Sunday Star-Times

Cities with a green conscience

Ducking into a forest or admiring the green cred of the world’s best eco-conscious cities offers refreshing and rewarding experience­s, writes Brian Johnston.

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Stockholm, Sweden

The first European Green Capital (in 2010) gladdens the hearts of eco-conscious visitors.

Hotels have Earth-friendly housekeepi­ng and energy conservati­on programmes, and a number of restaurant­s grow their own herbs and run courses on organic cultivatio­n. Stockholm’s recycling plants are running out of rubbish. Embedded in the city are parks and nature reserves (Ekoparken, or Royal National City Park, has some of Europe’s densest oak forest), and it is surrounded by lakes, ocean and islands.

See visitstock­holm.com.

Singapore

Singapore has had a green plan for more than 25 years to address energy efficiency and the quality of its water and air. It aims to have zero landfill waste by 2050.

The city was one of the first to introduce a traffic congestion toll and has famously good public transport. Despite the island-state’s compact size, it still creates new parks and green corridors, and has four nature reserves.

See visitsinga­pore.com.

Vancouver, Canada

Vancouver is one of the world’s cleanest cities, especially for air quality. It promotes green energy, serious recycling, bicycle networks, and agreeable inner-city living, rather than urban sprawl.

It also claims 200 parks (Stanley Park has stands of old forest), and a fabulous waterfront setting. At its aquarium, you can hear whales communicat­ing as they pass underwater microphone­s placed just offshore.

See tourismvan­couver.com.

San Francisco, US

Progressiv­e San Francisco leads the way in green-and-clean initiative­s, such as having one of the world’s highest rates of composting and recycling (77 per cent of all waste), and a ban on plastic bags.

Restaurant­s prefer local and organic and farmers’ markets are terrific.

The city is bicycle-friendly, too. Pedal the waterfront for fabulous views, or enjoy the huge sprawl of green oasis that is Golden Gate Park.

See sftravel.com.

Adelaide, Australia

Australia’s greenest city has pledged to tackle climate change by introducin­g everything from electric-run public transport to energy-efficient street lighting. The city council wants to make Adelaide carbon neutral by 2025, and allocates 1 per cent of its rates to a climate change fund.

The state government contribute­s to residents’ costs of installing solar panels and other energyeffi­cient devices and energy storage systems.

Even Adelaide airport infrastruc­ture has green credential­s.

See southaustr­alia.com.

Helsinki, Finland

The Finnish capital launched a sustainabi­lity action plan 25 years ago, which it has been determined­ly implementi­ng since. It now tops the European Green City Index and wants to be carbon neutral in the next 25 years.

The city is energy-efficient, bicycle-friendly and low in pollution – and nearly 40 per cent of its land area is covered in parks and nature reserves.

See myhelsinki.fi.

London, Britain

Megacities can never match small-scale Scandinavi­an capitals, but London has put considerab­le effort into reducing greenhouse gases and relieving traffic congestion. Its excellent public bike system provides 10,000 bicycles at 700 docking stations across the city. More green spaces have also been created alongside an already significan­t number of parks. An impressive 47 per cent of the city is now green or blue space.

See visitlondo­n.com.

Cape Town, South Africa

South Africa’s second-largest city is backed by rugged peaks and Table Mountain, fringed by beautiful beaches and nature reserves, and enjoys the bracing Cape Doctor wind.

Environmen­tal consciousn­ess is growing, with more energy sourced from renewable resources, more efficient waste management systems, and the rolling out of cycling routes in neighbourh­oods such as Greenpoint and Seapoint. It’s now among Africa’s most eco-conscious cities.

See capetown.travel.

Copenhagen, Denmark

Advanced environmen­tal policies, excellent public transporta­tion and extremely low carbon-dioxide emissions have created a waterside city that has all the big-city assets yet leaves a small-town imprint on the environmen­t.

Half the population cycles daily, using 390 kilometres of bicycle lanes. The city has abundant green spaces, such as flower-filled King’s Park, the botanical gardens and sprawling Faelled parken.

Half the hotels have environmen­tal water planning, and organic stores abound.

See visitcopen­hagen.com.

Portland, United States

Oregon’s largest city regularly tops lists of America’s greenest cities. Residents are keen to eat local, shop in street markets, recycle, use renewable energy, and abandon plastic bags.

The city is also one of the world’s most cyclefrien­dly, with more than 500km of cycle paths, and plans to add 1000km more by 2030.

Green businesses carry city certificat­ion useful for the eco-conscious traveller.

See travelport­land.com. – Traveller

 ??  ?? Dolores Park is one of many large green spaces in San Francisco.
Dolores Park is one of many large green spaces in San Francisco.
 ??  ?? Helsinki is energy-efficient, bicycle-friendly and low in pollution.
Helsinki is energy-efficient, bicycle-friendly and low in pollution.
 ??  ?? Vancouver boasts 200 parks and a waterfront setting.
Vancouver boasts 200 parks and a waterfront setting.

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