice
  • Mitigate the impacts of climate change across all neighborhoods and prioritize resources and investments where most in need, with a focus on climate justice communities.

Climate Mitigation

Reducing greenhouse gas emissions is central to Boston’s climate strategy. While Boston’s emissions alone will not determine global climate outcomes, the City’s actions play a critical role in demonstrating what is possible. By clearly showing how deep emissions reductions can be achieved in a dense, historic, and economically diverse city, Boston helps set expectations for the private sector and provides a replicable model for other cities. This leadership is essential to accelerating broader emissions reductions beyond Boston’s borders.

Boston’s emissions primarily come from buildings and transportation, with smaller contributions from waste and wastewater. Because waste contributes only a small share of Boston’s overall emissions, the Climate Action Plan includes relatively few waste-focused strategies. The waste strategies that are included primarily address resilient food systems and the construction and deconstruction of buildings. Driven by strong local and state policies, Boston has already reduced citywide emissions by 23.8% compared to 2005 levels, based on the annual community-wide greenhouse gas inventory.

Despite this progress, current trends show that Boston is not yet on track to meet its 2030 climate goal. If emissions continue along a business-as-usual path - relying only on policies already guaranteed to be implemented, such as the state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard - emissions would decline by roughly 23% by 2030, far short of the City’s 50% reduction target. Even if all existing city and state targets are fully achieved, such as the City’s Building Emissions Reduction and Disclosure Ordinance, emissions are projected to fall by approximately 44% by 2030, leaving a critical gap.

The Climate Action Plan focuses on accelerating action in the sectors with the greatest potential for near-term emissions reductions. Buildings, both large and small, must significantly increase efficiency and reduce fossil fuel use. Transportation strategies must go beyond electrification alone, expanding mode shift, increasing electric vehicle adoption, and reducing emissions from both passenger and heavy-duty vehicles.

The Plan builds on established targets while identifying additional actions needed to reach the full 50% emissions reduction by 2030 and stay on course for carbon neutrality by 2050. By prioritizing high-impact strategies and scaling proven solutions, Boston is positioning this decade as the decisive window for delivering deep emissions reductions across the city.

Sector

2030 Target

Buildings

Buildings covered by BERDO achieve a 60% GHG reduction from a 2005 baseline 

Buildings not covered by BERDO achieve a 45% GHG reduction from a 2005 baseline 

Buildings not covered by BERDO achieve a 44% reduction in fossil fuel use from a 2005 baseline 

Transportation

Achieve a 30% volume of electric passenger vehicles 

Increase the shift away from passenger vehicles by 46%

Achieve a -8% reduction in GHG emissions from heavy-duty diesel passenger trucks as they are replaced by electric or alternative fuel models

Climate Resilience

Unlike emissions targets that can be aggregated to track progress through greenhouse gas emissions, resilience targets are inherently more complex. Climate resilience cannot be measured through one indicator alone, because it reflects how people, neighborhoods, and systems experience climate risk and withstand climate impacts. Many resilience efforts are ultimately about preventing harm - keeping people safe during heat waves, storms, and flooding - which makes success harder to measure, as it is not defined by events that happen, but by impacts that are avoided. As a result, Boston’s resilience targets are designed to track progress across multiple indicators that together show how the City is reducing risk and strengthening resilience in neighborhoods through the three key hazards that Bostonians face: heat, stormwater and inland flooding, and coastal flooding. A fourth category, cross-hazard climate risks, acknowledges that the impacts of the three aforementioned hazards often overlap, so tracking progress through holistic targets can provide a more complete picture of neighborhood resilience.

Climate Hazard

Target

2026 Baseline

2030 Target (Short Term)

Heat

Heat-related emergency department (ED) visits per 100,000 residents during heat events

Approximately 100

25% reduction

Heat Minimum neighborhood tree canopy coverage Some neighborhoods <20%; Citywide average 26.5% No neighborhood below 25%
Stormwater and Inland Flooding Greened acres on public and private land Existing installations 300 acres added (roughly 1% of the land area of the City of Boston)
Coastal Flooding Number of residents protected from 2030 coastal flood pathways Less than 16,000 residents exposed in major events Protect at least 10,000 residents
Cross-Hazard City capital projects screened for future climate risk No baseline 100% screened
Cross-Hazard Neighborhoods with certified Community Emergency Response Teams (CERTs) Partial coverage 100% of neighborhoods

BOSTON'S CLIMATE ACTION STRATEGIES

 

Strategy

Potential Impact 

Leading by Example

COB1. Lead by example to reduce GHG emissions and prioritize healthy, high-performing environments in all municipal buildings and assets.

⭐⭐

Leading by Example

COB2. Facilitate the transition to electric-zero emission vehicles by leading by example with municipal fleet.

⭐⭐

Leading by Example

COB3. Improve practices for long-term sustainability of our parks.

⭐⭐

Buildings

B1. Expand support structures for implementing the City’s Building Emissions Reduction and Disclosure Ordinance (BERDO).

⭐⭐⭐

Buildings

B2. Expand building decarbonization support for small buildings.

⭐⭐

Buildings

B3. Expand current initiatives that support low-income and affordable housing building decarbonization efforts.

⭐⭐

Buildings

B4. Identify challenges and opportunities for decarbonizing restaurants.

Buildings

B5. Promote healthier, more efficient homes.

⭐⭐

Buildings

B6. Reduce embodied carbon through low-carbon new construction, adaptive reuse of existing structures, and responsible deconstruction, rehabilitation, and reconstruction practices.

⭐⭐

Transportation

T1. Encourage bus use with improvements to affordability, convenience, and accessibility.

⭐⭐⭐

Transportation

T2. Encourage walking, biking, and other forms of active transportation by improving safety, ease, and comfort for everyone on Boston streets.

⭐⭐⭐

Transportation

T3. Orient land use planning towards vehicle miles traveled (VMT) reduction.

⭐⭐

Transportation

T4. Advocate for and assess policies and funding opportunities to ensure Boston’s transportation systems are accessible, affordable, and equitable.

⭐⭐⭐

Transportation

T5. Explore first mile/last mile transit services to key destinations and neighborhood resources.

⭐⭐

Transportation

T6. Facilitate the transition to electric-zero emission vehicles by improving public access to charging infrastructure and tackling hard-to-decarbonize sectors such as medium/ heavy-duty vehicles.

⭐⭐

Energy

E1. Increase the amount of renewable energy supplied to Boston’s electric grid. 

⭐⭐

Energy

E2. Advance short-term energy infrastructure safety and process improvements to support long-term resilient grid planning.

⭐⭐⭐

Energy

E3: Deliver district-scale energy solutions.

⭐⭐

Energy

E4: Enable a just transition to a clean, resilient, and affordable energy system. 

⭐⭐

Heat

H1. Expand the City’s extreme heat interventions.

⭐⭐⭐

Heat

H2. Strengthen tree policies to protect existing canopy, expand tree planting, and ensure long-term maintenance.

⭐⭐⭐

Heat

H3. Keep workers safe during heat emergencies.

⭐⭐⭐

Heat

H4. Safeguard residents at home during extreme heat emergencies.

⭐⭐⭐

Heat

H5. Combat the impacts of extreme heat through zoning.

⭐⭐

Stormwater and Inland Flooding

S1. Advance green infrastructure projects, incorporating gray infrastructure solutions as necessary.

⭐⭐

Stormwater and Inland Flooding

S2. Expand open and green space through strategic land use planning.

⭐⭐

Coastal Flooding

C1. Close long-term flood pathways.

⭐⭐

Coastal Flooding

C2. Reduce immediate flood risk and costs.

⭐⭐

Coastal Flooding

C3. Strengthen coastal resilience through zoning.

⭐⭐

Cross-Hazard Climate Risks

X1. Expand the City’s capacity to deliver.

⭐⭐

Cross-Hazard Climate Risks

X2. Support community-led resilience and preparedness.

⭐⭐

Cross-Hazard Climate Risks

X3. Protect vulnerable homes from flooding through targeted retrofits.

⭐⭐

Cross-Hazard Climate Risks

X4. Strengthen and scale innovative resilience solutions.

Cross-Hazard Climate Risks

X5. Expand strategies to ensure nutritious, culturally relevant food reaches communities, contributing to a food system with less waste.

⭐⭐

Cross-Hazard Climate Risks

X6. Strengthen Food System Resilience.

⭐⭐

Workforce Development

W1. Grow Boston’s green workforce.

Workforce Development

W2. Explore and expand on opportunities to address barriers to accessing green jobs training programs.

Workforce Development

W3. Use procurement and policy tools to drive good jobs and an expanded labor market.

Funding and Financing

F1. Mainstream Climate Goals into the Annual Budget.

⭐⭐⭐

Funding and Financing

F2. Explore financing mechanisms for building decarbonization.

⭐⭐⭐

Funding and Financing

F3. Explore long-term funding options to support large-scale climate resilience projects.

⭐⭐⭐

Funding and Financing

F4. Leverage Philanthropic Funds for Climate Action.

⭐⭐⭐

BOSTON'S CLIMATE ACTION METRICS

Are we reducing emissions?

Metric

Neighborhood-Level Data?

Strategies Influencing this Metric

BERDO Compliance Rate and Emissions Reductions

✔️

B1

Awarded Amounts and Expected Emissions Avoided from Equitable Emissions Investment Fund (EEIF) Projects

✔️

B1

Number of Heat Pumps Installed in Residential and Commercial Buildings

✔️

B1, B2, B3

Installed Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) Capacity

✔️

B1, B2, B6, E2

Number of non-BERDO Buildings Weatherized or Electrified Through Boston Energy Saver

✔️

B2, B3

Number of Permitted Buildings in Compliance with Net Zero Carbon Zoning

✔️

B6

Monthly Public Transit Ridership

 

T1, T5

Number of Bluebikes Rides

 

T2

Percentage of Zero-Emission Vehicles in City of Boston’s Light-Duty Fleet

 

COB2

Vehicle Miles Traveled

 

T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6

Percentage of Zero-Emission Vehicles Registered in Boston

 

T7

Number of Publicly-Accessible EV Charging Ports

✔️

T7

Regional Transportation

 

T7

Boston Community Choice Electricity (BCCE) Enrollment

 

E1

Percentage of Electricity Supplied to Boston from Renewable Sources

 

E1, E2

Estimated Energy Cost Savings from BCCE Enrollment

✔️

E1

Energy Burden

 

E1, E4

Are we improving resilience?

Metric Neighborhood-Level Data? Strategies Influencing this Metric

Number of Trees Planted

✔️

H1, H2, S1

Estimated Cooling Benefits from Street Tree Planting

✔️

H1, H2, S1

Percentage of Boston Residents Within a 10-minute Walk from Public Pools and Splashpads

 

H1

Emergency Department Visits for Heat-Related Illnesses During Heat Emergencies.

✔️

H3, H4

Greened Acres and Green Infrastructure Performance

 

S1, S2

Acreage of Natural Area Restoration Zones

 

COB3, S2

Status of Coastal Resilience Projects

✔️

C1, C2, C3

Building Square Footage in Compliance with the Coastal Flood Resilience Overlay District (CFROD)

✔️

C1, C2, C3

Number of Registered Deployables

✔️

C2

Percentage of Households in Flood Zones Enrolled in a National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) Policy

 

C2

Number of Certified Emergency Response Teams (CERTs)

✔️

X1, X2

Are we supporting the green economic engine?

Metric Neighborhood-Level Data? Strategies Influencing this Metric

Number of individuals enrolled, graduated and job-placed from BCJA partnerships, PowerCorpsBOS, and Youth Climate Corps

 

W1, W2

Climate-Aligned Spending in City of Boston's Budget

 

F1

NEXT STEPS

While this draft has evolved from the first release of the draft Plan, several elements will be further developed for the final Climate Action Plan, expected to be released in Spring 2026. These include detailed implementation pathways, refined measures of success, and an accompanying public-facing dashboard that will track Climate Action Plan metrics and progress over the next five years. Together, these components will strengthen accountability and support ongoing evaluation against Bostonian’s climate priorities. 

The City is actively seeking feedback on this second draft to ensure the final Plan reflects community priorities and implementation realities. With the release of this draft, residents, partners, and stakeholders are invited to provide additional input that will inform the final Plan. Over the coming months, the City will continue to engage, working collaboratively to finalize a 2030 Climate Action Plan that is ambitious, actionable, and grounded in shared responsibility for Boston’s climate future. 

Learn more about the Plan and how to give feedback

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