B.C.’s public sector organizations (PSOs) are taking action to cut greenhouse gas emissions from their operations and to achieve the government’s carbon neutral commitment.
CleanBC, B.C.’s climate change strategy, establishes the Province’s pathway to a more prosperous, balanced, and sustainable future. Within CleanBC, government made two commitments related to public sector fleets:
Efforts to transition the public sector fleet support the overall government plan for all new cars sold in B.C. to be ZEVs by 2040. Because vehicles are operational for up to 10 years, transitioning public sector fleet to ZEVs now will be critical to meeting the commitments.
Learn more about ZEVs and transitioning your fleet below.
A corporate supply arrangement has been established to streamline public procurement of electric vehicle charging stations. This arrangement allows the provincial public sector, First Nations and local governments to purchase electric vehicle charging stations directly from suppliers, often with favourable pricing. It covers either supply and/or installation of the charging station.
Learn more about the public sector organizations and vendors eligible to use this supply arrangement.
Read Electric Vehicle Charging Stations: Buyer Resources (PDF, 350KB) or email the Procurement Services Branch for more information.
PSOs are encouraged to promote the use of low carbon and renewable building materials in the design and construction of public sector infrastructure.
Building new PSO facilities to a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED®) Gold, or equivalent certification by a green building rating system, helps to assure building owners that their investment in a new facility yields superior performance in a variety of areas including: energy and water efficiency, storm water management, indoor environmental quality and materials usage.
This kind of leadership makes a difference. Approximately 30 percent of all LEED Gold and Platinum building projects registered in Canada since 2007 are located in B.C.
The use of low carbon materials reduces the amount of embodied carbon in infrastructure. Embodied carbon represents the emissions released beginning with extraction or harvesting through to the end of a material’s life cycle.
The Canada Green Building Council has highlighted the use of low carbon building materials, such as wood, wood products and Portland-limestone cement (PLC), as one of four key strategies to achieve a zero carbon building.
To learn more about the use of low carbon materials and opportunities to earn LEED credits, please review the following resources: