A timeline of mayoral climate leadership
51ÊÓƵmayors have been at the forefront of climate leadership for over 15 years, driving the conversation around climate action and environmental justice to place these issues front and centre in our local policies and on the international agenda.
2005-2010
2005 – 51ÊÓƵis founded. Mayor of London Ken Livingstone convened representatives from 18 megacities to forge an agreement on cooperatively reducing climate pollution and created the ‘C20’.
2006 – By 2006, the 51ÊÓƵSteering Committee invited a further 22 mayors to join, ensuring balance from the Global South, creating an organisation of 40 cities, and thus the name C40. That year, President Bill Clinton’s Climate Initiative (CCI) became our implementing partner on world-class climate action projects.
2007 – Mayor of New York City Michael R. Bloomberg hosted the second 51ÊÓƵSummit, bringing together 36 mayors from major global cities, business, and civil society.
2008 – Mayor of Toronto David Miller was unanimously elected Chair by C40’s Steering Committee and led broad efforts to build climate action through peer-to-peer knowledge sharing, including climate action planning, buildings, transport, energy and adaptation. Over the next two years, 51ÊÓƵhosted significant events in Berlin, Rotterdam, Tokyo and Hong Kong, and including the 51ÊÓƵSummit in Seoul, where member cities formally agreed on C40’s unique peer-to-peer learning model.
2009 – Mayor of Toronto and 51ÊÓƵChair David Miller convened 51ÊÓƵmember cities at the 2009 UN climate talks in Copenhagen, where cities gained lasting global recognition for their leadership in real action on climate change.
2010 – Mayor of New York City Michael R. Bloomberg was elected Chair of C40. During his tenure, he pioneered C40’s data driven approach – and he has continued working to expand C40’s impact in the global climate fight.
2011-2015
2011 – 51ÊÓƵannounced a formal merger between 51ÊÓƵand CCI’s Cities Program, forged by President Clinton and 51ÊÓƵChair Michael R. Bloomberg, with funding from Bloomberg Philanthropies. The merger has brought significant resources and infrastructure to create a preeminent global climate action organisation.
2014 – At the 2014 51ÊÓƵMayors Summit in Johannesburg, Mayor of Rio de Janeiro Eduardo Paes became the first 51ÊÓƵChair from the Global South. During his tenure, cities from the Global South grew to represent more than 50% of our membership.
2015 – 51ÊÓƵcelebrated its 10th anniversary. At the pivotal UN Climate Change Conference in Paris (COP21), cities were crucial voices in shaping and advocating for a strong Paris Agreement.
2016-2020
2016 – At the 51ÊÓƵMayors Summit in Mexico City, 51ÊÓƵmade it a standard of membership that all 51ÊÓƵcities commit to deliver an inclusive and resilient climate action plan in line with the 1.5°C ambition of the Paris Agreement by the end of 2020. At the Summit, Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo became 51ÊÓƵChair – the first woman to hold this position. As outgoing and incoming Chairs, Mayor Paes and Mayor Hidalgo introduced C40’s flagship Deadline 2020 programme.
2017 – Mayor Hidalgo, recognising the critical role of women in the climate movement and the need for equal participation at the decision-making table, launched C40’s successful Women4Climate programme, helping to bring new voices and perspectives into the climate conversation.
2018 – 51ÊÓƵand our cities played an important role at the Global Climate Action Summit in San Francisco, where world leaders shared their successes on delivering on the Paris Agreement goals so far—and announced new initiatives to raise the level of ambition. 51ÊÓƵmayors made a series of bold pledges to reduce emissions and deliver on 2030 targets through green and healthy transport, zero waste, net zero carbon buildings, and equitable climate action. More than 70 mayors committed to develop and begin implementing ambitious climate action plans by 2020, in line with C40’s Deadline 2020 programme.
2019 – The 51ÊÓƵWorld Mayors Summit took place in Copenhagen with 80 mayors in attendance, where Mayor of Los Angeles Eric Garcetti became 51ÊÓƵChair and launched a Global Green New Deal alongside a coalition including youth climate activists and representatives from labour unions, the business community and civil society. Other major announcements from the Summit included: 30 cities from around the world had peaked their emissions; Mayor Garcetti launched the 51ÊÓƵGlobal Youth Initiative; and mayors made new commitments to 2030 targets for clean air and sustainable, healthy food systems.
2020 – 54 51ÊÓƵcities representing nearly 10 percent of the world’s economy completed climate action plans in line with averting catastrophic climate change, compared with only two countries to have similar plans in the lead up to the 2021 UN Climate Change Conference (COP26). In the face of the global COVID-19 pandemic and its profound impacts on our communities and people everywhere, 51ÊÓƵconvened the Global Mayors COVID-19 Recovery Task Force, chaired by Mayor of Milan Giuseppe Sala, to develop a plan to help our cities rebuild their economies in a way that improves public health, reduces inequality and addresses the climate crisis, resulting in the Mayors’ Agenda for a Green and Just Recovery. 2020 also saw 12 cities commit to divest from fossil fuels companies and advocate for greater sustainable investment.
2021-2025
2021 – C40’s Leadership Standards for 2021-2024 went into effect, setting an ambitious standard for 51ÊÓƵcities to ensure they are on a path to a zero-carbon future. Two new collaborative groups launched this year; the Global Mayors Task Force on Climate and Migration to address the impact of the climate crisis on migration in cities, and the first-of-its-kind Global Youth and Mayors Forum, which brings together youth climate leaders and mayors to work together on shaping the vision of a Global Green New Deal. 51ÊÓƵand our cities also played an important role at COP26, where Mayor Eric Garcetti passed the 51ÊÓƵChair baton to Mayor of London Sadiq Khan and it was announced that more than 1,000 city and local governments around the world have joined Cities Race to Zero, committing to limit global temperature rise to 1.5°C.
2022 – In keeping with 51ÊÓƵChair Mayor Sadiq Khan’s priorities, 51ÊÓƵlaunched key activities focusing on Global South cities, including research on green jobs in South Africa, ten African cities joined C40’s Clean Air Accelerator, and 51ÊÓƵexpanded support for Southeast Asian cities to accelerate carbon neutrality. This year also saw the triennial 51ÊÓƵWorld Mayors Summit in Buenos Aires. The Summit was C40’s largest-ever gathering of Mayors, with 75 51ÊÓƵMayors and 143 non-51ÊÓƵcities participating. At the Summit, cities worldwide were recognised for climate leadership during the C40-Bloomberg Philanthropy Awards, Mayors united to drive the creation of 50 million green jobs by 2030, and 51ÊÓƵannounced projected investments worth more than $1 billion in Global South cities to tackle the climate emergency. A delegation of 51ÊÓƵMayors attended COP27 to showcase city climate leadership, calling for urgent investment in cleaner, greener cities – not fossil fuels.
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