Showing posts with label Policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Policy. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

The Best Complete Streets Policies of 2013

Source: http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/complete-streets-2013-analysis

Communities across the country are making roads safer and more accessible for everyone who uses them—and these changes are happening on a larger scale than ever before.

In 2013, more than 80 communities adopted Complete Streets policies. These laws, resolutions and planning and design documents encourage and provide for the safe access to destinations for everyone, regardless of age, ability, income or ethnicity, and no matter how they travel.

Nationwide, a total of 610 jurisdictions now have Complete Streets policies in place. Today, 27 states as well as the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia have Complete Streets policies. Fifty-one regional planning organizations, 48 counties and 482 municipalities in 48 states also have adopted such policies.

The National Complete Streets Coalition examines and scores Complete Streets policies each year, comparing adopted policy language to ten ideal policy elements. Ideal policy elements refine a community’s vision for transportation, provide for many types of users, complement community needs and establish a flexible approach necessary for an effective Complete Streets process and outcome. Different types of policy statements are included in this examination, including legislation, resolutions, executive orders, departmental policies and policies adopted by an elected board.

Fifteen agencies led the nation in creating comprehensive Complete Streets policies in 2013. These policies are a model for communities across the country. They are:

1. Littleton, MA
2. Peru, IN
3. Fort Lauderdale, FL
4. Auburn, ME (tie)
4. Lewiston, ME (tie)
6. Baltimore County, MD
7. Portsmouth, NH
8. Muscatine, IA
9. Piqua, OH
10. Oakland, CA
11. Hayward, CA (tie)
11. Livermore, CA (tie)
11. Massachusetts Department of Transportation (tie)
14. Cedar Falls, IA (tie)
14. Waterloo, IA (tie)

The National Complete Streets Coalition, a program of Smart Growth America, supports communities as they develop, adopt and implement Complete Streets policies. Its staff and members are proud to have worked with and supported many of the communities discussed here.

A ranking of top Complete Streets policies is intended to celebrate the communities that have done exceptional work in the past year and to provide leaders at all levels of government with ideas for how to create strong Complete Streets policies.

Download the report

The Best Complete Streets Policies of 2013
Download the full report, including the list of top 15 Complete Streets policies from 2013 as well as a full explanation of our policy evaluation.

Click here to download the full report (PDF)

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The Best Complete Streets Policies of 2013: Executive Summary
Download the list of top 15 Complete Streets policies from 2013 as well as an an overview of our policy evaluation.

Click here to download the Executive Summary (PDF)

cs-pa-2013-thumb

    Download the report

    The Best Complete Streets Policies of 2012

    In 2012 nearly 130 communities adopted Complete Streets policies, with Indianapolis, IN coming away with the top policy of the year.
    Read 2012's full report >>

    Learn how to create a Complete Streets policy

    The Complete Streets Local Policy Workbook is a starting point for transportation experts and interested local leaders to begin mapping out their own Complete Streets policies.
    Get the guidebook >>



Special Issue: Resilience in the built environment

Resilience in the built environment
Source: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rbri20/42/2#.UwOgR4XeMoo

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Free online courses on Innovative Solutions for Cities by World Bank


Street Addressing is an invaluable tool for city management, although often misunderstood. It provides an opportunity to (a) create or update a map...
Urban crime and violence constitute a serious impediment to economic and social development globally. In many urban centers across the world, high...
This e-learning course focuses on disaster risk management (DRM) at the city level. Participants will learn, in particular, about planning and...
This course is the introductory course of the World Bank Institute’s e-learning program on disaster risk management (DRM). The objective of...
In emerging markets, many water supply and sanitation utilities are locked in a vicious spiral of weak performance, insufficient funding,...
Urbanization is the defining global phenomenon of this century. For the first time in history, more than half the world’s population lives in...
As the developing world is urbanizing rapidly, urban mobility becomes a critical issue. Urban mobility impacts not only the health and well being of...
April 02, 2014 - May 20, 2014
As the developing world is urbanizing rapidly, urban mobility becomes a critical issue. Urban mobility impacts not only the health and well being of...
October 28, 2013 - November 15, 2013
This e-learning course discusses how cities and urban regions can lead climate actions and mainstream climate mitigation and adaptation into their...
April 23, 2014 - May 21, 2014
This e-learning course focuses on disaster risk management (DRM) at the city level. Participants will learn, in particular, about planning and...

Source: http://einstitute.worldbank.org/ei/wbeiterms/ecourse/62


Thursday, October 10, 2013

Why the Sharing Economy is a Big Opportunity for Cities

by Joe Peach

share_kids

Our friends at Shareable recently published Policies for Shareable Cities - a report on how urban leaders can encourage a shareable economy through policy changes. We got the chance to put a few questions via email to Shareable co-founder and report co-author Neal Gorenflo about the project, and how embracing the sharing economy is a logical next step for cities.

This Big City: Could you start by telling the readers of This Big City a little about the sharing economy, and why you think it represents such a big opportunity for cities?

Neal Gorenflo: For us, the sharing economy is a people’s economy. It’s financed, owned, and controlled democratically by the people it serves. It’s a third way of provisioning life situated in relation to and in between the market and state.

However, It inverts the normal state of affairs where the economy is the end of all ends in society. Instead, a sharing economy is a means to an end. It has the potential to increase our freedom by reducing the resources need to provision our lives. The end being that people are free to pursue whatever gives them the most satisfaction most of the time.

That typically revolves around family, community, spirituality, health, art, learning, civic life, etc. In other words, those activities that offers increasing returns to satisfaction over time. In contrast, accumulating goods offers decreasing returns over time. That’s why consumer culture is a dead end. So the bottom line is this — the big opportunity for cities is to empower citizens to create a new, more liberating and celebratory experience in cities.

For us, the sharing economy begs the question, “what would life in cities be like if we we’re largely freed from what we know as work today?” I think we’d spend our time doing what we love with the people we love in the places we love. We’d spend our time contributing to our communities. I can’t think of anything better. What else should cities be for?

Anyway, that Shareable’s vision. Some would define the sharing economy as a technological thing, as access over ownership. That’s a part of it, but again, technology and access are a means, not an end.

The report looks at four areas – transport, food, housing and jobs. Are there any other areas where the sharing economy could change the way people live?

Yes, definitely, this was just a beginning. Food, housing, and transportation are the three biggest household expenses in the US. And jobs are how most people earn income. These are good places to start.

We could look at other industries like energy, telecommunication, and finance. There are sharing economy solutions for those too. We need a section on how to open up the political process. For instance, we advocate for participatory budgeting, where citizens decide how the city budget is spent in their neighborhoods. And for culture and leisure, we could look at the enabling infrastructure like policies for expanding public space.

Your report mentions that legal barriers are holding back the sharing economy. How, if at all, can people get around this?

The report is a guide, but it’s also a call to action. Sharing is a big opportunity for positive change. For example, take carsharing. Every shared car replaces 13 owned cars. 50% of new carsharing members join to get access to a car who didn’t already have access to a car. And for every 15,000 cars taken off of the ownership rolls, a city can keep an estimated $127 million in the local economy annually.

What if most of the economy operated this way? We could radically decrease resource consumption while radically increasing access to resources, and strengthen the local economy. There’s no other strategy that can address society’s two biggest challenges — poverty and climate change — at the same time. We can pursue prosperity through sharing instead of growth.

And here’s the thing, most of our recommendations are uncontroversial, nonpartisan, practical solutions. Despite the high profile regulatory battles of home and ride sharing companies like Airbnb and Sidecar, the path to a sharing economy is largely open. Shareable just launched The Sharing Cities Network to bring people together around this vision.

share_bike

Many laws are set on a local level, and you mention that US cities such as Cleveland, Austin, Chicago, New York and San Francisco are doing a good job of encouraging urban-scale sharing. What can other cities learn from them?

We might learn the most from Seoul, South Korea, where Mayor Park has kicked off an impressive initiative, “Seoul, The Sharing City.” It’s a comprehensive plan to help Seoul residents share. One of the big motivations is to build community in Seoul and reduce suicides. South Korea has the highest suicide rate in the 30 OECD countries. The suicide rate is linked to the increasingly competitive, Western-style economy. Mayor Park’s plan includes funding sharing startups, promoting sharing enterprises, and a lot more.

We could also learn a lot from regions like Emilia-Romagna in Italy and Basque Spain, which committed to an economic development model based on cooperatives. Huge portions of these regional economies are comprised of worker owned and managed cooperatives (30% and 60% respectively). It’s leads to more stable employment and wages, and a more resilient local economy in general.

Cleveland is adapting this model to their local economy, tying cooperative development to “anchor institutions” like universities and hospitals. The Evergreen Cooperatives in Cleveland are serving local anchor institutions with alternative energy, green laundry, and organic food services.

Which projects featured in the report are your favourites?

In the transportation section, I like the free parking for carsharing. It’s so simple, the impact of carsharing is huge as outlined above, and it’s what carsharing companies in San Francisco want the most from the city, which I bet is true elsewhere.

In the food section, I like the policies that help strengthen the local food economy, like allowing certain types of food products to be produced in home kitchens, supporting shared commercial kitchens, and making city land available for urban agriculture. These policies can create local jobs and increase the availability of healthy food.

In housing, supporting cooperative housing is hands down my favorite because it may be the best solution to affordable housing in cities. New York City has a big history with housing cooperatives, but we could probably learn even more from European cities like Vienna that have nearly a hundred years of experience with modern public and cooperative housing.

In jobs, it’s also about cooperatives. The cooperative model has been used successfully to develop rural areas in the US since the 1930s. It’s time to use the cooperative model in cities. Cooperatives stay local, pay better wages, and whether economic downturns better. History shows it’s a great long-term investment for cities.

Images via bengrey and Steven Vance

Source: http://thisbigcity.net/sharing-economy-big-opportunity-cities

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Policies for Shareable Cities: A Sharing Economy Policy Primer for Urban Leaders

Cities are built for sharing. It’s what makes cities engines of prosperity, innovation, and cultural exchange. Well connected cities have the unique capacity to raise per capita production and innovation while using dramatically less energy. For this reason, cities may be our best hope forachieving widespread prosperity within the earth’s natural limits.

Today, new circumstances have created an unprecedented opportunity to amplify cities as platforms for sharing. People are already acting on this opportunity. Driven by economic need and empowered by new technologies, they’re creating new, more resilient ways of providing food, jobs, hous-ing, goods, and transportation for themselves and each other in cities

This report details 32 specific policy steps that local leaders can take to benefit from the growing sharing economy and support innovations such as carsharing, ridesharing, cohousing, cooperatives, and urban agriculture. 

Please share this with every urban leader, mayor, city planner, or council member you know!

Created by
Shareable/Sustainable Economies Law Centre

Read

Go


Source: http://www.resilience.org/resource-detail/1859010-policies-for-shareable-cities-a-sharing

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Inclusive Green Growth: The Pathway to Sustainable Development

To get to sustainable development, we need well-designed, inclusive green growth policies that can improve social welfare for all, promote careful stewardship of natural resources, and respect the delicate balance of the planet. In the 2012 report Inclusive Green Growth: The Pathway to Sustainable Development, World Bank economists set out an economic argument and framework for countries to begin greening their growth.


OverviewFull Report
Chapter 1: An Analytical Framework for Inclusive Green Growth
Chapter 2: Influencing Firms, Consumers, and Policy Makers Through Market and Non-Market Mechanisms
Chapter 3: Green Innovation and Industrial Policies
Chapter 4: Human Capital: Implications of Green Growth Policies for Labor Markets and Job Creation
Chapter 5: Natural Capital: Managing Resources for Sustainable Growth
Chapter 6: Physical Capital: The Role of Infrastructure in Green Growth Strategies
Chapter 7: Crafting a Green Growth Strategy
Charts & Figures
Read the Full Report Online

Download Inclusive Green Growth in Latin America & the Caribbean
Full Report
Chapter 1: A Learning Lab for Inclusive Green Growth
Chapter 2: Urban & Infrastructure Services
Chapter 3: Natural Resources & Rural Services

Policy Pathways: A Tale of Renewed Cities

 Policy Pathways: A Tale of Renewed Cities


Edition: 2013
98 pages

Transport currently accounts for half of global oil consumption and nearly 20% of world energy use, of which approximately 40% is used in urban transport alone. The IEA expects urban transport energy consumption to double by 2050, despite ongoing vehicle technology and fuel-economy improvements. While increased mobility brings many benefits, the staggering rate of this increase creates new challenges. Urgent energy-efficiency policy attention will be needed to mitigate associated negative noise, air pollution, congestion, climate and economic impacts, all of which can cost countries billions of dollars per year.

This report highlights lessons learned and examples of good practice from countries with experience implementing a wide range of measures to improve energy efficiency in urban transport systems.

Part of the IEA Policy Pathway series, A Tale of Renewed Cities sets out key steps in planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluation to achieve improved energy efficiency in urban transport systems. The Policy Pathway series aims to help policy makers implement the IEA 25 Energy Efficiency Policy Recommendations.

See also: Policy pathways series

Overview
   
The world is moving - rapidly. Since 2000, total global passenger and freight movements have increased by an average of 4% per year, and as a result, global transport energy use increased 30% during the past decade. People and freight have also changed how they move. In 2000, there were roughly 625 million passenger light-duty vehicles (PLDVs) around the world. By 2010, that number had reached nearly 850 million PLDVs. The effects of growing travel demand and increasing shifts to private motorisation are particularly evident in urban areas. Throughout the world, urban roadway congestion threatens the ability of cities to sustain long-term economic growth. Congestion alone costs countries billions of dollars in wasted time. Motorised vehicle traffic also has significant adverse effects on environmental quality and health and safety in cities. These issues are unlikely to diminish in a “business-as-usual” future. In fact, they are likely to worsen. The IEA expects global travel (in terms of passenger and freight-tonne km) to double by 2050 and corresponding transport energy use and emissions to increase 70% between 2010 and 2050, despite expected vehicle technology improvements. Global motorised vehicle stock is expected to double, and subsequent roadway occupancy levels are projected to increase as much as six-fold in some countries (IEA, 2013).




In effect, the world has reached a turning point. The 19th and 20th centuries changed how we move through rapid transit and private motorisation. The 21st century now must address how to move people and goods most efficiently in an energy-, budget-, time- and space-constrained world.
An “avoid, shift and improve” approach to improving urban transport energy efficiency
   
Achieving energy efficiency improvements in urban transport systems is not always easy. Yet, already many cities across the globe are tackling the urban challenge head on. This policy pathway describes the broad policy measures designed to address urban transport issues in more than 30 cities. In-depth case studies are included for three cities – Belgrade, New York City and Seoul – to demonstrate how common responses can be applied in very different local contexts to achieve transport system improvements. Based on these case studies and the experiences from other cities highlighted in this report, the pathway proposes ten critical steps that local and national governments can take to develop, implement and evaluate key urban transport system policies. Urban transport energy efficiency policies can be grouped into three broad categories: those that allow travel to be “avoided”; those that “shift” travel to more efficient modes; and those that “improve” the efficiency of vehicle and fuel technologies. This package of policies contributes to what is known collectively as an “avoid, shift and improve” approach (GTZ, 2004).
  • “Avoid” policies address transport energy use and emissions by slowing travel growth via city planning and travel demand management. “Avoid” policies also include initiatives such as virtual mobility programmes (e.g. tele-working) and implementation of logistics technology.
  • “Shift” policies enable and encourage movements from motorised travel to more energy efficient modes, such as public transit, walking, cycling and freight rail. For example, increases in affordable, frequent and seamless public transport can alleviate local congestion while improving access and travel time to destinations and reducing household expenses on travel.
  • When motorised travel is necessary, “improve” policies can reduce energy consumption and emissions of all travel modes through the introduction of efficient fuels and vehicles. “Improve” policies include tightened fuel-economy standards and increased advanced-vehicle technology sales (e.g. clean diesel trucks and hybrid and plug-in electric cars).
The IEA estimates that between now and 2050, the “avoid, shift and improve” approach could lower total global expenditures on vehicles, fuels and transport infrastructure by as much as USD 70 trillion (IEA, 2012b). These savings come both from reduced spending on oil in the transport sector, as well as from reduced capital and operational expenses on vehicles and the world’s rapidly growing roadway infrastructure.
Pairing cities with the right policies
   
Which policies to put in place to improve the energy efficiency of an urban transport system depends on the city context and its transport needs. To assist policy makers, this policy pathway has devised a typology of four common city transport contexts within the land-use and travel framework. The four contexts (developing, sprawled, congested and multi-modal cities) describe some of the general travel trends and transport system issues facing cities across the globe. Variations to each of the four contexts exist, but the framework outlined in this pathway is a useful typology of common transport issues and corresponding policy measures for cities across the globe.






Developing cities

Context: Rapidly developing cities are experiencing increasing demand for transport services and rapid growth in private motorisation. Developing cities can have relatively low densities and often have inadequate travel infrastructure, especially for non-motorised transport modes (e.g. walking and bicycling), and weak public transit services (e.g. unregulated, poor quality bus operators). Combinations of convenience, inexpensive and subsidised fuels, poor public transit services, and increasing distances due to urban sprawl encourage growth in private motorisation. As a result, developing cities generally experience increasing roadway congestion, rising travel injuries and fatalities, more local air pollution and large disparities in access to transport, employment and social services.
Solutions: Developing cities often still have a rare opportunity to direct land use and travel growth toward energy efficient transport systems before urban form and transport network development are strongly established. Target policies include regulations that discourage or penalise sprawling development (e.g. minimum density thresholds and urban zoning laws) and land-use initiatives that prioritise dense urban cores, such as transit-oriented development. Transport infrastructure development (e.g. dedicated spaces for pedestrians and public transit networks) can help to steer growth in travel demand toward more energy efficient modes while improving access to destinations and travel choice.
At the same time, infrastructure development and land-use policies should be paired with well co-ordinated, complementary travel demand management policies to ensure that improvements are accessible, affordable and attractive (i.e. competitive with private motorisation). Policies include formalising and regulating public transport operations, increasing service quality and frequency on public transport networks, and discouraging private motorised travel (e.g. removal of fuel subsidies and implementing vehicle registration fees). Additional tools to combat growing motorisation include policies such as road pricing and eco-driving programmes. Improve policies (e.g. fuel-economy and emissions standards enforced through mandatory inspections) should help to increase energy efficiency of motorised transport while improving local air quality.


Sprawled cities

Context: Sprawling cities tend to have low densities and high urban and suburban sprawl. They often have poorly-defined urban cores with commercial and business hubs spread intermittently throughout the urban and metropolitan areas. Public transit use and non-motorised transport shares tend to be low, while private motorised transport tends to be the primary means of travel. These cities may have difficulty providing efficient and cost-effective public transit services because of long distances between destinations. Local congestion, especially during commuting hours, is high in sprawling cities, and road infrastructure often requires heavy investments and maintenance as a result of extensive, highly travelled networks. Local air pollution and road safety are also common issues of concern.
Solutions: Low densities, urban sprawl and heavy traffic in sprawling cities require strategic, comprehensive planning and policy actions. Transitioning to a denser urban environment that supports more efficient transport generally requires years of planning and development, especially in cities where urban form is well established. For this reason, medium- and long-term development goals are critical in addressing travel demand. Land-use policies that address denser development, such as density credits and unified regional planning guidelines, can help to discourage continued sprawl and increase urban core development. Long-term zoning strategies, builder incentives and tax credits for business relocation are examples of policies that encourage urban densification.
In the shorter term, policies that improve existing transport and prioritise shifts away from private motorised travel are important. These policies can include travel demand management programmes, such as parking reform and road pricing, as well as tools that focus on improving transport and travel flow (e.g. advanced traffic signal control and buyer incentives for alternative vehicle technologies). At the same time, policies that improve roadway travel can have rebound effects (i.e. increased motorisation due to improved travel flow). Short-term system improvements, therefore, should seek to serve or at least complement long-term objectives rather than temporarily relieve existing transport problems. These improvements include supporting travel choice (e.g. park-and-ride stations), addressing shortcomings in existing public transport networks (e.g. redesigning bus routes and frequencies) and building more efficient travel infrastructure, such as BRT and light rail. Additional policies include incentives that encourage shifts away from private vehicles (e.g. employer tax credits for providing public transit passes).


Congested cities

Context: Heavy roadway traffic, especially during peak travel hours, is common in congested cities. Congested cities generally have medium to high densities and strong urban cores, although urban sprawl may exist in surrounding metropolitan areas. Congested cities can have extensive transit systems and high public transport modal shares. However, heavy traffic levels, often paired with increasing motorisation, can lead to daily gridlock throughout these cities. Numerous causes, including poor or diminishing public transport, fuel subsidies, free or subsidised parking, and high levels of funding for roadway networks, all can contribute to the preference to use private motor vehicles. Zoning policies (e.g. housing and employment mismatches) can also encourage private vehicle use. Local air pollution, road injuries and travel fatalities can be major issues in these cities.
Solutions: Heavy traffic makes getting around in congested cities very difficult. Travel demand management policies are useful tools to improve and facilitate shifts to more energy efficient travel while improving existing travel movements. Policies that discourage vehicle ownership (e.g. vehicle quotas and vehicle registration taxes) and private motorised travel (e.g. road pricing and parking fees) can help to reduce or stabilise increasing traffic levels. Improved travel-management technologies, such as advance traffic signalisation and real-time travel information, can help to improve mobility and system flow, while incentives (e.g. rideshare incentives) can encourage additional shifts to more efficient travel.
In the short term, policies and programmes that respond to existing gaps in travel networks (e.g. seamless connections between travel modes) can help to improve passenger travel and encourage shifts away from private motorised vehicles. The policy tools are even more effective when paired with travel demand management measures. Medium- to long-term policies that address transport system development (e.g. increased funding streams to develop and improve public transport services) and an improved land-use transport interface (i.e. improved match between travel demand and destination) will encourage longer-term shifts to more efficient travel.


Multi-modal cities

Context: These cities typically have high densities, strong urban cores, and high public transit and NMT shares. Multi-modal cities generally have strongly interconnected, well-developed travel networks, which facilitate and encourage more efficient travel. Mixed land-use development paired with a high level of public transport services means that travellers generally have good access to energy efficient modes and a choice of different modes depending on their preferences and needs. Many multi-modal cities have dedicated spaces for more energy efficient travel modes, such as bus and cycling lanes. A key feature of these cities is also public transport terminals (e.g. train stations, or bus terminals) where several modes of public transport can be seamlessly accessed by users. In addition, these cities often have implemented policies that discourage driving, such as caps on parking (i.e. limitations on parking development), road pricing schemes and car-free zones.
Solutions: They often have strong public transit systems and dense urban cores, but they can still achieve additional efficiency improvements. Policies that improve traffic flows and travel options can encourage greater shifts to more efficient modes and increase efficiency of the entire transport system. These efforts include development of dedicated facilities for energy efficient modes (e.g. bus and cycling lanes) and investments in vehicle technology improvements for both public and private vehicle fleets (e.g. CNG buses and “green” taxi programmes).
Travel demand management policies are particularly useful in multi-modal cities to maintain or improve travel shares by more efficient transport modes. Examples of policies used to achieve additional improvements in transport system efficiency include transit-incentive programmes, car-free zones, parking levies and road pricing schemes. Cities are increasingly turning to technology to improve urban travel and transport efficiency. This technology includes “real-time” updates of road conditions and transit arrivals, smart-phone travel applications and online journey calculators. Other practical tools, such as geospatial analysis software, can help cities to identify gaps in transport services and infrastructure (e.g. proximity to transit and sidewalk access to bus stops).




The policy pathway: steps to achieving energy efficiency improvements
   
The pathway to improving energy efficiency in the urban transport system includes four stages – plan, implement, monitor and evaluate – with ten critical steps. The steps were developed from experiences drawn from successful policy implementations and expert input from practitioners. The examples represent a wide variety of transport systems, as well as a broad range of urban environments, local travel needs and economic contexts. Throughout the text, real-life examples are also given to demonstrate policy responses and lessons learned from cities across the globe.
This policy pathway is divided into four sections. The first section introduces why improving the energy efficiency of urban transport systems is important.
The second section provides illustrative “real-life” case studies of urban transport policies implemented in Belgrade, New York City and Seoul and distils learning that can be applied to other city contexts.
The third section analyses barriers to improving urban transport energy efficiency and the key polices (including interventions and measures) to overcome them. These barriers include policy and market failures; lack of access to financing; and other challenges, such as political resistance and institutional capacity.
The fourth section sets out ten detailed steps for supporting the development, financing, implementation and evaluation of policies to improve the energy efficiency of urban transport systems. These steps follow the plan, implement, monitor and evaluate approach applied in all the IEA Energy Efficiency Policy Pathways series.



Policy Tools and References
   
To assist planners and policy makers, this report includes the following list of transport policy references, practitioners’ guides and project examples. Although the list is by no means exhaustive, it can serve as a useful reference tool for decision makers seeking more information on specific sustainable transport policy measures and project examples.
 

Other useful transport policy publications

Land-use and travel network development

Bus rapid transit
 Land-use development
Non-motorised transport facilities

Access and travel choice

Non-motorised transport

Travel demand management

Parking

Financing


Source: http://www.iea.org/publications/freepublications/publication/name,39940,en.html

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Reframing Sustainable Development: A Critical Analysis, April 2013


'Reframing Sustainably Development' proposes a new sustainability paradigm in order to avert environmental and subsequent social and economic collapse.
reframing.JPG

CIWEM considers that the current emphasis on an integrated consideration of environmental, social and economic components of sustainability is undermined by poor decision making, weak governance and institutional frameworks which, ultimately, allow too great an emphasis on economic growth to the detriment of environmental and resource conservation.  Furthermore, there remains confusion with currently accepted definitions of sustainable development concerning the precise meaning of terms including 'development' and 'future'.  Thus, as a global community we are a long way from any kind of sustainable development.
In order to rectify this failure, CIWEM considers that sustainable development must be re-framed to focus more explicitly on the fundamental environmental dimension within culturally sympathetic contexts.  The single limiting factor of a so-called sustainable human race is the management and rate of exploitation of a finite planet - its resources and natural environment - of which humankind is a part. If these resources can be managed and conserved appropriately then pressures on people and the environment will be lessened and social and economic benefit will ultimately follow.
This report is endorsed by the Society for the Environment.

Mainstreaming Sustainability - A CIWEM Review of the UK Government's progress, January 2012

Since the election of the Coalition Government in May 2010 there has been a significant shift in the sustainability agenda.  The current Government position on sustainability is that it should not be driven from a non-departmental, independent body but mainstreamed throughout government utilising the same frameworks as for other agendas.
Mainstreaming Sustainability critically examines this new approach to sustainable development and sets out CIWEM's position on whether we consider it to be an appropriate model.  This work takes into account recent commentary by the Sustainable Development Commission (closed down in April 2011), the House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee and others including CIWEM's own experts.

CIWEM has also analysed the actions taken on planning and zero-carbon homes from the DCLG, low carbon and green economy policies from the DECC and action on the natural environment from Defra. The Government's own performance across its estate in terms of carbon cutting and procurement is also assessed. CIWEM has judged each area against the principles of SD in Securing the Future.
MScover.JPG
   

CIWEM's related activities

The policy team will be developing a new SD workstream in summer 2012 looking into defining SD post Rio+20.
CIWEM has been particularly vocal on the issue of sustainable development within the government's reforms to the planning system and the publication of the National Planning Policy Framework. We were on the front page of the Telegraph following our press release: "A builders' charter". We considered the initial draft of the framework to be completely deficient and have been pleased to see a marked improvement in the definitions of SD in the final draft. Our responses to the Department of Communities and Local Government and the Communities and Local Government Committee can be found in the side tab.
Nick Reeves gave oral evidence to the Communities and Local Government Committee on our concerns over an economic bias to sustainability in the NPPF. The Committee's final report agreed with many of our recommendations.
In Summer 2011 Alastair, Laura and Jo from the policy team met with Jonathon Porritt to discuss the current structures in place for SD and where/how best to influence the government.
Following the publication of 'Mainstreaming Sustainability' in Jan 2012, the policy team met Defra's head of transparency and stakeholder engagement in the Sustainable Development Unit to discuss how they may better encourage and implement SD into policy across government in early May.
Our Sustainability panel have been working on a signposting tool Signposts to Sustainability to help those in the industry put in place the most appropriate measures to increase sustainability at the various stages across the life of a project.

Policy Position Statements

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Global Food Policy Report 2012


The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) has published its 2012 Food policy report which examines the major food policy issues, developments, and decisions of 2012. By putting into perspective the year's food policy successes and disappointments, the report suggests how to move forward those policies that improve the food situation for the poor. Among the questions explored are: How has sustainable development evolved and is a green economy far behind? How can agriculture offer meaningful jobs to the growing number of young people in Africa? What directions are US and EU agricultural policies taking, and how do they diverge? 

Download the report

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Prosperity of Cities - Sustainable Energy and Sustainable Housing



Sustainable Housing for Sustainable Cities , A policy framework for developing cities
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  • Sustainable Urban Energy
    The concept of housing requires a new understanding to effectively address the pressing issues of slums, the urban divide, economic and human development, and climate change. No longer regarded as simply a roof over one's head, housing today plays a crucial role in achieving sustainable development. Sustainable Housing for Sustainable Cities outlines key concepts and considerations underpinning the idea of sustainable housing and provides a comprehensive framework for designing sustainable housing policies and practical actions. Although sustainable housing is often considered from a predominantly green perspective this book advocates a more holistic approach, which recognises the multiple functions of housing  as both a physical and socio-cultural system  and which seeks to enhance and harmonise the environmental, social, cultural, and economic dimensions of housing sustainability to ensure prosperous residential neighbourhoods and equitable cities.

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    http://www.unhabitat.org/pmss/listItemDetails.aspx?publicationID=3378

    Sustainable Urban Energy
    For cities to confront the challenges of fossil fuel depletion, increasing energy costs and rapid climate change, it is inevitable to develop and implement urban energy management solutions for their sustainable future. This publication is a training companion developed originally for training courses at the International Urban Training Centre in the Republic of Korea.
    This Sourcebook addresses sustainable urban energy solutions from a system’s perspective, as a three-step process - energy conservation, energy efficiency and renewable energy. Energy conservation asks the question, “do we need to consume a given good/service?” Energy efficiency asks, “what would be the best possible way to consume the same good/service”, while renewable energy asks, “could there be sustainable renewable energy alternatives for fossil fuels”.

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    http://www.unhabitat.org/pmss/listItemDetails.aspx?publicationID=3387

    The City is the Home of Prosperity. It is the place where human beings find satisfaction of basic needs and access to essential public goods. The city is also where ambitions, aspirations and other material and immaterial aspects of life are realized, providing contentment and happiness. It is a locus at which the prospects of prosperity and individual and collective well-being can be increased.
    What this new edition of State of the World's Cities shows is that prosperity for all has been compromised by a narrow focus on economic growth. UN-Habitat suggests a fresh approach to prosperity beyond the solely economic emphasis, including other vital dimensions such as quality of life, adequate infrastructures, equity and environmental sustainability. The Report proposes a new tool – the City Prosperity Index – together with a conceptual matrix, the Wheel of Prosperity, both of which are meant to assist decision makers to design clear policy interventions.
    The Report advocates for the need of cities to enhance the public realm, expand public goods and consolidate rights to the 'commons' for all as a way to expand prosperity. This comes in response to the observed trend of enclosing or restricting these goods and commons in enclaves of prosperity, or depleting them through unsustainable use.
    Other titles in the State of the World's Cities Series:
    • The State of the World’s Cities Report2001
    • Globalization and Urban Culture:2004/2005
    • The Millenium Development Goals and Urban Sustainability: 2006/2007
    • Harmonious Cities: 2008/2009
    • Cities for All: Bridging the Urban Divide: 2010/2011
    • Prosperity of Cities: 2012/2013

    DOWNLOAD:  (5,748 Kb)

    ISBN Series Number: 978-92-1-133397-8
    ISBN: 978-92-1-132494-5
    HS Number: HS/080/12E
    Series Title: Prosperity of Cities
    Pages: 152
    Year: 2012
    Publisher: UN-HABITAT

    Monday, March 19, 2012

    A Guide for Technology Selection and Implementation of Urban Organic Waste Utilisation Projects in Cambodi

    Policy Report "A Guide for Technology Selection and Implementation of Urban Organic Waste Utilisation Projects in Cambodia"

    This report describes and analyses the current situation of urban organic waste management in Cambodia through field surveys and interviews.The authors introduce various organic waste utilisation technologies that have been implemented in neighbouring and other developing Asian countries to assist technology selection.In addition, the authors provide guides for selection of appropriate technology for and implementation of urban organic waste utilisation projects in Cambodia.
    >>PDF download(2.9MB)
     
     

    Friday, June 17, 2011

    The Sustainable Kingston Plan

    The Community Plan


    Kingston has a vision: Kingston – Canada’s Most Sustainable City. A sustainable community is a place where people want to live and work; it meets the needs of its citizens, now and in the future. It is sensitive to the environment and reaches a higher quality of life.
    The Sustainable Kingston Plan serves to help us move towards sustainability in several ways:
    • It reflects Kingstonians' desire to foster a sense of community ownership, stewardship, community resilence and self-sufficiency, now and in the future
    • It expresses our willingness to be specific about how we preserve, bolster, utilize and protect our cultural, economic, environmental and social resources so they will be enjoyed by future generations
    • It acknowledges the Kingston community's profound concern with the current management of the Earth's natural and human resources
    • It demonstrates our intention to become an example to other Canadian communities as they seek to become more sustainable
    Kingston Sustainability Charrette in 2008
    Sustainable Kingston, an Integrated Community Sustainability Plan (ICSP), is based on the cultural, economic, environmental, and social pillars of sustainability.
    The high level objectives of Sustainable Kingston are:
    • Enhance awareness of community sustainability and encourage the adoption of more sustainable choices by our organizations, institutions, businesses, citizens, and visitors
    • Develop a long-term plan that defines the guiding principles, themes, theme statements, indicators, and goals that will help Kingston work towards the vision:Kingston - Canada's Most Sustainable City
    • Provide a framework for aligning, building on and integrating municipal and community actions (plans, policies, programs, processes, and initiatives) that are currently underway or being planned
    • Provide strategic guidance for current and future municipal decision-making that leads towards a cleaner, more attractive, more sustainable future for the community of Kingston
    • Raise awareness and solicit contributions through Community Partnerships and Citizen Commitments
    • Establish monitoring, reporting, and community consultation  practices so that Kingston's organizations, institutions, businesses, citizens, and visitors have up-to-date information
    • Become a conduit for community input and a catalyst for discussion that will result in the development of a community owned and community involved process that is tailored to the unique needs and desires of Kingston
    • Act as a living plan, subject to reflection and change through an annual process of community reporting, conferencing, and celebrating
    Sustainable Kingston consists of three parts: a Plan, a Sustainable Kingston Website (the one you are currently on), a Governing Body (described in more detail in the Proposed Governance Modelsection of this website). Sustainable Kingston was developed by the FOCUS Kingston Steering Committee based on extensive input from individuals, municipal government, Kingston institutions, businesses and community organizations. This input was critical in shaping the Sustainable Kingston Plan.
    Support Your Plan: Get Involved - Go to the How to Get Involved section of this website.

    Four Pillars of Sustainability

    Community Sustainability

    Over the last few years, the concept of what determines a sustainable community  has been discussed by many municipalities in Canada. From large cities such as Vancouver and Toronto to rural neighbours such as the County of Frontenac and the Township of Lanark Highlands, local leaders are thinking about the future that they want to see for themselves, their children and their grandchildren.
    Our communities are striving for sustainable development – “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” (Brundtland Commission, 1987). The Sustainable Kingston Plan has elected to use a four-pillar approach to sustainability. This approach is most clearly articulated in a sustainability tool known as the Melbourne Principles, which focuses equally on all four pillars.

    Four Pillars of Sustainability

    Sustainable Kingston uses a four pillar approach to sustainability: cultural vitality, economic health, environmental responsibility and social equity.
    Within each pillar, themes have been identified through consultation. Although themes are organized by pillars, it is the linkages and integration among themes and, ultimately, within pillars that will support Kingston in becoming more sustainable. As Sustainable Kingston is implemented and as Kingston becomes more sustainable, the emphasis on integration between the four pillars must increase; if successful, the pillar model may no longer serve the Plan. Our focus and intention, in Kingston, is to have a balanced integration and alignment of these pillars that affect our overall process to be a sustainable community.
    While the economic, environmental, and social pillars have been well defined and documented in community sustainability planning, inclusion of the cultural pillar is a relatively new phenomenon is sustainable development. Kingston has included the cultura pillar because of the important role that culture plays in defining our attitudes, values, and behaviours. This four-pillar approach to sustainable development recognizes that a community's vitality and quality of life are closely related to the vitality and quality of its cultural engagement, expression, dialogue, and celebration. More and more, governments, business, and organizations are using the arts as a tool to foster social inclusion, cultural diversity, rural revitalization, public housing, health, ecological preservation, and sustainable development. Sustainable development increasingly involves creating cultural frameworks that operate at the same level as do econoic, social, and environmental models. 

    Four Pillar Model

    The Importance of Integration 

    Sustainable Kingston is an Integrated Community Sustainability Plan (ICSP). While it is convenient to organize sustainability in terms of the four pillars of cultural vitality, economic health and social equity, it is the integration between them that will drive sustainability, highlight opportunities for innovation and reduce duplication of efforts.
    Ensuring the preservation of our environment and the responsible use of our natural resources are the right thing to do. Building the basis to enable social equity is good for all of us.  Preserving and growing our cultural vitality contributes directly to the quality of life for all our citizens. Building our economic strength is necessary. We recognize that an integrated approach will bring forward differing opinions; but the recognition and resolution of these differences will result in decisions that contribute to a more sustainable community. 

    Our Sustainability Themes

    A theme is a specific focus area of Sustainable Kingston. Themes are organized by the four pillars of sustainability – cultural, economic, environmental, and social sustainability. Visit each theme page to learn more about related goals, targets, priorities, actions, and indicators.
    How are actions added to a theme? Community Partners add actions that support the theme - it is all part of the Community Ownership model for Sustainable Kingston.
    Here are all of the themes organized by pillar. Each theme contains summary information of community actions that support the theme. These actions make up the Community Action Inventory.

    Cultural Pillar: Cultural Vitality

    Economic Pillar: Economic Health

    Environmental Pillar: Environmental Responsibility

    Social Pillar: Social Equity