photo of estuary at Crissy Field at sunset

Sustainability and Resilience

We believe: The region should be environmentally just, carbon-neutral,
and resilient to climate change and earthquakes.

Our Goals

• Decarbonize buildings.

• Make the region resilient to sea level rise and other climate-driven natural disasters.

• Improve communities’ resilience to earthquakes.

transect of a bayshore neighborhood with ground water beneath the soil

SPUR Report

Look Out Below

Bay Area cities planning for sea level rise need to address another emerging hazard: groundwater rise. Our case study on East Palo Alto offers recommendations applicable to other vulnerable communities along the San Francisco Bay shore.
transect of a bayshore neighborhood with ground water beneath the soil

SPUR Report

Look Out Below

Bay Area cities planning for sea level rise need to address another emerging hazard: groundwater rise. Our case study on East Palo Alto offers recommendations applicable to other vulnerable communities along the San Francisco Bay shore.
illustration of houses plugging into the electricity grid

SPUR Report

Closing the Electrification Affordability Gap

New Bay Area regulations are ushering in a transition from polluting gas furnaces and water heaters to zero-emissions electric heat pumps. SPUR’s action plan shows how to make this transition affordable for low-income households.
illustration of houses plugging into the electricity grid

SPUR Report

Closing the Electrification Affordability Gap

New Bay Area regulations are ushering in a transition from polluting gas furnaces and water heaters to zero-emissions electric heat pumps. SPUR’s action plan shows how to make this transition affordable for low-income households.
photo of Ocean Beach in San Francisco

Initiative

Ocean Beach Master Plan

San Francisco's Ocean Beach faces significant challenges. SPUR led a public process to develop a comprehensive vision to address sea level rise, protect infrastructure, restore coastal ecosystems, and improve public access.
photo of Ocean Beach in San Francisco

Initiative

Ocean Beach Master Plan

San Francisco's Ocean Beach faces significant challenges. SPUR led a public process to develop a comprehensive vision to address sea level rise, protect infrastructure, restore coastal ecosystems, and improve public access.
historic photo of houses damaged in the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake

Initiative

The Resilient City

We know that another major earthquake will strike San Francisco — we just don’t know when. SPUR's Resilient City Initiative recommends steps the city should take before, during, and after the next big quake.
historic photo of houses damaged in the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake

Initiative

The Resilient City

We know that another major earthquake will strike San Francisco — we just don’t know when. SPUR's Resilient City Initiative recommends steps the city should take before, during, and after the next big quake.

Updates and Events


120 Years After 1906

Policy Brief /
San Francisco’s long-term resilience is constrained by the safety of its existing buildings. While the city has made meaningful progress, thousands of seismically vulnerable buildings remain. Given the cost and complexity of retrofits, the next phase of seismic policy must align earthquake resilience with priorities to revitalize downtown and meet climate goals. On the 120th anniversary of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire, this brief assesses how far the city has come in strengthening its buildings and identifies where risks remain.

SPUR Position on SB 1097: Support If Amended

Advocacy Letter /
SPUR conditionally supports SB 1097, arguing that California urgently needs faster permitting to expand clean energy and meet statutory climate goals, but only if the bill is amended. SPUR urges excluding biomass thermal energy combustion facilities from streamlined environmental review because of their significant local pollution and disproportionate impacts on disadvantaged communities. Overall, SPUR backs accelerating truly clean energy projects like solar, wind, storage, and transmission, while maintaining stricter review for higher-polluting technologies.

When FEMA Steps Back, Who Pays for San Francisco’s Next Disaster?

News /
Over the last year, the Trump administration has sought to reform the Federal Emergency Management Agency and shift the bill for emergencies to local and state governments. Facing a major budget deficit tied to the city’s last major emergency, the COVID-19 pandemic, San Francisco must pursue new disaster management strategies, in coordination with regional and state partners, to ensure financial resilience in the face of future disasters.

Comment Letter on Natural Gas Energy Efficiency Incentives Policy

Advocacy Letter /
A coalition of environmental and community stakeholders urges the Commission to end all ratepayer-funded incentives for new gas-burning appliances in energy efficiency programs. These subsidies increase energy costs, lock customers into long-term gas use, and conflict with California’s climate and decarbonization goals while competing with cleaner electric alternatives. The letter calls for redirecting ratepayer funds toward strategies that support an equitable transition to a fully decarbonized energy system.

Bay Area Clean Air Coalition urges the Air District not to delay Rule 9-6 and to implement needed flexibilities

Advocacy Letter /
The Bay Area Clean Air Coalition, of which SPUR is a leading member, urges the board to keep the Zero-NOx water heater rule (Rule 9-6) on track for its planned January 1, 2027 implementation, warning that further delays would prolong harmful air pollution and weaken the market shift toward cleaner appliances. The coalition argues that the rule has already included years of preparation and stakeholder engagement, and that staff have developed flexibility measures to address implementation challenges. While supporting targeted exemptions and financial assistance for low-income households, the coalition stresses that the rule must move forward on schedule to protect public health, reduce NOx emissions, and maintain regulatory certainty.

SPUR Co-Sponsors AB 1738, the Remote Virtual Inspection Act

Advocacy Letter /
SPUR and Permit Power are co-sponsoring AB 1738 (Carrillo), legislation to expand the use of remote virtual inspections for simple, low-risk building permits across California. The bill would help reduce housing and clean energy project delays by allowing eligible inspections — such as water heaters, solar, and ADUs — to be conducted virtually, cutting costs, saving time, and freeing up inspector capacity while maintaining safety standards. By modernizing permitting processes, AB 1738 aims to accelerate housing production, electrification, and climate resilience statewide.