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City and County of Honolulu

About the Author

Josh Stanbro

Josh Stanbro is the City and County of Honolulu鈥檚 chief resilience officer and executive director of the Office of Climate Change, Sustainability and Resiliency.

The twin crises of COVID-19 and climate change are good examples of the kinds of increasing and compounding 21st-century shocks and stresses facing our island community.

The Honolulu Office of Climate Change, Sustainability and Resiliency has seen these realities firsthand in 2020, with our staff serving in the city emergency operations center for both COVID-19 and hurricane responses alike. It鈥檚 clear that the faster we build community and climate resilience, the safer we鈥檒l be 鈥 but also the better off our economy will be.

The problem is building that resilience can be tough. While many with economic interests in the status quo will say they don鈥檛 oppose sustainability or deny climate change, they quickly follow with 鈥渂ut start with someone else first,鈥 or 鈥渨e can鈥檛 move too fast.鈥

The problem with climate change 鈥 like COVID-19 鈥 is that it doesn鈥檛 care what people think or what business interests might deem 鈥減olitically palatable.鈥 The science and speed of both don鈥檛 lie, and we ignore them at our peril.

Thankfully, Hawaii has the largest majority of citizens in the nation who understand the urgency of climate resilience and have demanded real solutions instead of hollow words. Over the past four years, Mayor Kirk Caldwell and the outgoing City Council have quietly answered that call and worked together to lay a foundation for a 鈥済reen鈥 economic recovery with an impressive series of strong climate policies.

Oahu developed an island-wide resilience strategy informed by thousands of community voices. We revamped our building codes to ensure every new house is wired for solar panels and electric vehicles. We started the move away from single use plastics to protect our oceans and health. We changed streetlights across the island to LED bulbs, and are now focusing on energy efficient equipment and renewable energy systems throughout our park system and city buildings.

We filed suit to hold oil corporations responsible for 50 years of climate deception and protect Oahu taxpayers from millions in climate damages. We put into law a mandate for carbon neutrality by 2045, and a fossil fuel-free fleet by 2035 鈥 but also acted on it by building charging infrastructure and adding the first of what eventually will be hundreds of cleaner, quieter electric buses to our city routes.

The result is that Honolulu is now in pole position as the incoming Biden administration unveils new programs and funding aimed squarely at tackling climate change, investing in infrastructure, accelerating renewable energy and transportation electrification, and providing more stimulus funding to jumpstart an economic recovery from COVID-19.

The baton will now be passed to a new administration and new City Council who will need to work hard to continue to transition the city fleet, add bike lanes, adopt an aggressive Climate Action Plan, expand micro-mobility, install renewable energy on city facilities, and keep Honolulu in the Paris climate agreement.

Happily, all of these actions will not only position us well to capture federal funding over the next four years, it will help create green jobs and diversify an economy that for too long has placed all of its eggs in the tourism basket. Let鈥檚 keep our climate policies strong to attract every dollar we can to build green infrastructure, install renewable energy, expand electric vehicle chargers, move or elevate roads, and put the state with the highest unemployment figures back to work building a safer and more self-sufficient island home.

The path to long-term security and economic recovery is directly rooted in building climate resilience.

The City and County of Honolulu released its first ever for Oahu on Wednesday. A Council-adopted plan is a requirement for the city to uphold the Paris climate agreement and mandated by .

The city is requesting public input on the draft plan through Jan. 30 and invites all residents to participate in a virtual workshop to learn more and provide additional feedback on Feb. 2. To see the plan, provide comments, and sign up to participate in the workshop .

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org. The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.


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About the Author

Josh Stanbro

Josh Stanbro is the City and County of Honolulu鈥檚 chief resilience officer and executive director of the Office of Climate Change, Sustainability and Resiliency.


Latest Comments (0)

Here芒聙聶s the problem. Oahu tourist population dies. It芒聙聶s going to take years for it to return. Bad stories on the mainland about resort fees, unfriendly local boys, and draconian shut downs have killed the life like to Oahu. Then we are going to start raising the taxes and engaging in "climate change" activities which will price even more families out the islands? Good luck with that we might as well change Hawaii into a nature preserve.

NotsoAloha · 4 years ago

By what date will Honolulu convert its vehicle fleet to renewables?聽Not only would that reduce its carbon footprint, but it would encourage its driver workforce to consider going renewable, too, after they see how much better renewable vehicles are.

LarryS · 4 years ago

As it's unlikely a 2/3 majority in HI Senate and House would ever over-ride the 1978 ConCon's nuclear fission prohibition (0-carbon power), and as enviro lobby has successfully blocked lower-cost, always-on, lower-emissions natural gas for energy, how many acres of ag land will be taken by solar and wind 'farms,' (we hear 70%) and how high will they drive the price of remaining ag land leases as the 2% of our farmers who are making any money compete for what solar/wind leave as left-overs? How is this going to help food sustainability? and when will the gigantic earth moving and child or coerced labor costs for solar/wind raw materials, and the incalculable disposal costs of much of this unrecyclable equipment be factored into our 'renewable' energy carbon footprints?聽 Much of this 'sustainability' mantra rests on disastrously incompletely factored-in assumptions.聽 聽Our windmills aren't even pumping into reservoirs for always-on hydro!聽 Batteries aren't magic, aren't energy dense like fuels, and the materials needed, & disposal, are big big issues.聽聽Watch out what we ask for, we might get it.聽

Haleiwa_Dad · 4 years ago

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