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Cities and sustainability Cities and sustainability

Cities and sustainability - PowerPoint Presentation

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Cities and sustainability - PPT Presentation

reminder what is sustainability welcome 2 make up classes still needed This week Wednesday or Friday or since we need to add another 90 minutes we can add 15 minutes to the next 6 classes ID: 686679

cities urban population areas urban cities areas population people water growth billion increase land pollution world

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Slide1

Cities and sustainability

reminder: what is sustainability?Slide2

welcome

2 make up classes still needed

This week - Wednesday or Friday?

or, since we need to add another 90 minutes, we can add 15 minutes to the next 6 classesSlide3

Cities…

⁃ 3.6 billion people of the 7.0 billion world population live in urban areas, and this urban population is projected to increase to 6.3 billion in 2050 (while the world population will be 9.3 billion).

⁃ cities in the world account for between 71% and 76% of global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions Slide4

Let’s think together

Break into teams.

What are the indicators for a sustainable city? What are the questions that need to be asked?

Think: environmental, social, economic, governmental

Take notes, choose a rep, and report back to the class.Slide5
Slide6

Beirut

0.8 square meters of public green space / person

WHO recommends a minimum of 9 square meters / person

Beirut is 50 times less than recommendedSlide7

Sustainable city?

Kennedy et al. (2007): a sustainable city can only be one for which the in ow of material and energy resources, and the disposal of wastes, do not exceed the capacity of the city’s surrounding environment. In other words, for achieving environmental sustainability urban consumption must match or be below what the natural environment — such as forests, soil and oceans — can provide, and the resulting pollutants must not overwhelm the environment’s ability to provide resources to humans and other members of the ecosystem. Slide8
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please see / read the readings provided on the blogSlide15

chapter 22Slide16

living in urban areas

Urbanization: the creation and growth of urban and suburban areas; measured as the % of people in a country, or in the world, living in such areas

Urban growth: rate of increase of urban populations

1st cities: 6,000 years ago. … Today, ½ of the world’s population live in urban areas

growth by

natural increase

and by

immigration

, mostly from rural areasSlide17

4 major trends in urban population dynamics

Proportion of global population living in urban areas is increasing; could reach 66% by 2030; 88% of growth in already overcrowded and economically stressed cities

Numbers and sizes of urban areas are mushrooming. Every week: 1 million people. Megacities - cities w/ 10 people or more

Urban growth is much slower in more developed countries; more-developed at 75% urbanization - to reach 81% by 2030

Poverty is increasingly urbanized. 1 billion people in lees-developed countries live in slumsSlide18

1609 … Slide19

some undesirable impacts of

urban sprawl

Land and biodiversity

loss of cropland & loss and fragmentation of forests, grasslands, wetlands and wildlife habitat

Water

increased use and pollution of surface water and groundwater; increased runoff and flooding

Energy, air and climate

increased energy use and water; increased emissions of carbon dioxide and other air pollutants

Economic effects

decline of downtown business districts; more unemployment in central citiesSlide20

any advantages?

centers of development …

centers of services …

recycling may be more feasible; may preserve biodiversity … ; may save energy …

how?Slide21

any disadvantages

intense population pressure and high population densities

huge ecological footprints

urban population occupy about 2% of the earth’s area - but consume about 75% of its resource and produce 75% of the world’s climate changing carbon dioxide

http://rprogress.org/index.htm

- for your information

[read the core case study of Curtiba, Brazil]Slide22

most cities

lack vegetation [and the vegetation could absorb air pollution give off oxygen, provide shade, reduce soil erosion, provide habitat]

have water problems [water demands increase; reservoirs and canals built; deeper wells drilled; depriving rural and wild areas, and depleting underground water supplies]

concentrate pollution and health problems [plus can increase spread of infectious diseases]

excessive noise [prolonged exposure to sound levels above 85 dbA]

affect local climates [warmer, rainier, foggier, cloudier than rural areas. why? generate more heat - create urban heat island]

cause light pollution [sea turtles…]Slide23

urban heat islandSlide24
Slide25

What to do about slums / shanty-towns?

“Should squatters living in or near cities by given title to the land they live on?”Slide26

Transportation?

Cities can grow outward or upward

outward with cheap gasoline, highways, plentiful land

US: 4.6% of world’s population and ⅓ of the world’s vehicles; use 43% of the world’s gasoline

motor vehicles

1.2 million deaths a year (3,300/day); 50 million animals

congestion … outdoor air pollution

reducing car usage

car sharing … bikes… mass transit rail… buses… Slide27

land-use planning

zoning: parcels of land are designated for certain uses

height restrictions; property tax;

Beirut: http://www.executive-magazine.com/business-finance/real-estate/higher-regulationSlide28

making cities sustainable?

walkability

mixed-use and diversity

quality urban design

smart transportation

— cities for people not for carsSlide29

major urban resource and env problems