Greenest Cities in America
With October being National Energy Awareness Month and New York recently becoming the first city to unveil a plan that upholds the Paris Climate Agreement among nearly 250 cities that pledged to do so, WalletHub conducted an in-depth analysis of 2017’s Greenest Cities in America. To determine which cities promote a “green” lifestyle, WalletHub’s analysts compared the 100 largest U.S. cities across 22 key indicators of environmental friendliness and sustainability.
Greenest Cities in America
1. San Francisco, CA
2. San Diego, CA
3. Fremont, CA
4. Honolulu, HI
5. San Jose, CA
6. Washington, DC
7. Sacramento, CA
8. Irvine, CA
9. Portland, OR
10. Oakland, CA
Least Green Cities in America
91. Oklahoma City, OK.
92. Cleveland, OH.
93. Lexington-Fayette, KY.
94. Toledo, OH.
95. Tulsa, OK.
96. St. Petersburg, FL.
97. Louisville, KY.
98. Jacksonville, FL.
99. Baton Rouge, LA.
100. Corpus Christi, TX. Best vs. Worst:
- Lubbock, Texas, has the lowest median air-quality index, 21, which is 4.3 times lower than in Riverside and San Bernardino, California, the cities with the highest at 90.
- Anchorage, Alaska, has the most green space, 84.2 percent, which is 56.1 times more than in Hialeah, Florida, the city with the least at 1.5 percent.
- Lubbock, Texas, has the lowest annual excess fuel consumption, 4.1 gallons per auto commuter, which is 8.5 times lower than in New York, Washington, as well as Newark and Jersey City, New Jersey, the cities with the highest, each at 35 gallons per auto commuter.
- New York has the highest walk score, 89, which is four times higher than in Chesapeake, Virginia, the city with the lowest at 22.
- Honolulu has the most farmers markets (per square root of population), 0.1197, which is 63 times more than in Newark, New Jersey, the city with the fewest at 0.0019.