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Standards, Low Carbon Fuel Standard, and Innovative <br />Clean Transit Regulations, described in detail in Chapter 4. <br />California Environmental Quality Act <br />CEQA requires that many proposed development projects <br />conduct an environmental review to identify how the <br />project may impact the environment. SB 97 directed the <br />Governor's Office of Planning and Research to amend the <br />State CEQA Guidelines to address GHG emissions, requiring <br />proposed projects to analyze their GHG emissions and <br />contribution to climate change. The Office of Planning and <br />Research adopted the CEQA Guidelines in December <br />2009, and they went into effect March 18, 2010. The <br />guidelines include provisions for local governments to use <br />adopted plans for the reduction of GHG emissions to <br />address the cumulative impacts of individual future projects <br />on GHG emissions (see State CEQA Guidelines Section <br />15183.5(b) (1)). <br />Consistent with the State CEQA Guidelines, lead agencies <br />may use adopted GHG reduction plans to assess the <br />cumulative impacts of discretionary projects on climate <br />change. In addition, the CEQA Guidelines provide a <br />development review of future projects. <br />[ME na iroropfii[.7: <br />A San Leandro streetscape. <br />mechanism to streamline <br />Specifically, lead agencies may use adopted plans consistent with State CEQA Guidelines <br />Section 15183.5 to analyze and mitigate the significant effects of GHGs under CEQA at a <br />programmatic level by adopting a plan for the reduction of GHG emissions. Later, as <br />individual projects are proposed, project -specific environmental documents may tier from <br />and/or incorporate by reference that existing programmatic review in their cumulative <br />impact analysis. Project -specific environmental documents prepared for projects <br />consistent with the General Plan and the CAP may rely on the programmatic analysis of <br />GHGs in this document. <br />A project -specific environmental document that relies on this CAP for its cumulative <br />impacts analysis must identify specific GHG reduction strategies applicable to the project <br />and demonstrate the project's incorporation of the strategies. Project applicants and City <br />staff will identify specific strategies applicable to each project during project review. If <br />applicable strategies are not otherwise binding and enforceable, they must be <br />incorporated as mitigation strategies for the project. If substantial evidence indicates that <br />the GHG emissions of a proposed project may be cumulatively considerable, <br />San Leandro 2021 Climate Action Plan Page 21 <br />