What Cities Want to Measure: Bottom-Up Selection of Indicators for Systemic Change toward Climate Neutrality Aligned with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 40 European Cities

: Cities are taking action to respond to climate change by designing and implementing sustainable solutions which provide benefits and challenges to citizens. Measuring the progress and effects of such actions at the urban level, beyond mere greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions quantification, is still an emerging research area. Based on data from the 40 European cities belonging to 20 pilot city programmes within the EU-funded NetZeroCities (NZC) project, cities’ selections and preferences for indicators for assessing their climate actions are analysed in relation to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This study provides bottom-up evidence of cities’ selection of non-GHG indicators through different levers of change, including participatory governance and social innovation, for assessing progress and the co-benefits of actions toward climate neutrality taken at the urban level. The resulting list of indicators, classified according to the SDGs, provides evidence of cities’ priorities and can be utilised by cities’ climate


Introduction
The implications of climate change [1] underscore the urgency of addressing the threats it poses through systemic and measurable climate action.Data-supported or evidencebased climate action, despite being a relatively new concept, is arguably a best practice for cities to support their paths to climate neutrality today [2,3].Greenhouse gas (GHG) indicators provide crucial information and evidence for policymakers, public administrations, and politicians to support and communicate climate action.A focus on GHG outcomes alone, however, has proven insufficient for understanding complex systems, since they do not consider contextual factors [4] that influence behaviour, stakeholders' acceptance of and involvement in solutions [5], climate justice awareness [6], location-specific awareness, training and capacity building [7], and ecosystems for systemic change [8].Moreover, climate action and environmental governance have been conventionally top-down interventions across global contexts, and the effectiveness of climate actions has essentially been focused only on the measurement of Greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions [9].However, this approach in isolation is not sufficient for tackling the systemic complexities of the current climate crisis [10,11].Technological innovation, considered one of the primary drivers necessary to reduce GHG emissions, is proving to be insufficient for addressing the complexities of today's socio-technical systems [11][12][13] and behavioural norms [14,15].
Ulpiani and Vetters [16] analysed a questionnaire completed by 362 cities (including cities analysed in this study) regarding their express interest in the European Mission for 100 Climate-Neutral and Smart Cities by 2030 and presented a comprehensive account of the associated risks and barriers that these European cities are currently facing, indicating Climate 2024, 12, 41 2 of 33 the relative lack of available literature with regard to the non-technical aspects of the transition to climate neutrality.The present study responds to this call to action and builds on cross-disciplinary perspectives in the wider domain of sustainable development, specifically in the European context, such as the role of culture, artistic expression, and creativity in sustainable urban transformations [17], which is testimony to the growing consensus towards the adoption of a multi-dimensional systemic approach.The agendas of large-scale climate initiatives, policies, and multi-level governmental organisations reflect the relevance of this systemic approach [18,19], namely the EU Mission "Climate Neutral and Smart Cities", which includes the NZC project.
The transformative potential of new categories of innovation is gaining recognition as a means of bridging the gap in systemic climate action and comprehensive environmental governance.Recent developments in research and practice show a gradual adoption of systemic climate action strategies among cities that employ nature-based solutions [20], Urban Green Infrastructures [21], and bottom-up approaches towards climate neutrality [6] such as social innovation [11,12,22] and citizen engagement [23] to support stakeholders' involvement in the transition [24].However, the promising potential of such approaches cannot be described through GHG indicators alone, requiring cities to evaluate outcomes of actions toward climate neutrality with indicators beyond GHG measures [25], such as co-benefits or indicators of behavioural change, as well as process indicators such as collaboration and partnerships for the goal [2,24,26].
Despite this need, the academic literature provides scarce systematic support for cities aiming to deploy a systemic approach beyond GHG indicators to monitor the progress and outcomes of actions taken to reach climate neutrality, such as measures to assess health and well-being [27,28], citizens' engagement [23] with climate action, the involvement of citizens in policy making and public institutions [29,30], or the development of public-private partnerships for sustainability [31,32].On the other hand, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) [33] provide a well-known, widely utilized, and suitable framework to classify such indicators.Scholars recently began deploying this approach, highlighting the need to establish a connection between climate action and other SDGs to ensure a broader focus on the actions' accountability [34].Even if SDG targets are primarily centred around developing contexts, Sompolska-Rzechuła et al. [35] already examined the climate-wellbeing linkages through SDGs and presented the diverse implementations of SDG3 ("Good Health and Well-Being") and SDG13 ("Climate Action").However, the ambitious 1.5 target established in the Paris Agreement [26] not only highlights the need for reductions in GHG emissions (SDG13) and the need to promote "good health and well-being" (SDG3) but also points towards considering systemic societal transformations [13,22] with Pro-Environmental Behaviour (PEB) among citizens [5,36].Sachs et al. [37] discuss the gap in the common understanding among stakeholders on how the implementation of SDGs can be organised and propose a systemic policy approach with six transformations aimed towards SDG achievement.In another study, Wuebben et al. [38] propose bottom-up alliances between citizen science and energy communities through SDGs and present the relevance of SDG7 ("Affordable and Clean Energy"), SDG11 ("Sustainable Cities and Communities"), SDG13 ("Climate Action"), and SDG17 ("Partnerships for the Goals").The paradigm shift [39] in climate action arguably signals the need to measure climate neutrality by incorporating broader indicators of change.Yet, the knowledge of cities' perspectives on what is considered relevant to measure at the urban level to assess the progress and outcomes of their city's climate action has not been thoroughly investigated.
This study aims to analyse cities' selection of indicators for assessing the progress and outcomes of the actions of their Pilot Cities Programmes aimed at climate neutrality according to the SDGs.The results provide evidence of cities' priorities in terms of what they find relevant to measure.For this purpose, indicators selected by 20 of the first batch of Pilot Cities (cohort 1) taking part in the EU-funded NetZeroCities (NZC) project are analysed and classified.NetZeroCities is a Horizon 2020 project, supporting the European Union's Mission of "100 Climate-Neutral and Smart Cities 2030" [2] and The European Green Deal [40].The project aims to support Mission Cities and Pilot Cities with tools, resources, expertise, and a platform for collective knowledge sharing in their path to achieving climate neutrality.The NetZeroCities project proposes a systemic approach to innovation.Pilot cities are required to report greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and are additionally invited to measure the outcomes of their actions in terms of co-benefit indicators.Cities submit a pilot programme description in which they outline the actions they plan to undertake and the indicators they plan to use for assessing progress, both in terms of GHG emissions (mandatory) as well as non-GHG indicators (optional, including process indicators and co-benefits).The NZC theory of change framework (also called the "impact pathways") [41,42] defines seven emission domains (vehicles and transport, electricity consumption, non-electricity energy consumption, industrial processes, land use, and multi-sector waste) and six systemic levers: (1) technology and infrastructure, (2) governance and policy, (3) social innovation (SI), (4) democracy and participation, (5) finance and funding, and (6) learning and capabilities.With this structure (Figure 1), cities can define and measure the performance of their climate actions.
according to the SDGs.The results provide evidence of cities' priorities in terms of what they find relevant to measure.For this purpose, indicators selected by 20 of the first batch of Pilot Cities (cohort 1) taking part in the EU-funded NetZeroCities (NZC) project are analysed and classified.NetZeroCities is a Horizon 2020 project, supporting the European Union's Mission of "100 Climate-Neutral and Smart Cities 2030" [2] and The European Green Deal [40].The project aims to support Mission Cities and Pilot Cities with tools, resources, expertise, and a platform for collective knowledge sharing in their path to achieving climate neutrality.The NetZeroCities project proposes a systemic approach to innovation.Pilot cities are required to report greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and are additionally invited to measure the outcomes of their actions in terms of co-benefit indicators.Cities submit a pilot programme description in which they outline the actions they plan to undertake and the indicators they plan to use for assessing progress, both in terms of GHG emissions (mandatory) as well as non-GHG indicators (optional, including process indicators and co-benefits).The NZC theory of change framework (also called the "impact pathways") [41,42] defines seven emission domains (vehicles and transport, electricity consumption, non-electricity energy consumption, industrial processes, land use, and multi-sector waste) and six systemic levers: (1) technology and infrastructure, (2) governance and policy, (3) social innovation (SI), (4) democracy and participation, (5) finance and funding, and (6) learning and capabilities.With this structure (Figure 1), cities can define and measure the performance of their climate actions.The NZC project's pilot cities are required to submit documentation containing, among several other requirements, a description of their actions as well as their selection of indicators.The cities are provided with a standardised set of 36 indicators which include 12 GHG emissions indicators and 24 non-GHG emissions indicators (see Table 1 and Appendix A, Table A1).In addition, the cities can propose their own customised indicators which are suitable for their specific pilot actions.The NZC project's pilot cities are required to submit documentation containing, among several other requirements, a description of their actions as well as their selection of indicators.The cities are provided with a standardised set of 36 indicators which include 12 GHG emissions indicators and 24 non-GHG emissions indicators (see Table 1 and Appendix A, Table A1).In addition, the cities can propose their own customised indicators which are suitable for their specific pilot actions.
In this study, we extrapolate indicators provided by the 20 pilot cities of the first cohort of the NZC project, classify them according to SDGs, and analyse their frequencies to derive insights into cities' priorities in terms of the SDGs.This study provides a novel contribution by analysing bottom-up evidence from several cities in terms of their SDG priorities in relation to actions toward climate neutrality.Secondly, the resulting analysis provides a comprehensive list of non-GHG indicators, classified according to SDGs that can potentially be applied by all cities in the world.The results also provide directions for future academic research regarding cities' priorities in terms of measurable SDG impact, highlighting gaps in the extant literature.

Empirical Information Sources
This study systematically analyses all indicators selected by cities belonging to the first cohort of pilot cities of the NZC project-Bristol (U.K.), Budapest (Hungary), Cluj-Napoca (Romania), Istanbul (Turkey), Kozani (Greece), Kranj (Slovenia), Lahti (Finland), Leuven (Belgium), Liberec (Czech Republic), Limassol (Cyprus), Malmö (Sweden), Nantes (France), Rivne (Ukraine), Turku (Finland), and Umeå and Uppsala (Sweden)-and those selected by the cities in the following four multi-city pilot projects: 7 Spanish cities under the pilot project titled "Urbanew", 9 Italian cities under the pilot project titled "LetsGOv", 5 Polish cities under the project "NEEST", and 3 German cities of the project "Co-lab" (information on these specific pilot projects is available online at https://netzerocities.eu/pilot-citiescohort-1-2022/). Figure 2 shows a map that visually locates all the above-mentioned cities.The pilot cities were provided with a standardised set of 36 indicators, including 12 GHG indicators (such as the "total Greenhouse gas emissions per year") and 24 non-GHG indicators (such as "Improved citizen participation" in the area of participatory governance) [2,42] (Table 1).In addition, the cities could provide their own indicators, which resulted in 127 customised indicators in total for the analysed cities [43].It is important to note that this study solely analyses the selection of proposed indicators as, currently, no data have been submitted by the pilot cities; thus, we only have information on the preliminary selection of indicators the cities are planning to utilise to assess their pilot programme actions (which are subject to change in consecutive rounds of refinement and data submissions).

Methods
The analysis of the indicators of the NZC Pilot Cities Programme in relation to the SDGs was conducted by extracting the set of standardised and customised indicators and computing the frequency of occurrence of each one (Section 2.2.1), which is the total count of the number of times each indicator was selected by the cities for their pilot projects.Secondly, the indicators were classified according to the SDGs and further analysed according to the categorisation approach discussed in Section 2.2.2.

Compilation of Indicators
The compilation of the indicators was carried out in two steps: the frequency of occurrence of each indicator (as selected by the cities based on their interventions) was recorded for the set of 36 standardised indicators (including the 12 GHG and 24 non-GHG indicators) provided for the pilot cities participating in the NetZeroCities project (Table 1, Appendix A, Table A3).For the purpose of this study, the primary goal is to analyse the standardised indicators set (Appendix A, Table A1) and the list of customised non-GHG indicators proposed by the Pilot Cities Programmes in relation to the SDGs (Appendix B, Table A4).

Methods
The analysis of the indicators of the NZC Pilot Cities Programme in relation to the SDGs was conducted by extracting the set of standardised and customised indicators and computing the frequency of occurrence of each one (Section 2.2.1), which is the total count of the number of times each indicator was selected by the cities for their pilot projects.Secondly, the indicators were classified according to the SDGs and further analysed according to the categorisation approach discussed in Section 2.2.2.

Compilation of Indicators
The compilation of the indicators was carried out in two steps: the frequency of occurrence of each indicator (as selected by the cities based on their interventions) was recorded for the set of 36 standardised indicators (including the 12 GHG and 24 non-GHG indicators) provided for the pilot cities participating in the NetZeroCities project (Table 1, Appendix A, Table A3).
For the set of customised indicators proposed by the cities based on the specific requirements of their pilot programmes, 127 indicators were extracted from the documentation submitted by the 20 Pilot Cities Programmes and compiled as a list (Appendix B, Table A4).Since the customised indicators differ on a city-by-city basis, indicators with similar characteristics were grouped into 12 different thematic categories (Table 2).The grouping was first conducted independently by each author and then finalised through a communal discussion.This categorisation is aimed at assessing the current trends in climate action undertaken by neutral-to-be European cities.

Classification with SDGs
All indicators were classified according to the SDGs; the classification was conducted by two authors independently and by a research assistant following an investigator triangulation method [44].A discussion was organised to solve cases in which a different SDG was attributed by different coders, and all cases were solved with unanimous agreement.The coding of each indicator with the most relevant SDGs was based on the thematic selection criteria mentioned in Appendix A, Table A2.
Indicator Frequency of Occurrence i p i × Total sum of all indicator occurances where n is the total number of indicators, p i is the total number of SDGs selected for the i-th indicator, and Indicator Frequency of Occurrence i is the frequency of occurrence for the i-th indicator.
The SDGs were then ranked from the highest to the lowest frequency of occurrence for the standardised indicator set, as shown in Table 3.For the customised indicator set, however, since each indicator is essentially unique to the particular pilot interventions, such an analysis is neither feasible nor useful.Hence, each indicator was attributed a primary SDG and a secondary and tertiary SDG when needed.
The total number of occurrences of the SDGs for each level of relevance (i.e., primary, secondary, and tertiary) were separately computed and then ranked from the highest to the lowest frequency of occurrence for the customised indicator set, as shown in Table 4.The results are visualized as bar charts (Figure 3).

Standardised Indicators and SDG Occurrence Frequency Rankings
The frequency of occurrence of the SDGs was calculated from the selection of standardised indicators in the analysed pilot cities of the NZC project, providing insights into the current trends in climate actions adopted by the 40 European cities considered in this study.Table 3 shows the frequencies of occurrence of 10 relevant SDGs, ranked from the highest to the lowest frequency of occurrence.While it may be regarded as an expected outcome for SDG13 (Climate Action) to emerge as the most frequently occurring SDG, the order of the rest of the list reveals a unique set of insights.
SDG9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure) is the second highest raked, with 15.90% of indicators relating to this goal, closely followed by SDG12 (Responsible Consumption and Production; 12.80% of selections) and SDG11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities; 9.60% of selections).Tracing back these SDGs to the frequency of occurrence of the specific indicators of the standardised set (Appendix A, Table A1), it is seen that a large number of cities have selected indicators from the impact domain "Social Inclusion, Innovation, Democracy and Cultural Impact".In particular, 16 out of the 20 pilot city projects

Standardised Indicators and SDG Occurrence Frequency Rankings
The frequency of occurrence of the SDGs was calculated from the selection of standardised indicators in the analysed pilot cities of the NZC project, providing insights into the current trends in climate actions adopted by the 40 European cities considered in this study.Table 3 shows the frequencies of occurrence of 10 relevant SDGs, ranked from the highest to the lowest frequency of occurrence.While it may be regarded as an expected outcome for SDG13 (Climate Action) to emerge as the most frequently occurring SDG, the order of the rest of the list reveals a unique set of insights.
SDG9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure) is the second highest raked, with 15.90% of indicators relating to this goal, closely followed by SDG12 (Responsible Consumption and Production; 12.80% of selections) and SDG11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities; 9.60% of selections).Tracing back these SDGs to the frequency of occurrence of the specific indicators of the standardised set (Appendix A, Table A1), it is seen that a large number of cities have selected indicators from the impact domain "Social Inclusion, Innovation, Democracy and Cultural Impact".In particular, 16 out of the 20 pilot city projects selected the indicator ( 17 23) "Number of follow-up projects or districts".This analysis highlights that, besides mandatory GHG indicators, European cities are showing an inclination towards selecting optional bottom-up levers for systemic change and socio-economic impact domains to focus their comprehensive climate actions, thus illustrating a pattern in their urban visions that centres around the citizenry, focusing on a flexible and accessible framework that advocates for stakeholder participation in the face of challenges to deep decarbonisation [45].

Customised Indicators and SDG Occurrence Frequency Rankings
The coding of the customised indicators proposed by the pilot cities according to the SDGs (shown in Appendix B, Table A4, and the final ranking for the SDGs in Table 4) resulted in SDG13 (Climate Action) emerging again as the most relevant with a frequency of 43.10%, followed by SDG16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions), with a frequency of selection of 24.50%, meaning that approximately one fourth of the indicators proposed by the cities related to strong institutions, justice, or peace (SDG16).In this bottom-up proposal of indicators by cities, SDG9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure) is still prominent, ranking as the third most selected category, with a frequency of occurrence of 7.20%, closely followed by SDG17 (Partnerships for the Goals) with a frequency of 6.70% and SDG12 (Responsible Consumption and Production) and SDG11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities), which were both selected 5.30% of the time.Other SDGs related to the indicators proposed by the pilot cities have a frequency below 2.40% and include SDG3 (Good Health and Well-being), SDG7 (Affordable and Clean Energy), SDG8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth), SDG10 (Reduce Inequalities), and SDG4 (Quality Education).
Compared to the SDGs associated with the standardised indicators presented in Section 3.1, the frequencies of occurrence of SDG16 and SDG17 for the customised indicators are interestingly higher: when cities proposed their own indicators, 24.50% of indicators belonged to SDG16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions), while in the standardised indicators set, SDG16 appeared only 6.10% of the time, suggesting that cities need more indicators related to strong institutions, justice, and peace.SDG17 (Partnerships for the Goals) is not included in the standardised indicators set, but cities have self-selected indicators related to it with a frequency of 6.70%.
In the case of the customised indicators, there is a high number of indicators that are unique or project-specific; however, a high frequency of occurrence (see Appendix B, Table A4) was observed for the thematic groups "Bottom-up Approaches, Participation and Involvement (People, neighbourhood, company and govt.channels)", with 22 corresponding indicators proposed by the cities for their pilot projects, and "Awareness Building, Training, Knowledge Sharing and Capacity Building", with 17 corresponding indicators proposed by the cities for their pilot projects.This finding shows the inclination of cities to experiment with bottom-up approaches towards climate neutrality, similar to the trend observed in the analysis of the standardised indicators.However, it is noteworthy that some of the thematic areas evolving out of cities' proposed indicators are not captured in the standardised set.These novel thematic areas include Policy and Regulatory Indicators, Behavioural Change Indicators and Operations, and Decision Making and Reporting Indicators (Table 2).
These results provide relevant insights into the climate action indicators that cities are not obliged to report and yet find necessary to measure and evaluate based on their priorities.

Discussion
The key outcome of the analysis of the indicators through the framework of the SDGs is that it outlines emerging patterns that shape the trends of the climate actions currently undertaken by 40 European cities belonging to 20 pilot projects (Figure 2).It also sheds light on what cities are interested in measuring to gauge the progress of their climate actions, as seen especially for the customised indicators.Classifying indicators aimed at assessing progress toward climate neutrality with the SDGs provides novel insights that can shape the understanding and the narrative of the current trends in the climate actions undertaken by cities.While there may be no surprise that SDG13 (Climate Action) emerged as the most relevant SDG, the high occurrence of SDG9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure), SDG12 (Responsible Consumption and Production), and SDG11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities) for the standardised indicators point at a common focus among cities towards interventions related to non-GHG indicators, essentially interventions centring around their citizenry.Interestingly, these results show consistency with another recent study which focused on monitoring climate neutrality through SDGs, namely the referenced study conducted by Ciambra et al. [46], wherein it was found that SDGs 7, 11, 12, and 13 have emerged as the primary SDGs associated with (GHG-focused) climate neutrality indicators taken into consideration for the case of Madrid (Spain).For the customised indicators (those freely selected by cities), the high occurrence of SDG16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions; 24.50%), SDG9 (Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure), SDG17 (Partnerships for the Goals), and SDG11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities) also suggests a focus on systemic climate action through climate policy and regulations, participatory governance, bottom-up approaches, and awareness building (Figure 3).
In summary, this study gauges the inclinations of European cities beyond the realms of GHG indicators towards more systemic and inclusive, citizen-centric approaches, navigated through systemic levers of change such as participatory governance, social innovation, policy and regulations, and awareness and capacity building, thereby bringing forth a novel transdisciplinary systemic perspective [47] towards assessing climate actions by highlighting the social components of holistic climate action in European cities.

Conclusions
The SDGs associated with the standardised and customised indicators of the NZC Pilot Cities Programme present a comprehensive landscape of the trends in the climate actions undertaken by European cities' frontrunners in climate action.The 17 SDGs have long served as time-bound targets for cities to measure the five Ps-Prosperity, People, Planet, Peace, and Partnership [37].However, they can also be valuable and appropriate in the specific context of climate action evaluation and reporting [33,37].The uniqueness of this study is found in the bottom-up inputs provided by the cities' administrators who are at the forefront of fostering climate actions.Hence, the study contributes a realistic and timely perspective for the emerging body of literature in this interdisciplinary domain based on evidence from the convergence of current practices and cities' needs.However, readers should be aware of the study's limitations: the NZC project is focused on the European context; nonetheless, indicators' insights can be beneficial for cities worldwide with adaptation.It is also noteworthy to acknowledge the varying levels of preparedness of specific cities or multi-city projects participating in the NZC project: certain indicators might be suitable depending on the city's readiness level or the scope of the specific pilot programme.
In conclusion, this study makes three key novel contributions.Firstly, it provides a comprehensive list of the most relevant indicators for assessing climate neutrality projects according to 40 European cities.Such a list of indicators has both pragmatic and academic relevance, enriching the extant literature on climate action assessment at urban and regional levels.Secondly, this study lays the foundation for future theoretical research on systemic innovation for climate neutrality at the urban level, showing that the cities, which were only required to report GHG emissions, selected optional indicators related to SDG16 (Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions) in 24.50% of cases.Thirdly, it shows that the SDGs are a suitable impact assessment framework for cities to deploy for framing and reporting on climate actions to further enhance cities' pathways toward climate neutrality through systemic and holistic assessments of progress and impacts which include innovative governance, citizen participation, awareness, behaviour, social aspects, and partnerships.

Selection Criteria Inclusion Criteria
Primary Criterion: General description of the SDG and keywords The NZC indicator description contains similar thematic areas or impact domains, impact sub-domains, keywords, and/or levers of change.
Optional Criterion: SDG targets and indicators 1The NZC indicator description matches or is similar to one or more targets and indicators of the SDG in consideration.For example, SDG 13 contains target 13.2 (Integrate climate change measures into national policies, strategies, and planning) and a corresponding indicator 13.2.2(Total greenhouse gas emissions per year).* The most relevant SDG targets [33] are referenced here to make the coding explicit.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. Geographical locations of all the pilot cities analysed.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. Geographical locations of all the pilot cities analysed.

Figure 3 .
Figure 3. Frequencies of occurrence (%) of SDGs for standardised and customised indicators combined.

Figure 3 .
Figure 3. Frequencies of occurrence (%) of SDGs for standardised and customised indicators combined.
) "Improved Citizen Participation" (categorised under the sub-domain Citizen & Communities Participation) and the indicator (18) "Improvement in Skills and Awareness" of public administration (categorised under the sub-domain Capacity of the Public Administration).Moreover, other indicators in the same domain also show a considerable rate of selection (more than 6 out of 20 pilot projects), including indicator (20) "Improved acceptance of digital solutions", indicator (21) "Number of participative activities implemented per stakeholder group", and indicator (

Table 2 .
Thematic clusters of customised indicators proposed by cities and related corresponding standardised indicators (when available).
* The thematic clusters in bold are indicators that have been listed by multiple cities but are not related to any of the standardised indicators.

Table 3 .
Ranked order of SDGs in terms of their frequencies of occurrence for the NZC standardised indicators.

Table 4 .
Ranked order of SDGs in terms of their frequencies of occurrence for the NZC customised indicators.

Table A1 .
[43]standardised indicators with their frequencies of occurrence in the indicators selected by the 20 pilot city projects of the NZC project[43]."#" indicates Number and is directly exracted from the original source data.
* Total number of times the indicator has been selected by the 20 pilot cities in the NZC project.

Table A2 .
Qualitative selection criteria for coding SDGs with the NZC indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of 36

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of 36

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of 36

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of 36

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

rence SDGs Coding SDG Targets * SDG Frequency of Occurrence 1 Total green- house gas emis- sions per year
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of 36

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
SDG Frequency of Occurrence.SDG Frequency of Occurrence G

ets SDG Frequency of Occurrence
.SDG Frequency of Occurrence

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
coding of the NZC standardised indicators.coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.
Climate 2024, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 16 of

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.

Table A3 .
SDG coding of the NZC standardised indicators.