REINVENTING THE
CITY
THREE PREREQUISITES FOR GREENING URBAN INFRASTRUCTURES
The
Urban Challenge
The Urban ChallengeOur
cities play a vital role in the quest to achieve global ecological
sustainability. They are the largest contribu-tors to greenhouse gases and
climate change. Howev-er, if we can achieve sustainable construction and use of
urban infrastructure, our cities could become a criti-cal leverage point in
global efforts to drastically reduce emissions and avoid the social and
economic costs associated with climate change, as well as enhance energy
security and resilience in the face of high fossil energy prices.The world’s
urban centres already account for more than 70 per cent of CO2 emissions.1 In
the next three decades, the global population will continue to grow and become
ever more urban. Booz & Company analysis conducted for this report shows
that under business-as-usual (BAU) assumptions, $350 trillion will be spent on
urban infrastructure and usage during this period. This huge expenditure either
can cause the ecological impact of our cities to become even more.
pronounced or can be a
tremendous opportunity to reduce that impact. To meet the urban challenge,
cities around the world—in developed and developing nations—need to tackle
climate change directly. Cities in developed nations can apply new technologies
to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions stemming from the usage of their exist-ing
infrastructure. They can invest in mobility manage-ment and incentivize
sustainable lifestyle choices. Every city is part of the solu-tion—now is the
time to act!
Business
as Usual Is a Prescription for Failure
Business as Usual Is a
Prescription for FailureIf our cities don’t act, it is likely that the
opportunity to control global warming will be lost and costs will continue to
spiral out of control. There is a growing consensus that the average global
temperature 2must not rise more than 2 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial
levels if we are to avoid dangerous climate change. However, in a BAU scenario,
the growth of our cities—in particular, the construction and usage of urban
infrastructure for dwelling and transportation—will generate global carbon
emissions of more than 460 GtCO2 in the next three decades alone (see Exhibit
1).
The economic cost of
climate control also represents a major challenge. Estimates by economists such
as Nicholas Stern suggest that it will cost an additional 1 to 2 per cent of
GDP—$28.4 trillion to $56.8 trillion over the next 30 years, using purchasing
power parity (PPP) GDP estimates—to combat climate change. But even though this
level of investment is small compared to projected urban infrastructure
expenditures, the source of this funding remains uncertain, particularly in
developing nations. The Copenhagen Accord sought to address this issue by
establishing the Copenhagen Green Climate Fund, which will provide $100 billion
annually to help devel-oping countries mitigate carbon emissions by 2020. But
it may be too little and too late. First, the targeted funding level is well
below the estimated requirements to combat global warming and adapt to climate
change in developing nations. Second, the timing of the funding is problematic.
Further, the economic challenge of climate control pales before the gargantuan needs of cities over the next 30 years. Our analysis shows that global urban infrastructure and usage expenditures in dwelling and transportation for the next three decades will exceed $350 trillion (under BAU assumptions and in constant U.S. dollars set at year 2000), or five times the current global GDP (see Exhibit 2).
In order to control emissions and meet the economic
and public health challenges of urban growth, cities will need to shift their
spending from high-carbon infrastructure to green infrastructure that features
zero or very low emissions. This will require long-term and strategic action
plans to guide capital investments towards infrastructure solutions that offer
attractive returns in the form of reduced running costs, zero or low carbon,
and lower air and water pollution levels.
Urbanization
Trends
The
ecological footprint created by these two trends is currently distributed
unevenly among regions. For example, the ecological footprint of the average
Tanzanian or Indian is approximately a quarter of the ecological footprint of a
European and a ninth of that of an American. Cities are already the source of
more than 70 per cent of global CO2 emissions, and they will account for an
ever-higher percentage in the coming years, as more and more people reside in
and move to cities in search of more prosperous lifestyles.
Focusing on
Small Cities
The bulk of
urban population growth will not occur in well-known and mature megacities like
Beijing, London, Los Angeles, Mexico City, and Mumbai. By 2020, its population
is expected to exceed 500,000.
They
generally follow predictable patterns in the mix of expenditures and emissions
related to infrastructure development and usage. During the early stages of
city development, the bulk of expenditures and emissions stems from
construction of buildings, public transportation, and utility infrastructure,
such as energy and water. As the maturation process continues, ongoing energy
usage increases as the city grows in extent (and, not entirely coincidentally,
in wealth) until the bulk of expenditures and emissions comes from the use of
existing infrastructure. The fact that growth is occurring fastest in small
cities that are still in the process of developing their infrastructure creates
a valuable opportunity to decouple the global urban future from expensive,
high-carbon lifestyles.
Focusing on Developing Nations
Energy usage
in residential and commercial buildings in some industrial regions, in
developing economies will be high overall compared to usage. This suggests that
there is a window of opportunity to drive down emissions. Given the rate of
urban growth in developing nations and the early stage of their infrastructure
development efforts, it is clear that they can offer the highest returns in the
quest for urban sustainability, even if they are currently less equipped to
deal with the challenge. And given the outsized energy usage of cities in
developed nations, it is also clear that developing nations should not adopt
their inadequate transportation systems and energy-wasting house and building
stock as a norm. Developing nations must be supported in a drive to minimize
energy use and undertake a shift to renewable energy sources that will enable
low carbon lifestyles for city dwellers. The first step in such an effort
should be long term, strategic level, low carbon action plans, supported by a
holistic national urban planning approach that enables the integration of large
mainstream investment flows rather than a project by project approach on the
sidelines of core development strategies and decisions.
The Planning
Prerequisite
This decrease occurs due to a shift
in the mix of industries from energy intensive manufacturing to the lower
energy requirements of service industries. It can also occur because of the
natural responses to high population density. The most obvious example of the
positive role of urban density is transportation, one of the major components
of energy and emissions intensity. Population density also has a significant
impact on emissions associated with habitation. Denser land use is highly
correlated with denser individual housing units, which in turn lead to lower
demands for heating, cooling, and lighting, the principal uses of residential
energy in the industrialized world. The net result is that increasing
urbanization, industrialization, and wealth not only are inevitable but will
generally have a negative ecological impact. Higher population densities may
have lower emissions per capita, but their total energy usage is higher. The
solution is better planning, with high density as one of the central aspects of
that planning. With an integrated approach to urban planning that utilizes
modern technology, it is possible to achieve lower carbon emissions from
transport and buildings in any city.
The
Investment Prerequisite
Nations that
are in the later stages of the urban infrastructure life cycle with high carbon
infrastructures should give high priority to large scale programs designed to
reduce the emissions that have been built into the infrastructures of their
cities. They should apply the latest technologies to mitigate carbon emissions
from their old stock and also set ambitious and challenging standards for
guiding their future investments. Decision makers, especially mayors, in
developing countries must also seize the opportunity to allocate their
financial resources in a strategic way that frees urbanites from high-cost, high-emission
infrastructures.
The
Technology Prerequisite
Incremental technological
improvements cannot provide the absolute emission reductions needed given the
rates at which our cities and consumption levels are growing. The technological
solutions that we seek must offer transformational levels of improvement. We
need to plan infrastructures and use financial leverage from the enormous
investments to create zero carbon infrastructures that feature the intelligent
use of renewable energy sources. These will likely include solutions
integrating renewables like the electrification of private vehicles, public
transportation run on electricity and biogas, and the use of district cooling
and heating, LED, and natural lighting in buildings.
The Low-Carbon City Is Already
Emerging
As in many
cities in developing nations, emissions levels are rising in the Chinese city
of Baoding, but unlike with other cities, a share of Baoding’s emissions growth
is caused by fuelling its workforce and the machinery it is developing to
provide lowcarbon solutions to the rest of the world. Solar photovoltaics, wind
power, and energy efficiency industries have been a major source of Bao-ding’s
green growth engine for the past five years, and the city is determined to
expand further. Nationally recognised as the “Green Electric Valley of China,”
Baoding has seen the number of its green energy companies expand from 64 in
2005 to 200 in 2008, and its green revenues have more than quadrupled in the
same period, from $700 million to $3.5 billion.
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