BEST-konferansen 2015 - Christina Fragola
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Transcript of BEST-konferansen 2015 - Christina Fragola
1
CITIES LEAD In the
New Climate
Economy
OSLO Best Conference
February 2015
Cities in the New Climate
Economy
2
Between now and 2030 a group of less than
500 key cities (including all 70 C40 members)
will be responsible for 60% of GDP growth and
50% of carbon emission growth
By 2030 60% of the population will be Urban
Roughly “one Stockholm” x week moves into a
city - 1.4 million people
City administrations are often acutely
influential, with sharper local powers than
national policy-makers
Cities in the New Climate
Economy
3
4
C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group
5
The 70 C40 CITIES
Addis Ababa
Amsterdam
Athens
Austin
Bangkok
Barcelona
Basel
Beijing
Berlin
Bogota
Boston
Buenos Aires
Cairo
Cape Town
Caracas
Changwon
Chicago
Copenhagen
Curitiba
Dar es Salaam
Delhi
Dhaka
Hanoi
Heidelberg
Ho Chi Minh City
Hong Kong
Houston
Istanbul
Jakarta
Johannesburg
Karachi
Lagos
Lima
London
Los Angeles
Madrid
Melbourne
Mexico City
Milan
Moscow
Mumbai
Nairobi
New Orleans
New York
Oslo
Paris
Philadelphia
Portland
Rio de Janeiro
Rome
San Francisco
Santiago
Sao Paulo
Seattle
Seoul
Shanghai
Shenzhen
Singapore
Stockholm
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto
Tshwane
Vancouver
Venice
Warsaw
Washington, DC
Wuhan
Yokohama
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The Power of the C40
8%of all humans
21%of global GDP
$$$$$
5%of global GHG
emissions
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
CO2e
7
The Power of the C40
ONE BILLION TONS IN POTENTIAL REDUCTIONS
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The Power of the C40
ONE BILLION TONS IN POTENTIAL REDUCTIONS
9
Cities act
10
Cities lead
Transit
Residential
waste
Landfills
Building
regulation
Water supply
City planning
Outdoor lighting
City streets &
parking
409
665
80
1297
303
482
114
519
8,068climate
actions
EUROPE – POWERS
OVERVIEWAcross regions and sectors, levels of
Mayoral power vary according to a range
of factors and drivers.
European cities exercise strong power in
Transport and Outdoor Lighting
Partial power is held over the majority
of sectors, including: Building Energy
Efficiency, Waste, Resilience, Finance &
Economy, and Sustainable
Communities. This is less than the
power exercised in Africa and East Asia,
but equivalent to other regions.
Limited power is held over ICT, the
sector of lowest power for European
cities
12
What C40 Does
PEER-TO-PEER
EXCHANGE
ON-THE-GROUND
CITY SUPPORT
RESEARCH &
KNOWLEDGE
MANAGEMENT
13
What are Networks?
C40 Networks are active working groups of city
officials with commonly identified opportunities,
interests, or priorities.
“How do we work together
to negotiate better
warranties for buses
retrofitted to hybrids?”
“How did your
city persuade
major corporate
building owners
to retrofit?”
14
15
C40 Initiatives and Networks
Transportatio
n
Low Emissions
Vehicles
Bus Rapid
Transit
Solid Waste
Sustainable Solid
Waste Systems
Zero Waste
Sustainable
Communities
Sustainable
Urban
Development
Climate Positive
Transit Oriented
Development
Energy
Private Building
Efficiency
Municipal
Building
Efficiency
Water &
Adaptation
Connecting Delta
Cities
Cool Cities
Climate Change
Risk Assessment
Finance &
Economic
Development
Green Growth
Sustainable
Infrastructure
Finance
District Energy
1
6
C40 Networks for a Greener
Oslo Energy: The energy supply shall be fossil free and climate
neutral based on renewable energy sources and energy optimal
utilization of local resources. District Energy Fossil Fuel Free
Transport: Hydrogen Strategy for Low Emission Vehicles – “One
Stop for All Energy Stations”
Green Growth: Measuring the Size of the Green Economy
Leadership: Waste and Electric Vehicles
2014 CCLA Award: Finalist for EVs -Transport
17
C40 Energy Networks
Sharing best practices
and tackling common
challenges in energy
efficiency for city-owned
or managed buildings
Private Building
Efficiency
Municipal Building
EfficiencyDistrict Energy
Working with cities to
increase energy
efficiency of existing
commercial and
residential buildings,
focused on engaging
multinationals, data
insight, citizen action
and policy development
Supporting city efforts
to accelerate the
development of or
transition to efficient,
low-carbon district
heating and cooling
systems
18
C40 Transportation Networks
Working with cities to
introduce, expand or
improve BRT systems by
exchanging knowledge
on a range of BRT-related
topics including
infrastructure,
technology, scheduling
and financing solutions
Connecting almost one-
third of C40 Cities for
whom cleaner vehicle
technologies are crucial
for reducing transport
emissions
• Transport demand
management
• Non-motorised
transport
Bus Rapid Transit
(BRT) Network
Low Emission Vehicles
(LEV) NetworkProposed
networks
C40 cities will collectively launch a ‘Declaration of Intent’ on clean buses
at the Latin American Mayors Summit on 27 March 2015 during the
Press Conference.
The statement urges global manufacturers, public transport operators,
leasing companies, multilateral development banks and other funding
agencies to step up and work with cities in accelerating the take-up of
clean buses, particularly in addressing cost issues
The Declaration is intended to give cities a strong foundation for
conversations with manufacturers to tackle the issue of high premiums
on new bus technologies
It will bring together Mayoral support behind clean bus aspirations of
cities, and send a strong statement about the interest of Mayors in
seeing action on this front
The Declaration will be sent out to all C40 Mayors to sign
Clean Bus Declaration = Shifting Public
Transport Demand
19
Amsterdam: By 2025, 25% of Amsterdam’s electricity needs
generated sustainably within the city boundaries, amount will
increase to 50% by 2040.
Berlin: 50% GHG reduction by 2030 and 85% by2050 – biogenic waste
and solar – drafting the Energy and Climate Protection plan to
transform its energy system
Copenhagen Carbon Neutral by 2025, DE with renewable and clean
energy
London: 60% reduction in CO2 from 1990 levels by 2025 and 25% of
London’s Energy from DE with renewable and/or recovered heat by
2025
Oslo: 50% by 2030 and Zero emission by 2050, developing an
integrated clean energy strategy for all sectors and a Hydrogen
Strategy for 2015-2025
Paris 75% GHG by 2050 - 25% renewable or recovered energy by
2020; For the Parisian district energy, renewable energy rate is
estimated around 40/42%.
EU Cities Paving the Low
Carbon Way
20
The Pledge
The Compact of Mayors is an agreement between
city networks to support our city members to:
- Register “City Climate Commitments” (targets
for GHG emissions reduction and plans to
adapt to climate change);
- Report annually on progress towards achieving
GHG emissions reduction targets and
assessing climate hazards, using standards
established through City Networks; and
- Disclose this information publicly by reporting
through a recognized city platform http://www.un.org/climatechange/summit/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2014/09/CITIES-
Mayors-compact.pdf
Compact of Mayors
Key Findings
Significant commitments towards greenhouse gas
(GHG) reduction have already been made by cities
around the world:
- 228 global cities, representing 436 million
people, have already set GHG reduction goals
and targets.
- The greatest impact of these cumulative
commitments will be felt in the period 2030 –
2050.
The cumulative savings in 2050 are equivalent to the
combined current annual emissions of China and
India, while the annual savings are equivalent to the
current annual emissions of South Africa
Global Aggregation of City Climate
Commitments
Cities Leading the a Sustainable World
23
2.8
6.1
13.0
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
2020 2030 2050
Cu
mu
lati
ve S
avin
gs (
GtC
O2
e)
CUMULATIVE COMMITTED CITY EMISSIONS SAVINGS
The Significance
The Compact is the world’s largest effort to drive more aggressive city climate actions
and reaffirm existing targets, through public, annual reporting of cities’ GHG data
Compact compliance will mean that cities will be choosing to meet the same
requirements proposed for the international climate negotiations that will lead to a
global climate treaty in 2015
Data collected through the Compact of Mayors will create an evidence base of the
greenhouse gas impact of city action to enable capital flows into cities to support city
governments taking further action and to be held responsible for that action and the
associated investments
A key intention of the Compact is that it will encourage national governments to
actively support additional city action by recognizing local commitments, establishing
more enabling policy environments and directing resources to cities to limit any
further increase in global warming and to appropriately resource both mitigation and
adaptation local climate action
Compact of Mayors
The Campaign
In September 2013, the Sustainable Development Solutions Network launched the
Campaign for the inclusion of an Urban Sustainable Development Goal (SDG), with
the support of C40, UN Habitat, UCLG, Cities Alliance, ICLEI, Metropolis, and
Communitas Coalition for Sustainable Cities and Regions
As part of the C40 Mayors Summit in Johannesburg, 41 C40 Mayors signed onto the
Paes Letter letting the UN know they support an Urban SDG.
The Significance
Well-crafted Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for the period 2015 to 2030 will
help guide the public’s understanding of complex sustainable development
challenges, inspire public and private action, promote integrated thinking, and foster
accountability
The SDGs will be complementary to the tools of international law, such as global
treaties and conventions, by providing a shared normative framework
The SDGs will also mobilize governments and the international system to strengthen
measurement and monitoring for sustainable development
Urban Sustainable Development Goal
C40 has REACH
Media Coverage Media PartnershipsSocial & Digital Media Channels
CDC Mobile Application –
Delta City App
27
Facilitating city to city
sharing via mobile
technology
28
CONNECT WITH US
Cristiana Fragola
Europe Regional Director
www.C40.org
C40 Cities
@C40cities