San Jose will receive up to $2.5 million to mitigate climate change as a winner of the Bloomberg American Cities Climate Challenge, the city announced Oct. 17.

The city plans to use financial and technical support from Bloomberg Philanthropies, a nonprofit  run by entrepreneur and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg that aims to help cities find solutions to global problems.

The support will be part of a two-year acceleration program to bolster sustainable, electrified transportation and phase out the use of fossil fuels in buildings.

The competition recognized San Jose for Climate Smart San Jose, a program approved by the City Council in February that aims to create 25,000 โ€œgreenโ€ jobs, reuse 100 percent of the cityโ€™s wastewater and reduce per capita energy use by 50 percent, among many other goals.

โ€œAs an increasing frequency of wildfires, floods and other natural disasters threatens cities across the country, we must accelerate our efforts to combat climate change,โ€ Mayor Sam Liccardo said in a statement.

Liccardo hopes to implement an education- and incentive-based strategy for shared electric vehicles, create priority lanes for walking, cycling and bike- and scooter-sharing systems, and require solar and electric-vehicle readiness for new construction.

San Jose is among 20 cities receiving the award. Others include Los Angeles, San Diego, Portland, Seattle and Atlanta.

โ€œThe response to our Climate Challenge was overwhelming,โ€ Bloomberg said in a statement.

He said cities across the country competed with thoughtful proposals, and it wasnโ€™t easy to choose a winner.

โ€œWith Washington asleep at the wheel, cities need to step up in the fight against climate change โ€” and these cities are leading the way. Congratulations to them all,โ€ Bloomberg said.

Story originally published by Bay City News.