Cities and Climate Change
328 pages
English
YouScribe est heureux de vous offrir cette publication
328 pages
English
YouScribe est heureux de vous offrir cette publication

Description

This volume comprises a collection of papers prepared and presented at the World Bank's Fifth Urban Research Symposium, as part of the World Bank Group's strategy to share and encourage research oriented to urban issues and bridge these academic results with the pressing needs of developing cities. The selected papers included in this book combine robust analytical pieces and theoretical insights with best practices from around the world. Specific case studies include New Orleans in the context of a fragile environment, a framework to include poverty aspects in the cities and climate change discussion, and a contribution toward measuring the impact of GHG emissions.
Cities and Climate Change is the first title in the World Bank's new Urban Development Series.The Series discusses the challenge of urbanization and what it will mean for developing countries in the decades ahead, and aims to delve more substantively into the core issues framed by the World Bank's 2009 Urban Strategy, Systems of Cities: Harnessing Urbanization for Growth and Poverty Alleviation.

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Publié par
Publié le 02 juin 2011
Nombre de lectures 31
EAN13 9780821386675
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 2 Mo

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CITIES
AND CLIMATE
CHANGE
Responding to an Urgent Agenda
Daniel Hoornweg, Mila Freire, Marcus J. Lee,
Perinaz Bhada-Tata, and Belinda Yuen, editorsCITIES
AND CLIMATE
CHANGET e Urban Development Series discusses the challenge of urbanization and what it
will mean for developing countries in the decades ahead. T e series delves substantively
into the core issues framed by the World Bank’s 2009 Urban Strategy, Systems of Cities:
Harnessing Urbanization for Growth and Poverty Alleviation. Across the f ve domains of
the Urban Strategy, the series provides a focal point for publications that seek to foster
a better understanding of the core elements of the city system, pro-poor policies, city
economies, urban land and housing markets, urban environments, and other issues
germane to the agenda of sustainable urban development.
Cities and Climate Change: Responding to an Urgent Agenda is the f rst title in the
Urban Development Series.CITIES
AND CLIMATE
CHANGE
Responding to an Urgent Agenda
Daniel Hoornweg, Mila Freire, Marcus J. Lee,
Perinaz Bhada-Tata, and Belinda Yuen, editors
Washington, D.C.© 2011 T e International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / T e World Bank
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Washington DC 20433
Telephone: 202-473-1000
Internet: www.worldbank.org
All rights reserved
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T is volume is a product of the staf of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / T e World
Bank. T e f ndings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this volume do not necessarily ref ect the views
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ISBN: 978-0-8213-8493-0
eISBN: 978-0-8213-8667-5
DOI: 10.1596/978-0-8213-8493-0
Cover photo: ©Atlantide Phototravel/Corbis
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cities and climate change : responding to an urgent agenda / edited by Daniel Hoornweg ... [et al.].
p. cm.—(Urban development series)
Collection of papers prepared and presented at the World Bank’s Fif h Urban Research Symposium.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8213-8493-0—ISBN 978-0-8213-8667-5 (electronic)
1. Urban ecology (Sociology—Congresses. 2. Greenhouse gases—Congresses. 3. Climatic changes—
Congresses. I. Hoornweg, Daniel A. (Daniel Arthur), 1961- II. Urban Research Symposium (5th Marseille,
France 2009)
HT241.C555 2011
307.76—dc22
2011007569 Contents
Foreword iii
Acknowledgments xi
Contributors xiii
Abbreviations xv
Chapter 1. Introduction: Cities and the Urgent Challenges
of Climate Change 1
Chapter 2. Greenhouse Gas Emission Baselines
for Global Cities and Metropolitan Regions 15
Christopher A. Kennedy, Anu Ramaswami, Sebastian Carney,
and Shobhakar Dhakal
Chapter 3. Comparing Mitigation Policies in Five Large
Cities: London, New York City, Milan,
Mexico City, and Bangkok 55
Edoardo Croci, Sabrina Melandri, and Tania Molteni
Chapter 4. GHG emissions, Urban Mobility, and Morphology:
A Hypothesis 87
Alain Bertaud, Benoit Lefèvre, and Belinda Yuen
Chapter 5. The Role of Institutions, Governance, and
Urban Planning for Mitigation and Adaptation 125
Harriet Bulkeley, Heike Schroeder, Katy Janda,
Jimin Zhao, Andrea Armstrong, Shu Yi Chu,
and Shibani Ghosh
■ vvi ■ CONTENTS
Chapter 6. V iral Governance and Mixed Motivations:
How and Why U.S. Cities Engaged
on the Climate Change Issue, 2005–2007 161
Toby Warden
Chapter 7. Urban Heat Islands: Sensitivity of Urban
Temperatures to Climate Change and
Heat Release in Four European Cities 175
Mark P. McCarthy and Michael G. Sanderson
Chapter 8. Adapting Cities to Climate Change:
Opportunities and Constraints 193
Dirk Heinrichs, Rimjhim Aggarwal, Jonathan Barton,
Erach Bharucha, Carsten Butsch, Michail Fragkias,
Peter Johnston, Frauke Kraas, Kerstin Krellenberg,
Andrea Lampis, Ooi Giok Ling, and Johanna Vogel
Chapter 9. A Conceptual and Operational Framework
for Pro-poor Asset Adaptation to Urban
Climate change 225
Caroline Moser
Chapter 10. Epilogue: Perspectives from the
5th Urban Research Symposium 255
Appendix. Titles and Abstracts of Papers Not Included
in Full in This Volume 271
Index. 289Foreword
T e 5th Urban Research Symposium on Cities and Climate Change—Responding
to an Urgent Agenda, held in Marseille in June 2009, sought to highlight how
climate change and urbanization are converging to create one of the greatest
challenges of our time. Responding to this challenge ef ectively and sustainably
is a key objective for governments, authorities, institutions, and other organi-
zations involved in urban development processes. T e World Bank, the French
Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable Development, Transport and Housing, and
the French Development Agency were therefore particularly committed to the
co-organization of the symposium.
Cities consume much of the world’s energy, and thus produce much of the
world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Yet cities, to varying extents, are also vulner-
able to climate change impacts, with poor populations facing the greatest risk.
T us, adaptation and increased resilience constitute priorities for every city,
and cities have a key role to play in mitigating climate change. Climate change
mitigation and adaptation in cities has emerged as a new theme on the global
agenda, creating a strong desire among governments, the private sector, and the
academic community worldwide to learn from experiences and good practice
examples.
T e 5th Urban Research Symposium made an important contribution to
the growing body of knowledge and practice in the area of cities and climate
change. During the three-day symposium, approximately 200 papers were pre-
sented to more than 700 participants representing more than 70 countries. As
co-organizers, we found it very rewarding to have such an audience and to see
the wide range of topics discussed, from indicators and measurement to insti-
tutions and governance.
T e symposium was made possible through the commitment and contri-
butions of a wide range of partners and cosponsors, as well as through the
■ viiviii ■ FOREWORD
interest and participation of the wider community of urban researchers
and practitioners. We were encouraged by the symposium’s success, which
exceeded many expectations, and therefore wish to further disseminate its
results. T is publication is comprised of an edited selection of the many
papers submitted to the symposium and gives a f avor of the questions asked
and possible answers. (T e entire collection of symposium papers is available
as an online resource for interested readers.) We look forward to the benef ts
that the knowledge gained and the partnerships forged during the symposium
will have for global ef orts on cities and climate change.
Inger Andersen
Vice President
Sustainable Development Network
T e World Bank
Michèle Pappalardo
General Commissioner for Sustainable Development
Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable Development, Transport and Housing
Rémi Genevey
Executive Director (Strategy)
French Development Agency

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