The Star Malaysia

Melaka a model green city

- RAMESH SUBRAMANIA­M Director-general, Southeast Asia Department, Asian Developmen­t Bank

IN the last five years, Melaka has made great strides toward building a sustainabl­e, green city.

By 2020, the government-run 7248ha Melaka World Solar Valley aims to power most of the daily activities of manufactur­ers, housing developers, farmers and other stakeholde­rs.

Recently, a public-private partnershi­p installed 100,000 LED street lamps along the Alor-GajahMelak­a Tengah-Jasin Highway, which will improve road safety and reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

The urban landscape has also changed. Walkable neighbourh­oods with mixed-use developmen­t have increased foot traffic and reduced car use.

The Melaka River, long a polluted backyard drainage canal, is now a popular gathering place and tourist attraction.

Melaka’s transforma­tion is the result of meticulous planning, a comprehens­ive approach supported by government policies and projects, private sector engagement and citizen initiative­s.

The Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) is proud to have worked with Melaka to develop its roadmap, the Green City Action Plan.

In addition to a technical assistance grant to underwrite the plan, which was completed in 2014, ADB also helped Melaka implement it, including by structurin­g bankable projects for solar energy and street lighting, setting up a database to track indicators in environmen­t and economic growth, and conducting training in urban developmen­t, environmen­t planning and knowledge sharing.

The Melaka projects are the first to be implemente­d under the Green Cities Initiative of the Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand Growth Triangle (IMT-GT), an ADBsupport­ed sub-regional cooperatio­n programme focused on the developmen­t of 32 provinces in these three countries.

It aims to help states and provinces discover and use their relative comparativ­e advantages to work together in the sub-region.

So far, four other cities – Songkhla and Hat Yai in Thailand; Medan and Batam in Indonesia – have developed similar plans.

A “green” city means an area that is resilient and inclusive, manages its natural resources well, promotes low carbon growth to remain competitiv­e and improves the livelihood­s of all citizens.

With each green city plan, countries are moving away from business-as-usual economic growth models to forge a clear, concise vision for a city’s future based on factors such as comprehens­ive analysis and consensus among key stakeholde­rs.

These plans present a paradigm shift, where cities pursue integrated urban developmen­t and environmen­tal planning as they make a transition to a cleaner, greener and more prosperous future.

The initiative is very relevant, because cities are the primary drivers of economic growth across countries in the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), producing about 70% of the region’s gross domestic product.

Almost 300 million people in Asean already live in cities, and another 90 million people are expected to move in by 2030, pushing up the urban share of the population to nearly 45%.

Urbanisati­on is placing a growing environmen­tal strain on cities, such as air, water and noise pollution, traffic congestion and inadequate solid waste management.

Tackling these challenges will require city government­s to integrate social and environmen­tal considerat­ions into locally customised economic developmen­t plans.

It will require innovation, testing and applicatio­n of new ideas, learning and sharing of lessons, and developmen­t of new approaches to emerging challenges.

The Green Cities Conference, to be held on Oct 1 in Melaka, will bring city leaders together to collaborat­e on green growth strategies.

It also seeks to continue to support the Green Cities Network establishe­d under the IMT-GT and the Brunei Dar us sal am-Ind ones iaMalaysia-Philippine­s East A sean Growth Area.

ADB strongly supports the network of Asean green cities, which serves as a platform for knowledge sharing.

Coinciding with the 25th anniversar­y of IMT-GT, the conference also provides a window for action following Melaka’s success in transformi­ng into a green city.

It’s time now for policy makers to make their own Green City Action plans a reality. The implementa­tion process requires strong coordinati­on between multiple government agencies, the private sector and communitie­s.

It will also require a management approach easily adaptable to project monitoring, data analysis and citizen feedback.

ADB stands ready to provide knowledge and financial support to further develop competitiv­e, inclusive and green cities across Asean.

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