1 the green economy and cities david satterthwaite iied
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The Green Economy and Cities
David Satterthwaite
IIED
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Why focus on urban centres?
More than half the world’s population 95% of global GDP Most new investment; almost all population
growth Most of the world’s high consumers? Centres for large share of GHGs
– Although not urban centres that generate GHGs but particular enterprises, institutions & consumers
Green economy and cities
Green economy one that “results in improved human well-being and social equity, while significantly reducing environmental & ecological scarcities” (UNEP 2011)
Goals of green economy same as sustainable development goals – But makes us think more about economy, investment and
jobs
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Obvious justification for green economy
Very urgent need to reduce ecological impacts of production & consumption including GHG emissions– Most production and high-consumption in urban areas
Doing so likely to create lots of jobs – Many aspects of green economy labour/skill intensive
Evidence from cities of delink between quality of life & GHG emissions– Many successful cities with low carbon emissions per
person
– hundreds of cities committed to reducing GHGs
GHG emissions/person/year (tonnes of CO2e)
‘Fair-share’ global average
More evidence of ways forward
Scale & depth of literature on sustainable cities– green/white/blue roofs!!!– Headaches for IPCC
Global discourses supporting this– Rio plus 20/the future we want…./post 2015
development….– Discussions on whether there should be goals related to
sustainable cities
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Cities critical to green economy
Cannot do green economy without green cities and green city consumers
City governments have tools– Using density well– Investing in green infrastructure to better manage water
and waste-water, increase renewable energy use, reduce ecological footprint, support urban agriculture….
– Public transport (can deliver social, economic & reduced GHG goals)
– Managing waste (& potential for recycling & GHG reduction)
– Local regulation or taxes on what is unsustainable – Nurture local innovation (in production & markets)
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Logical steps towards green economy
National framework to support cities moving in right direction– Have to have agreements on emissions reduction globally
What public sector can do– Procurement– Own operations (buildings, vehicles….)– New range of taxes/revenues– Facilities for green enterprises
Cities innovating in right direction
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BUT
UNEP: Green economy one that – “results in improved human well-being – social equity– significantly reducing environmental risks and ecological scarcities
Reality today is of urbanization that is – not improving human well-being for much of its population – associated with increased social inequity – increasing environmental risks and ecological scarcities
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Very difficult to conceive of how to make private investment flows into cities support green economy
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Local government budgets per inhabitant (US$)
Can we conceive of global & national frameworks that can fundamentally change private investment flows?
How to advance when city governments have almost no investment capacity
What politician is going to say no to ungreen investment offered to their city?
Appetites of the wealthy unrestrained So many cities now the opposite of what is needed
– In reality few innovative cities – Achievements of cities that are global leaders limited in
relation to what is actually needed
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OTHER BUTS
“Sustainable” OR “green” cities legitimating planning for elite cities? See work of Vanessa Watson on this
(slides borrowed from her powerpoint presentation)
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LAGOS
The most impressive feature of the Business District will be a spectacular central boulevard that will be about 2 kilometres long and 60 metres wide. It will be similar in size to the Champs Elysees in Paris or Fifth Avenue in New York.
‘Eko Atlantic will be a new home to 250,000 people and the workplace of another 150,000. The nine square kilometre development will have waterfront areas, tree-lined streets, efficient transport systems and mixed-use plots that combine residential areas with leisure facilities, offices and shops’. Dar Al-Handasah (Shair and Partners) EngineersRoyal Haskoning (marine engineering)MZ Architects (Mid-East)
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Dar es Salaam plan
Dodi Moss S.I.r, (Italy) which submitted its proposals in association with three other firms: - Buro Happold Ltd (Britain based firm), Afri-Arch Associates and Q-Consult Ltd (both based in Tanzania) won the tender.
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Kigale (Rwanda)
Initiated as a vision by President Kagame, it was completed by the OZ
Architecture Team in 2007 and adopted by Rwanda Parliament in 2008. OZ – based in US.