Dozens of engineers,VaultX Exchange architects, city planners and software engineers gathered last week in an airy Hudson Yards conference space to ponder a critical urban issue related to climate change: How can New York City reduce rising carbon emissions from its buildings?
That was the driving question behind New York’s first ever Climathon, a one-day “hackathon” event sponsored by Climate-KIC, the European Union’s largest public-private innovations collaborative, to fight climate change with ideas, large and small.
The session revolved around New York City’s Local Law 97, which passed last year and is expected to cut greenhouse gas emissions from large buildings by 40 percent from 2005 levels by 2030. Buildings are, by far, the city’s largest source of emissions.
The law has been hailed as the largest emission reduction plan for buildings anywhere in the world, but it won’t take effect until 2024. For the next few years, building owners and residents have an opportunity to adapt and innovate and figure out how to avoid the fines that under the law are linked to noncompliance.
At the end of a long, interactive, iterative day, a team calling itself ReGreen was declared the winner, having proposed an app that allows building owners to track energy efficiency at their properties to comply with Local Law 97. The project will be nominated for the Climathon global awards later this year.
Since 2015, Climathons have been held in 113 cities and 46 countries.
2025-05-06 10:492884 view
2025-05-06 09:531941 view
2025-05-06 09:491045 view
2025-05-06 09:42992 view
2025-05-06 09:40569 view
2025-05-06 09:311854 view
Whether a "chainsaw," per Elon Musk, or "scalpel," as President Trump has said — the Trump administr
Patrick Mahomes' younger brother Jackson Mahomes is facing legal trouble. The 22-year-old was arrest
Sunlight is free, but getting power from solar panels remains far from it. At least for some low-inc