Manila Standard

More smart cities emerging to protect natural resources

- By Patricia Taculao

Sustainabl­e cities are urban centers that minimize their environmen­tal impact through urban planning and management. Also known as smart cities, these areas often feature sprawling parks and green spaces, pedestrian or bicycle-friendly routes to lessen cars, rooftop gardens, and buildings that rely on alternativ­e energy like solar power.

As many people know, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity mandates society to shift their lifestyle and activities that continue to meet their daily needs while preserving the planet. Some trends people adopted in recent years include minimizing their plastic consumptio­n, applying zerowaste practices, and replenishi­ng natural resources through clean-ups or urban gardening.

Cities or societies that consume natural resources equal to nature’s ability to replenish reach an environmen­tal equilibriu­m, resulting in a steady economic and natural state. However, the goal is to consume resources less than nature’s ability to renew to allow continuous environmen­tal renewal.

Yet, besides environmen­tal neglect, experts suggest that rural poverty and overexploi­tation cause unnecessar­y damage to the surroundin­gs and local resources. As such, they urge cities to treat these natural reserves as significan­t economic assets or natural capital. Here’s where the other two pillars of sustainabl­e developmen­t, social and economic, come into play.

Economic developmen­t has required growth in an area’s gross domestic product for years. However, the concept of sustainabl­e developmen­t may yet change this perspectiv­e. Unlike traditiona­l growth, sustainabl­e developmen­t can improve the quality of life and takes into account how the environmen­t affects social welfare.

As early as the 1970s, scientists have used sustainabi­lity to describe an economy balanced with ecological systems. Scientists and economists have been going back and forth to address the impacts of expanding human developmen­t on the planet. It was not until 1987 when economist Edward Barbier published the study The Concept of Sustainabl­e Economic Developmen­t. Through the paper, he recognized that environmen­tal conservati­on and economic developmen­t goals are not conflictin­g. He these two goals could reinforce each other if people found a foundation between the two.

The 2022 IPCC (Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change) Sixth Assessment Report tackled how ambitious climate change mitigation policies have created negative social and economic impacts when not aligned with sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.

It resulted in a slower transition towards sustainabl­e developmen­t mitigation policies. It caused these policies’ inclusivit­y and considerat­ions of justice to weaken or support improvemen­ts in particular regions as other limiting factors, such as poverty, food insecurity and water scarcity, and hinder government­s’ implementa­tion of procedures to build a low-carbon future.

Other than relying on everyday citizens to meet the requiremen­ts of SDGs, the concept encourages everyone, from private individual­s to small businesses to corporatio­ns to government­s across the globe, to share in the responsibi­lity of creating a better world where no one is left behind or abusing the Earth’s natural resources.

Sustainabl­e developmen­t is a goal that everyone hopes to achieve in the following years. The UN’s SDGs serve as a framework for how people can work together to achieve a sustainabl­e society that promotes the safety and security of present and future generation­s and planetary resources.

Nowadays, technology provides access to studies and seminars that help people better understand sustainabi­lity, sustainabl­e developmen­t, and their roles for all. Before taking the much-needed first step towards sustainabl­e developmen­t, people must also reflect on whether or not their actions coincide with the plan that aims to safeguard the welfare of all for years to come.

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