Local governments increasingly adopt climate and energy strategies addressing both mitigation and adaptation objectives, yet these domains are often treated separately, limiting integrated planning. This study develops a structured Climate–Energy Action Library to support more coherent local decision-making. The library was constructed through a systematic review and harmonisation of actions from European Sustainable Energy and Climate Action Plans (SECAPs), international repositories, and related frameworks, resulting in a taxonomy of 171 actions grouped into thematic bundles and policy categories. The methodology enables the identification of potential synergies among measures, and revealing consistent cross-sector interaction patterns. The strongest interaction potential occurs when technical measures are combined with enabling governance actions, including policy instruments, planning frameworks, and capacity-building. Cross-sectoral synergies are evident in building retrofit programmes linked with heat-stress adaptation and in nature-based solutions contributing to mitigation, urban cooling, and ecosystem services. These findings indicate that governance and ecosystem-based measures often enhance the effectiveness of sector-specific interventions. The proposed library provides a practical analytical reference for municipalities, supporting the design and evaluation of integrated climate strategies and helping bridge the persistent separation between mitigation and adaptation in local climate governance.
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