The Bay Area is home to two of the most sustainable metro areas in the country, according to a new study put together for the United Nations. The San Jose-Santa Clara-Sunnyvale area topped the list, and the San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward area came in fourth.
The San Diego-Carlsbad area and the Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura area landed spots five and eight, respectively, giving California more cities on the list than any other state.
Using public, published data, the index measured how well cities met the 17 U.N. sustainable development goals (SDG), which include: zero hunger, no poverty, quality education, affordable and clean energy, and industry, innovation and infrastructure.
“I don’t think it’s an accident that California does so well on this because it has embraced many of these objectives for a long time, far ahead of the rest of the country,” said Columbia University professor Jeffrey Sachs, who directed the network of experts that compiled the index.
Sachs hopes policymakers around the country will use the index as a tool to pinpoint problems to tackle in their region.