The city with the lowest overall risk is Laredo. For heat, El Paso has the lowest risk and San Antonio has the highest risk. For precipitation, El Paso has the lowest risk and Houston has the highest risk.
With a score of 98.3 it ranks in the top 2% of U.S. counties and top 4% in Texas for disaster risk. Tornados, hail, river flooding, lightning and heat waves are the highest hazard types.
The City of San Antonio is working with partners to save water, improve air quality and reduce energy consumption within its municipal operations and within the community. COSA Drought Operations Plan. COSA Mayor's Monarch Pledge. CPS Energy Save Now Home Energy Efficiency Programs. Green Shade Program.
Under a high emissions scenario, San Antonio is projected to face average summer weather that's about 8.4 degrees warmer and about 5.4% drier than today, based on the climate model projections.
SA Climate Ready was adopted by the San Antonio City Council on October 19, 2019. 1 The Climate Action and Adaptation Plan (CAAP) commits the community to achieving carbon neutrality by 2050. The plan includes 28 community mitigation, 13 municipal, and 45 adaptation strategies.
At COP21 in 2015 in Paris, all UNFCCC Parties adopted the Paris Agreement : the first ever universal, legally binding global climate agreement. They agreed to limit the global temperature increase from the industrial revolution to 2100 to 2°C while pursuing efforts to limit the increase even further to 1.5°C.
Under a high emissions scenario, San Antonio is projected to face average summer weather that's about 8.4 degrees warmer and about 5.4% drier than today, based on the climate model projections.
Least Impacted San Francisco, California. Seattle, Washington. Columbus, Ohio. Minneapolis, Minnesota. Baltimore, Maryland. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Portland, Oregon. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
CAPs typically establish GHG-reduction targets and use a community GHG emissions inventory as a baseline for setting those targets. CAPs also identify emissions reduction policies and strategies by sector (e.g., transportation/land use, buildings, waste reduction, agriculture, and municipal operations).
Climate projections for the region indicate that under all scenarios, by the 2040s, San Antonio will see an increase in warm nights (>80°F), hot days (>100°F) and the introduction of very hot days (>110°F). Precipitation is expected to become more extreme and variable in terms of timing as well as amount.