Giving Compass' Take:

• Global Citizen reports on the efforts of Claudia Sheinbaum — a former climate scientist and Mexico City's first elected female mayor — to reduce pollution in her district through auto reforms.

• Sheinbaum may face headwinds depending on how the NAFTA talks with the U.S. shake out, but her expertise in this area is unimpeachable. What can other cities learn from her proposals?

• The problem is growing. Here in the U.S., transportation is now the largest source of emissions.


Mexico City’s first woman mayor won’t take office until December, but she’s already taking measures to clean up the city’s air.

Environmental scientist Claudia Sheinbaum, who won the election by a large margin in July, is already taking steps to reduce particle contamination by 40%, reported Reuters.

"What we are proposing, and we want to do this even before we enter government, is to have a meeting ... with the major automakers," Sheinbaum said in an interview with Reuters, adding that she will approach embassies of major automaking powers first. "From there we want to generate a new standard for new vehicles, that allows new vehicles to be less and less polluting."

Mexico has fallen behind in emissions standards for new vehicles, according to Sheinbaum, and the costs for hybrid and electric vehicles that are currently inaccessible to most consumers in the country.

Read the full article about Mexico City's first female mayor taking on pollution by Erica Sanchez and Joanna Prisco at Global Citizen.