Hey Interloafer, I did find this report issued in January 2004, but I can't find anything more recent.

I attended a lecture about a month ago by Prof. Stephen Hammer that outlined what New York could learn from London's approach to energy:

A bolder approach would borrow another big idea from across the pond - the London Plan. More formally known as London's Spatial Development Strategy, this land use planning document articulates a coherent, long-term vision that says where development should occur, and what it should look like. What is truly unique about the London Plan, however - and what makes it noteworthy for policymakers in New York - is the way it links to and is supported by other strategic plans covering topics like transport, noise, waste management, air quality, economic development and energy. To borrow a term from British policy debates, London's strategies emphasize "joined up" thinking, with each individual strategy reflecting and supporting key themes found in other policy documents.

Perhaps the Mayor and Dan Doctoroff will start "joining-up" their thinking on all these issues instead of the piecemeal approach to development we have seen to date.

Sorry, I meant to link to this article by Stephen Hammer in the Gotham Gazette.