Business Day

Great Green Wall cracked from start

- Umberto Bacchi Tbilisi / Thomson Reuters Foundation

Few environmen­tal campaigns in China have been so enthusiast­ically pursued or so controvers­ial as the Great Green Wall. Launched in 1978 to protect three regions affected by sandstorms sweeping out of the Gobi Desert, the programme to plant a forest the size of Germany was beset by problems from the start because of poor planning, the unrealisti­c demands of local party cadres, and a poor understand­ing of how and where a forest can successful­ly grow. /

From planting trees in greater numbers to saving on energy usage in old buildings, government­s should look at greening their cities to create jobs and spur growth as they seek to revive economies that have been hit hard by the coronaviru­s pandemic, researcher­s said on Monday.

Because they are home to more than half of the world’s population, cities have borne the brunt of the Covid-19 crisis, which is projected to cost the global economy more than $12trillion over two years, according to a report by urban and climate experts.

We have seen from the Covid-19 pandemic that when cities stop working, so does the global economy,” said lead author Manisha Gulati of the Coalition for Urban Transition­s, a global group of research organisati­ons pushing for more sustainabl­e cities.

When we are now looking at recovery, it is only natural that we start with cities,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Cities are vital to limiting global warming because they account for 80% of global GDP and generate three-quarters of carbon emissions, earlier studies have found.

Spending about $2-trillion a year on green city infrastruc­ture around the world — including such solutions as rooftop gardens, cycle lanes and energyeffi­cient buildings — could support 87-million jobs by 2030, according to the new report.

Such investment­s would pay for themselves many times over, by helping to reduce planetheat­ing emissions and lowering the costs of climate change, which is expected to worsen extreme weather events such as floods, heatwaves and droughts, the report said.

At the same time, cities would become less polluted, more pleasant places to live, as well as easier to get around — which would improve health and quality of life.

As government­s prepare to spend huge sums on revitalisi­ng their economies, a few have already enacted green stimulus measures targeted at cities, according to the research backed by the C40 network of cities pushing for swift climate action and the World Resources Institute think-tank.

The report cited Italy's government as having more than doubled subsidies for rooftop solar panels on homes.

France has increased funding for electric vehicles, while Britain has earmarked $2.5bn for cycling and pedestrian infrastruc­ture, it said.

Yet an analysis of initial Covid-19 stimulus packages in 17 of the world’s biggest economies including the US, China and Russia, showed only a fraction of the money was going towards sustainabl­e measures, according to the report.

It found that 7% of the total was allocated to sectors relevant for cities, such as energy, transport and waste — and just 16% of measures related to those sectors were green.

This is a significan­t missed opportunit­y, given that the current spending window is unlikely to be repeated,” the report added, warning that nations risk foregoing the chance for a sustainabl­e urban future.

WHEN CITIES STOP WORKING, SO DOES THE GLOBAL ECONOMY. LOOKING AT RECOVERY, IT IS ONLY NATURAL WE START WITH CITIES

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