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Archive for the ‘Carbon-neutral’ Category

Resource - Post your sustainability events, initiatives, research & even questions for free DIRECTLY on SustainableCitiesNet.com!

June 17th, 2008

by ferne edwards

This is to reminder that you are welcome to post your sustainable-city related events, initiatives, research & even questions & ideas for free DIRECTLY on SustainableCitiesNet.com!

SustainableCitiesNet.com is a communications hub as “a portal to the future of cities” that are ecologically, socially and culturally sustainable. It serves as a network and communication system to deliver information, to connect people and projects, to accelerate the city’s transformation across the world. For more information about this site please visit “About“.

To contribute a post click here and follow the instructions. If you have any problems posting your data please contact either:
Ferne Edwards, Project co-ordinator & site moderator, at fedwards @unimelb.edu.au or
Simon DAlfonso, Technical support, at dals @unimelb.edu.au.

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Posted in Carbon-neutral, Event, Food, Health, Model, Movement, Provocations, Resource, Urban Design and Built Form, Vision, Water, climate change, energy, networks, research, waste | No Comments »

Provocation - Towards zero carbon in building design

July 1st, 2008

by ferne edwards

Please find an abstract below from an interesting article which discusses some of the issues involved in going for zero carbon emissions in building design. The full article can be viewed at http://www.theecologist.org/pages/archive_detail.asp?content_id=1879.

Abstract: “Whole-house thinking”, Dr. David Strong, The Ecologist, 20/06/2008
“What’s the point of zero-carbon homes that aren’t fit for habitation? There is more to sustainable building than meeting Government targets, argues Dr David Strong

The UK Government has declared a laudable and ambitious plan to ensure all our new homes are zero carbon by 2016 and new non-domestic buildings zero carbon by 2019. The impact of this plan has been felt throughout the property and construction industry, and the drive towards zero-carbon has already had a powerful effect in galvanising the house-building and property development community, and in stimulating innovation. I am not sure that would have happened without such a strong legislative and policy initiative.

Of course the huge surge in interest in sustainable building is good news. After 35 years working in the industry, it is highly gratifying to see sustainability finally reaching the top of the political, planning and construction agenda. The emphasis being put by the Government on more energy-efficient buildings, and greener communities generally, is a truly welcome and encouraging sign.

However, those of us who are passionate about delivering a genuinely sustainable built environment currently face a real dilemma.

Here’s our problem: there is so much more to delivering exemplary built environments than zero carbon. In fact, there is even a danger that a fixation on zero carbon may result in highly perverse outcomes and deliver seriously damaging and unintended consequences in terms of sustainability – with the pursuit of the ‘best’ becoming the enemy of the good.”

The full article can be viewed at http://www.theecologist.org/pages/archive_detail.asp?content_id=1879.

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Posted in Carbon-neutral, Model, Provocations, Urban Design and Built Form, climate change, energy | No Comments »

Networks - “Cities-for-Mobility.net” promotes worldwide cooperation for sustainable mobility

July 1st, 2008

by Cities-for-Mobility

Cities for Mobility is a worldwide network of local actors engaged in promoting sustainable urban mobility: It comprises almost 500 local autorities, public transport companies and partners from private business, science, education and civil society from over 60 countries from all world regions. The network has been created by the German Municipality of Stuttgart (Mayor Dr. Wolfgang Schuster) in 1999.

If you are interested in joining the network free of charge, please visit the “Documents” section of www.cities-for-mobility.net (”membership forms”) or write to cfm@stuttgart.de.

You are kindly invited to join existing project initiatives and to bring in new ones.

Currently the network members put special emphasis on the crucial issue of rising energy prices in the ending oil age. How will local authorities be able/enabled to guarantee in the future sufficient mobility services to their citizens at affordable prices? The rational use of energy, energy-efficient vehicles as e.g. bicycles or electric mobility (above all Light Electric Vehicles - LEV; http://www.pedelec.com/main.php?language=en) and the use of renewable energy sources in transport are among the most urgently needed and most promising solutions that are already available at present.

C4M members are invited to gather in Stuttgart at the yearly World Congress at the beginning of June (next event: 15-16 June 2009) or at Regional Congresses in other parts of the world.

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Posted in Carbon-neutral, Transport, climate change, energy, networks | No Comments »

Models & Resources – Carpooling, Carsharing and Walking School Buses with plenty of international online resources

May 27th, 2008

by ferne edwards

The section below is from the Relocalise Newsletter May 2008 available at http://www.relocalize.net/newsletter/may08.

Carpooling, Carsharing and Walking School Buses
Transportation is a major focus for planners in cities and municipalities, and while increasing gas prices are being felt across the board, they are much more evident at the pump. Nationwide spending on gas in the US has increased by 26% to 5.2% on average overall. How can one curb spending on gas and all the related costs of car ownership while still getting around? Shelby Tay offers some examples of community activities that can help us make the transition away from our gas guzzling ways. Read more here.

Online Resources
This time of year also brings the start of awareness campaigns around the world, including Bike-to-Work week and car-free festivals that encourage us to be smarter with our travel. May is national bike month across the United States. Check out 50 ways (large PDF) to celebrate Bike Month and browse bike advocacy groups by state to find one near you, courtesy of the League of American Cyclists.

Here are some more resources to give you some ideas:

To read more about The Relocalisation Networks’ work visit http://www.relocalize.net.

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Research – Tree lined streets soothe children’s lungs

May 26th, 2008

by ferne edwards

The abstract below was posted on the Planet Ark News list available at http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/48292/story.htm.

“Four- and five-year-olds living along the city’s greenest streets were less likely to have asthma than young children living in sparsely planted neighborhoods, Dr. Gina S. Lovasi and colleagues from Columbia University found.

“We think that trees might have a beneficial effect on air quality — affecting air quality right at the street level,” Lovasi told Reuters Health. While the effects were independent of poverty and pollution, the researcher added, its possible street trees may simply be a stand-in for a healthful environment. “We’re not confident that it’s the trees themselves that are what’s driving this.”

Asthma rates have risen sharply in the US since 1980, and inner cities have been hit particularly hard, Lovasi and her colleagues note in their report. Trees could cut asthma risk by cleaning the air and encouraging kids to play outdoors, they add; but the pollen they release could also contribute to asthma attacks. To investigate, the researchers compared a census of New York City’s half-million street trees from 1995 to statistics on asthma prevalence and hospitalisation rates for 1999.””

To read the full article visit http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/48292/story.htm.

'Tree-lined street' by jilldoughtie

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Posted in Carbon-neutral, Health, Urban Design and Built Form, Vision, research | No Comments »

Model – Update on Portland’s plan to become a sustainable city

May 23rd, 2008

by ferne edwards

The abstract below was posted on http://www.urbanmamas.com/activistas/2008/05/the-portland-pl.html.

“Pushing the planning envelope and building its visionary urban design legacy, the City of Portland is taking the lead on sustainable, equitable and economically viable long-range planning. Over the next three years, the Bureau of Planning will be updating its 1980 Comprehensive Plan and the 1988 Central City Plan in an effort called the Portland Plan.

The Portland Plan is an inclusive, citywide effort to guide the physical, economic, social, cultural, and environmental development of Portland over the next 30 years. The plan will build on the work the community did through visionPDX, which captured and fleshed out our shared values of sustainability, equity and accessibility, and community connectedness and distinctiveness.”

To read the full article visit http://www.urbanmamas.com/activistas/2008/05/the-portland-pl.html.

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Event review - Highlights from the recent 7th EcoCity World Summit

May 7th, 2008

by ferne edwards

Holly Pearson has recently published an article about the highlights from the 7th EcoCity World Summit on WorldChanging.com and its well worth a read! Find an abstract of her post below followed by a link to the full text.

ABSTRACT:
Highlights from the 7th EcoCity World Summit
HOLLY PEARSON
APRIL 28, 2008 9:48 AM

“In order to transform our cities, we need to move from ego-culture to eco-culture.”
— Rusong Wang, President, Ecological Society of China

The EcoCity World Summit wrapped up on Saturday afternoon in San Francisco. An incredible assemblage of the world’s brightest minds that are working to build greener cities and towns gathered for three and a half days of presentations, discussions, city tours, arts & culture, and celebration. As an urban planner for whom the sustainable cities movement is not only a passion but also a raison d’etre, professionally speaking, I found the conference to be nothing short of mind-blowing.

A vast amount of information and ideas was exchanged, and after letting it all sink in for a day or so I’ve summarized what I thought were some of the most interesting concepts and initiatives presented at EcoCity.

The Big Picture for Saving the Planet: Sustainable Cities
Amazingly, somehow I have worked as a city planner in Oakland, California for almost a year without knowing that right here in my own neighborhood is one of the leading green city advocates in the country, if not the world: Richard Register. Dubbed “EcoCity Master” by his conference co-organizer, Rusong Wang of China, Register is the President of non-profit EcoCity Builders.

Looking critically at the environmental movement, Register asserts that humanity is “winning the battle but losing the war.” Despite lots of successes – stronger environmental legislation, recycling programs in most metropolitan areas in the U.S., and the like – ecological degradation continues and is, in fact, worsening. That’s because, says Register, we’re not paying attention to the big things. And the big things, first and foremost, have to do with the design and functioning of our cities. Urban population is on the rise the world over, and cities are by far the greatest sources of natural resource consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and other pollutants. For this reason, a sustainable global future cannot be achieved without re-thinking and redesigning cities to reduce their ecological impact.

To read the full article visit: http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/007996.html

WorldChanging - Highlights from the 7th EcoCity World Summit

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Posted in Carbon-neutral, Event, Food, Health, Model, Movement, Provocations, Resource, Transport, Urban Design and Built Form, Vision, Water, climate change, energy, networks, waste | No Comments »

Visions - Web resources of future city thinking

April 23rd, 2008

by ferne edwards

Links to Future City thinking from Architects with water as a role:

Listen at:
http://www.marketplace.org/shows/2007/01/15/AM200701151.html

See designs at:
http://www.history.com/designchallenge/sweepstakes/aboutDesign.jsp

See New York City at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/54112970@N00/sets/72157594483012847/

See Chicago at:
http://www.urbanlab.com/

See LA at:
http://www.ericowenmoss.com/index.php?/content/projects/

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Posted in Carbon-neutral, Model, Transport, Urban Design and Built Form, Vision, Water, energy | No Comments »

Model - Carbon-free beer anyone?

April 18th, 2008

by ferne edwards

Fosters launches new ‘green’ beer
Fosters Australia, (the beer brand – but they own wine and spirits too) has recently launched a ‘carbon offset’ beer – see here for the press release http://www.fosters.com.au/mediacentre/40C711FE44664123A68139930F3899EC.htm and here for further details: http://www.cascadegreen.com.au/default.aspx

The company has also published its 2007 sustainability report. http://www.fosters.com.au/about/sustainability.htm. The energy target is to reduce energy use per case by 10% by 2011.

Fosters launches new 'green' beer

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Resource - Papers available – environmental economics

April 16th, 2008

by ferne edwards

The UK Network of Environmental Economics recently held its annual conference. The presentations given at the event are now available online at www.uknee.org.uk or more specifically at http://www.eftec.co.uk/UKNEE/agenda.htmhttp://www.eftec.co.uk/UKNEE/agenda.htm. Sessions focused on: Climate and carbon; Ecosystem services and biodiversity; Water; market based instruments; Economic valuation; and Life expectancy and satisfaction.

Content from past conferences (envecon 2004-2007) and UKNEE seminars can also be accessed via the website.

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Posted in Carbon-neutral, Water, climate change, research | 1 Comment »