Fayetteville Becomes 54th US City to Make 100% Renewable Energy Pledge

Taking a “tremendous step forward,” the city of Fayetteville, Arkansas on Tuesday overwhelmingly voted to transition toward 100 percent clean energy.

“Going renewable is the right thing to do—and now is the right time to do it.”The Sierra Club says it’s the first city in the state to take such an action, and the 54th city to do so in the nation.

The commitment is laid out in the Fayetteville’s Energy Action Plan, which the city council passed 7-1. That greenhouse gas-slashing plan aims to be “the groundwork for a thriving, beautiful community for generations to come.”

To meet that task, the plan focuses on four sectors: reducing overall energy use, diverting waste from landfills, shifting toward clean energy production, and reducing transportation-related emissions.

Among the specific goals the city lays out are to achieve

  • 100 percent local government clean energy by 2030;
  • 50 percent community-wide clean energy by 2030;
  • 100 percent community-wide clean energy by 2050;
  • 25 percent bike/walk/transit mode share by 2030; and
  • 40 percent total waste diversion from the landfill by 2027.

It also seeks to “build local support for national carbon emission reduction and carbon capture strategies.”

“The Sierra Club applauds Fayetteville … for this tremendous step forward,” said Glen Hooks, director of the Arkansas Sierra Club.

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