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    By the Footprint

    Houston steps to top of list of U.S. cities with lowest carbon footprints

    Brianna Caleri
    Aug 9, 2022 | 9:25 am
    Houston skyline
    Houston claimed the No. 1 spot among the 50 most visited in the U.S. with the lowest carbon footprint.
    Sean Pavone/Getty Images

    People looking to travel to a sustainable city probably don’t have Texas spots at the top of their lists. Images of oil, cars, and blasting air conditioners spring up. The Texas power grid, no one need remind us, is barely hanging on.

    But Texas blew other states away for lowest carbon footprint per capita, landing Houston at the top of the list compiled by travel blog Park Sleep Fly. Austin followed (No. 3), then San Antonio (No. 4) and Dallas (No. 9). Only Florida appeared twice in the top 10, and none matched Texas with four cities.

    Among the 50 most visited in the U.S., those with the lowest carbon footprint are:

    1. Houston
    2. Los Angeles
    3. Austin
    4. San Antonio
    5. Tampa, Florida
    6. Salt Lake City
    7. Phoenix
    8. Miami
    9. Dallas
    10. Portland, Oregon

    Houston is not exactly a green place, with less-than-ideal utilization of public transportation. It and Dallas tied for third place among least sustainable cities in the same report.

    “Public transit isn’t the most popular mode of transportation in Houston, but it does exist,” an online publication called TripSavvy drably admits. The city takes credit for employing “nearly one third” of the nation’s oil and gas extraction workers.

    On the renewable side, however, Houston claims more than 100 solar energy companies, and at least half of its corporate research and development centers pursue “energy technology and innovation.” And its huge population spreads the load, leaving only 14.6 metric tons of carbon dioxide per resident — the same as Los Angeles. Big cities seem to have an advantage in this rating system.

    Austin is just behind Houston at 15 metric tons per capita, neck-and-neck with San Antonio at 15.2. These two cities have smaller populations to distribute their total footprint, but are generally seen as eco-friendly. Austin got a big head start in 1991 with the introduction of the Austin Energy Green Building program — the first of its kind in the whole country — which created an evaluation system for individual building sustainability that’s still in use. Dallas' carbon footprint is the largest of the Texas cities in the ranking, at 16.5 metric tons per capita.

    As such a multifaceted issue (especially tied up in economic concerns), sustainability is hard to pin down from city to city. The multiplicity of this list is yet another indicator that Texas as a whole is a much more nuanced place than many people think.

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    millennial magnet

    Houston suburb surprises as a booming millennial hotspot in 2026

    Amber Heckler
    Feb 26, 2026 | 10:30 am
    W. Goodrich Jones State Forest in Conroe, Texas
    Photo by Obed Esquivel-Pickett on Unsplash
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    A new Houston-area city has emerged a top destination for millennial movers, a new migration report has found: Conroe.

    This surprising Houston neighbor ranked as the 15th most popular U.S. city for millennials in SmartAsset's annual report, "Where Millennials Are Moving – 2026 Study."

    The report calculated the percentage of the total population represented by millennials (people aged 25-44) in more than 250 of the largest U.S. cities. Then it ranked the cities by the rate of millennials who moved there in 2024 (the year with the most recent available data), also as a percentage of the total population. Data was sourced from the U.S. Census Bureau's 1-Year American Community Survey.

    According to the data, 9.14 percent of Conroe's total population were millennial transplants that arrived in the city in 2024. That means nearly 10,500 people between the ages of 25 and 44 packed up and moved to Conroe that year.

    To zoom out on the city's greater millennial population, there are currently about 39,300 millennials who call Conroe home. These individuals make up around 35 percent of the city's entire population, the study determined.

    SmartAsset also broke down how many millennial transplants arrived in Conroe from elsewhere in Montgomery County, a different Texas county, a different state altogether, and another country:

    • Moved in from same county: 5,383 people
    • Moved in from different county in same state: 3,802 people
    • Moved in from a different state: 863 people
    • Moved in from abroad: 423 people
    Millennials make up about 36 percent of the American workforce, the report noted, so it's likely not a surprise that many of them would choose to live in a city like Conroe, who was among the most desirable suburbs to move to in America in 2025, and was also dubbed one of the best cities for renters that same year. Most recently, the suburb landed among the top 20 U.S. suburbs with the highest rate of new wealthy residents.

    "With more flexibility than ever due to remote work and rapidly developing technologies, many Millennial households opt to move locations in pursuit of job opportunities, higher pay, preferable lifestyles, and family considerations, among other reasons," the report's author wrote.

    The study proposed that U.S. cities that are successful in attracting newcomers within the 25-44 age group may see some benefits from "stronger and more diverse workforces, disposable income flowing to local businesses, and additional tax revenue." Yet it also warned that an influx of transplants can result in greater competition in a city's housing market and "a change in the business mix for preexisting locals."

    The top 10 most popular destinations for millennials on the move in 2026 are:

    • No. 1 – Cambridge, Massachusetts
    • No. 2 – Seattle, Washington
    • No. 3 – Sunnyvale, California
    • No. 4 – Orlando, Florida
    • No. 5 – Arlington, Virginia
    • No. 6 – Austin, Texas
    • No. 7 – Bellevue, Washington
    • No. 8 – Sandy Springs, Georgia
    • No. 9 – Denver, Colorado
    • No. 10 – Santa Clara, California
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