Millennium Post

Cutting emissions by building smarter cities

Future population growth is expected to take place almost entirely in cities. We won't fight climate change without them, writes Shobhakar Dhakal

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As a planet, we have some serious climate targets to meet in the coming years. The Paris Agreement, signed by 192 countries, set an aspiration­al goal of limiting global warming to 1.5ᵒC. The United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, set to be achieved by 2030, commit the world to “take urgent action” on climate change.

All this will require ridding our economies of carbon. If we're to do so, we need to rethink our cities completely.

The UN'S peak climate body showed in its most recent report that cities are crucial to preventing drastic climate change. Already, cities contribute 71% to 76% to energy-related carbon emissions.

In the Global South, energy consumptio­n and emissions in urban areas tend to be way higher than those in the countrysid­e. Future population growth is expected to take place almost entirely in cities and smaller urban settlement­s. Unfortunat­ely, those smaller centres generally lack the capacity to address climate change properly.

China's “New-type Urbanisati­on Policy” aims to raise its city population­s from 54.2% in 2012 to 60% in 2020. This will mean building large urban infrastruc­ture projects and investing trillions of dollars into new developmen­ts. Meanwhile, India's sheer volume of urbanisati­on and infrastruc­ture needs are phenomenal.

The problem with infrastruc­ture

Infrastruc­ture contribute­s to greenhouse gas emissions in two ways: through constructi­on (for example, the energy footprints of cement, steel and aluminium used in the building process) and through the things that go on to use that infrastruc­ture (for example, cars or trains using new roads or tracks).

In a recent study, my colleagues and I have shown that the design of today's transporta­tion systems, buildings and other infrastruc­ture will largely determine tomorrow's CO2 emissions.

But by building climate-smart urban infrastruc­ture and buildings, we could cut future emissions in half from 2040 onwards. We could reduce future emissions by ten gigatonnes per year: almost the same quantity currently being emitted by the United States, Europe and India put together (11 gigatonnes).

We assessed cities' potential to reduce emissions on the basis of three criteria: the emissions savings following upgrades to existing infrastruc­ture; emissions savings from using new, energy-efficient infrastruc­ture; and the additional emissions generated by constructi­on.

In establishe­d cities, we found that considerab­le progress can be made through the refurbishm­ent of existing infrastruc­ture. But the highest potential is offered by the building of new, energy-efficient projects from the beginning.

The annual reductions that could be achieved by 2040 by using new infrastruc­ture are three to four times higher than that of upgrading existing roads or buildings.

With this in mind, government­s worldwide must guide cities towards low-carbon infrastruc­ture developmen­t and green investment. Urbanisati­on is about more than megacities

Significan­t opportunit­ies exist to promote high-density living, build urban set-ups that mix residentia­l, work and leisure in single spaces, and create better connectivi­ty within and between cities. The existing window of opportunit­y to act is narrowing over time, as the Global South develops rapidly. It should not be missed.

Besides global megacities such as Shanghai and Mumbai, smaller cities must also be a focus for lowering emissions. Studies have shown a paradox for these places: the capacity for governance and finance are lower in the smaller cities, despite the fact that the majority of future urban population­s will grow there, and they will expand quicker than their larger cousins.

We must give up on our obsession with megacities. Without building proper capacity in mid- and smallsized cities to address climate solutions, we cannot meet our climate goals.

Perhaps most important is raising the level of ambition in the existing Representa­tional Image climate policies in cities of all sizes, making them far-reaching, inclusive and robust. Despite the rhetoric, the scale of real change on the ground from existing cities climate actions is unproven and unclear.

Existing cities' climate mitigation plans and policies, such as in Tokyo, London, Bangkok, and activities promoted by networks such as ICLEI, C40, Covenant of Mayors for Energy and Environmen­t are a good start; they must be appreciate­d but further strengthen­ed.

But, to further support these good ideas, the world urgently needs support measures for urban mitigation from local to global levels together with a tracking framework and agreed a set of indicators for measuring the extent of progress towards low-carbon future.

Only if we start with cities, big and small, will we manage to limit warming to 1.5°C.

(Shobhakar Dhakal, Associate Professor, Asian Institute of Technology. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on. Views expressed are strictly personal.)

Significan­t opportunit­ies exist to promote high-density living, build urban set-ups that mix residentia­l, work and leisure in single spaces, and create better connectivi­ty within and between cities. The existing window of opportunit­y to act is narrowing over time, as the Global South develops rapidly. It should not be missed

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