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Bellingham · BEL-CP-2025 · Pages 96-103

Climate

The Climate chapter provides a comprehensive framework for both mitigating greenhouse gas emissions and building community resilience to climate change impacts through 2050 and beyond. It establishes goals addressing extreme weather, wildfire, sea level rise, resource resiliency, and ecosystem health, while also targeting building electrification, transportation emissions reductions, and renewable energy adoption. The chapter integrates climate equity principles to ensure that vulnerable communities receive equitable protection and access to climate program benefits.

Climate Environment Social Economy Safety

“Only 1 of 41 Climate policies (2%) include a concrete, measurable commitment.” Real Record SAY vs DO analysis · Bellingham Comprehensive Plan

About this analysis

Real Record applies the SAY vs DO accountability framework to every chapter of every Washington comprehensive plan we publish. Each policy in the chapter is read individually and scored into one of four buckets:

  • Measurable — the policy names a specific target, deadline, dollar amount, or action that can be verified later.
  • Strong — binding action language (“shall,” “will adopt,” “require”) without a measurable threshold.
  • Aspirational — encouraging or supportive language (“encourage,” “support,” “consider”) with no enforcement.
  • Monitor only — policies that commit to tracking or reporting but not to action.

The accountability score shown in the sidebar is the share of policies in the chapter that landed in the “Measurable” bucket. A score of 0–19 (red) indicates most policies use aspirational language without concrete accountability; 20–49 (orange) is mixed; 50 or higher (green) means the chapter is dominated by measurable commitments.

The underlying text comes from the official adopted comprehensive plan published by the Bellingham planning department. Scoring is performed by Real Record analysts using a structured rubric; the raw policy text and bucket assignments are archived in the Real Record civic data warehouse.

Read the full methodology, sources, and rubric at Real Record · About.

What the Plan Promises
Formal targets adopted in the Bellingham Comprehensive Plan.
Net zero emissions by 2050
Goals (10 total)
  • C-A: Citywide Approach – Implement a unified, proactive and collaborative citywide approach to address climate change
  • C-B: Climate Equity – Integrate equity and inclusion factors into all climate program design and implementation actions
  • C-C: Extreme Weather Preparation – Protect community health, wellbeing, infrastructure and natural environment from extreme weather impacts
  • C-D: Wildfire Impacts Preparation – Protect community health, wellbeing, infrastructure and natural environment from wildfire impacts
  • C-E: Sea Level Rise Preparation – Protect community health, wellbeing, infrastructure and natural environment from sea level rise
  • C-F: Resource Resiliency – Anticipate and plan for sustainable, resilient resources to meet community needs
  • C-G: Ecosystem Resiliency – Protect, enhance and restore ecosystems that could be adversely impacted by climate change
  • C-H: Building Emissions Mitigation – Ensure that buildings use renewable energy, conservation and efficiency technologies to reduce GHG emissions
  • C-I: Transportation Emissions Mitigation – Eliminate GHG emissions from municipal and community transportation
  • C-J: Renewable Energy – Encourage and support renewable energy generation and use
Stronger Policy Language (22 policies in this chapter)
  • C-1: Respond to climate change through citywide implementation of science-based climate mitigation and adaptation action plans that include emissions reduction targets and community resilience goals.
  • C-12: Develop, implement and regularly update as needed a comprehensive drought resilience strategy that factors in projected climate impacts and sets action levels for drought stages.
  • C-16: Develop, implement, and regularly update a wildfire smoke response plan in partnership with community members and emergency management staff to mitigate risk and exposure.
  • C-35: Continue to implement and improve multimodal and active transportation systems to reduce fossil fuel reliance, vehicle miles traveled and vehicle emissions.
Show all 22 stronger policies
The four examples above are a representative sample. The remaining 18 stronger policies are catalogued in the Real Record civic data warehouse and indexed by policy number against the adopted plan text. See how policies are scored →
Aspirational / Monitoring Language (18 policies in this chapter)
  • C-5: Encourage public-private partnerships with higher education institutions, nonprofit groups and other agencies to address climate change.
  • C-22: Support opportunities for businesses to adapt their operations in anticipation or in response to a changing climate.
  • C-25: Encourage building retrofits, particularly those with sensitive land uses, that make them more resilient to natural disasters and climate change.
  • C-33: Promote the electrification of existing and new buildings with approaches such as education, technical assistance, design services, financing incentives.
Show all 18 aspirational / monitoring policies
The four examples above are a representative sample. The remaining 14 policies in this bucket use language like “encourage,” “support,” “consider,” or “monitor” — phrasing that does not create an enforceable commitment. See how policies are scored →

SAY vs DISCUSS: Did this come up in meetings?

Real Record has not yet indexed any Bellingham briefings tagged to this chapter’s topics. Browse all Bellingham council and planning briefings to see related discussions in context.

View Bellingham Briefings →

SAY vs DO: Where the Money Goes

Departments related to Climate in Bellingham — what the city actually funds, year over year.

Budget analysis for this chapter is in progress. Real Record has mapped 2 Bellingham departments to this chapter, but the FY2006 / FY2025 line-item totals are not yet loaded into our civic data warehouse. In the meantime, browse the city-wide budget comparison on the index page.