Eugene (Or.)2013-08-212013-08-212010-09http://www.eugene-or.gov/archives/48/00_CEAP_FINAL_10%2018%2010_no%20appendices.pdfhttps://hdl.handle.net/1794/1309853 pp. Appendices not attached. Images, charts.In the winter of 2008/2009, Eugene’s City Council unanimously directed staff to develop a Community Climate and Energy Action Plan (CEAP).[4] All City operations and City-owned facilities were to be carbon-neutral by 2020. During the same year, the Council committed the City to work with its partners to develop a plan to set carbon emission goals, to suggest effective emission reduction strategies, and to identify ways in which the community can adapt to the anticipated changes. Four months later, the Council expanded the action plan to include steps for achieving a 50 percent reduction in community-wide fossil fuel consumption by 2030. This plan is the product of those efforts to understand what climate change and fuel cost increases could mean for Eugene, and to find ways that lessen the expected impacts and meet the goals for reducing emissions and fossil fuel consumption.en-USPublic DomainEnergy policy -- OregonEnergy conservationA Community Climate and Energy Action Plan for EugeneBook