New York Daily News

The urban answer to climate change

- BY MARIANNA KOVAL, TENSIE WHELAN AND ALISA VALDERRAMA Koval is a senior research scholar and Whelan is the founding director of the NYU Stern Center for Sustainabl­e Business. Valderrama is a senior policy analyst at the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Imagine New York Harbor, the Hudson River and the East River as open sewers. It may well be in our future. A definitive government report on climate science makes clear that the frequency and intensity of precipitat­ion in the Northeast (already the highest in the nation, with a 17% increase in the last 25 years) will only grow dramatical­ly in years to come.

In New York City, we should brace ourselves. Our aged sewer system is already overwhelme­d by normal rains, flooding our neighborho­ods and spewing 20 billion gallons of untreated sewage into our waterways every year. That’s more water than 30,000 Olympic swimming pools. And it’s not only sewage; it includes massive volumes of toxic chemicals.

Three quarters of our dense, built city is covered with asphalt and concrete. As rain pours off these impermeabl­e surfaces, our old gray infrastruc­ture — concrete pipes, wastewater treatment plants and massive holding tanks — tries to manage the storm water.

But waste still gets dumped straight into our rivers.

A new approach called green infrastruc­ture solves the problem. Strategica­lly placed trees, grass, rain gardens, permeable pavement and green roofs absorb and filter rain. And not only does it help control flooding; it lowers temperatur­es, improves air quality and beautifies our neighborho­ods.

The nation’s largest city has a huge opportunit­y to lead the country — to plant and build such green infrastruc­ture on public and private property throughout the city.

Unfortunat­ely, we’re playing a climate change catchup game. The New York City Department of Environmen­tal Protection, a sprawling agency with a $3 billion annual budget and almost 6,000 employees, has been great at building massive, multibilli­on-dollar public gray infrastruc­ture like expensive water treatment and filtration plants.

But figuring out how to intelligen­tly green the city — even this city, which has been planting trees at a rapid clip since Michael Bloomberg was mayor — has been hard.

In 2011, the agency committed to spend $1.5 billion on green infrastruc­ture, “stimulate” private investment­s of $900 million and green 8,000 acres by 2030.

After six years, DEP has greened just 437 acres, largely by building bioswales (essentiall­y, enhanced tree pits). And it has spent $15 million on only 34 projects in a private property grant program.

More than 50% of land in New York City is privately owned. With so much at stake financiall­y and environmen­tally, we need to do better.

New York City’s problem has a Philadelph­ia solution. Federal law requires Philly, like New York, to fix sewer overflows and storm water pollution. And, like New York, Philly is building both gray and green infrastruc­ture.

But unlike New York, Philly is also motivating private property owners to build green infrastruc­ture, at less cost and more quickly than city government.

First, Philly changed its water and sewer fees. The city now uses a “storm water fee” to charge fairly for the cost of runoff that a property creates. It reduces those fees when a property owner takes steps to manage storm water onsite — usually with green infrastruc­ture. And it requires green infrastruc­ture be used in new constructi­on.

Second, Philly launched cost-effective grant programs targeted at private property owners. Since the city was paying $250,000 or more to green a single publicly owned acre, Philly believed that the private sector could do much more for less money. It now pays less than $150,000 to green one privately owned acre.

Philly’s program has greened almost 840 acres and is committed to about 10,000 acres over 25 years.

We urge New York City: Outdo Philly. Mobilize private property owners with financial grants. Begin to charge New Yorkers more fairly for storm water costs. And require green infrastruc­ture in developmen­t projects.

Despite sewer overflows, our waters are the cleanest they have been in a century; humpback whales have been spotted swimming in New York Harbor. Over the last three decades our waterfront — filled with new parks, greenways and buildings — have flourished.

We can must transform our whole concrete city into a living green space for our future.

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