The Citizen (Gauteng)

Copenhagen’s 7-year itch

GOING GREEN: CITY SETS ITSELF DEADLINE TO STOP EMISSIONS

- Copenhagen

Nearly all its 600 000 residents own a bicycle and it has 375km of cycle lanes.

Around the world, more than 70 major cities have pledged to end their reliance on fossil fuels and stop pumping out climate-changing emissions by 2050.

But Copenhagen – a city of wind turbines, bicycles and reliable public transporta­tion – thinks it can go even further: it intends to accomplish that shift in just seven years.

It will require a complete reimaginin­g of how the Danish capital is powered and designed – and a lot of cyclists, officials admit.

“Why are we going for that?” asked Jorgen Abildgaard, director of the city’s climate programme. “People might say what we do in Copenhagen doesn’t really matter on the global stage at all. We are tiny.”

But with cities and countries around the world still searching for ways to turn the 2015 Paris agreement on climate change into a reality, “it’s important to show it’s possible to make this transition”, he said.

Scandinavi­an cities have long been seen as green leaders – and Copenhagen is no exception.

While other cities have parking garages for cars, Copenhagen has them for bicycles. Virtually all its 600 000 residents own a bicycle and the city has 375km of dedicated cycle lanes.

The harbour-rimmed municipali­ty is also mostly powered by clean energy – and it has its own renewable energy company and wind turbines.

Running its own energy systems is one of the reasons Copenhagen is well on track to being carbon neutral, meaning it will produce no more carbon emissions than it can offset by 2025.

The city’s concerted efforts to go green put it firmly ahead of the schedule set by almost 200 nations in Paris to effectivel­y phase out greenhouse gases between 2050 and 2100.

Leading climate scientists will warn next week that global carbon emissions from energy use will have to plunge by up to seven percent a year to meet Paris’ toughest goals – unless technologi­es to suck carbon from the air and store it are developed, according to a draft UN report.

Copenhagen’s officials are confident the city can largely achieve its ambitious goals.

“We want to be 100% carbon neutral by 2025. But if we are 95% or around that, it’s still a big success,” said Abildgaard, who has overseen the city’s efforts toward carbon neutrality ever since it made its pledge in 2009, when it hosted UN climate talks.

In 2017, Copenhagen produced about 1.37 million tons of climate-changing gases, down 40% from 2005, according to city figures. That’s about 2.2 tons of emissions per capita, one of the lowest rates for a European city.

The city said the reduction in emissions was largely due to a switch to wind energy under Hofor, the city’s utility company.

“We are some of the muscle that the city has to be able to [use to] reach its goals,” said Jorgen Edstrom, head of strategy and business developmen­t at Hofor, one of many energy companies in the city.

“The city wanted to build windmills to compensate for its electricit­y consumptio­n, so we built windmills.”

Hofor has invested billions of euros to build 360 wind turbines by 2025 to power most of the city and will soon replace its coal-fired power plants with biomass-powered units that burn sustainabl­e wood pellets, the company says.

Around the world, cities consume more than two-thirds of the world’s energy and account for about three-quarters of carbon dioxide emissions, according to the United Nations. That means finding ways for cities to become carbon neutral will be key to meeting the Paris commitment to keep the rise in global temperatur­es to “well below” 20C above pre-industrial levels.

“Cities are where the emissions are the largest. So if cities can solve the problems, that’s part of the way to a more carbon neutral world,” Edstrom said. – Reuters

 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? GOAL. Copenhagen, a city of wind turbines, bicycles and reliable public transporta­tion, is on a mission to end its reliance on fossil fuels and stop pumping out climate-changing emissions in seven years.
Picture: EPA-EFE GOAL. Copenhagen, a city of wind turbines, bicycles and reliable public transporta­tion, is on a mission to end its reliance on fossil fuels and stop pumping out climate-changing emissions in seven years.

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