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What is a “sustainable city”? Fred Lee Department of Geography The University of Hong Kong

Explore the concept of sustainable cities, historical context, and the discourse on sustainable development. Learn about ambiguous definitions, critics of dominant views, and the principles that guide sustainable urban planning.

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What is a “sustainable city”? Fred Lee Department of Geography The University of Hong Kong

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  1. What is a “sustainable city”? Fred Lee Department of Geography The University of Hong Kong March 15, 2012

  2. Sustainable Cities • What is a “sustainable city”? • What is “sustainable development”? • Ambiguous definitions  confusions & contradictions ~ “sustainable cities”? or ~ cities that contribute to “sustainable development”?

  3. Sustainable Cities • Historical context ~ UNCED (1992): > Agenda 21: Program of Action for Sustainable Dev’ > “Local Agenda 21” (Ch. 28 of Agenda 21) Why Local Agenda 21?

  4. Sustainable Cities • Historical context ~ Habitat II (1996): Habitat Agenda > “Sustainable human settlements” (Ch. III.B.) * “green city” * “eco-city” * “liveable city” * “environmental city” * “zero-emission city”

  5. Sustainable Cities

  6. Sustainable Cities • What is “sustainable development”? ~ sustainability > what is to be sustained? > what sector(s)? > at what scale? ~ development > what goal(s)? > for whom? > how?

  7. Sustainable Cities • Discourse on sustainable development ~ one-sided emphasis on: sustainability [ecological sustainability] ~ consequences (at city level): > investment to reduce use of fossil fuels > decrease throughputs of resources > control pollution > draconian measures on pop. growth & mobility * such policies do little for the poor * may even exacerbate their problems

  8. Sustainable Cities • Ambiguous definition  confusions ~ What does “sustainable development” mean? > “ensuring human activities can continue”? or > “keeping natural capital intact”? or > “meeting human needs”?

  9. Sustainable Cities • What is “sustainable development”? ~ the WECD definition: “Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”

  10. Sustainable Cities • WCED definition ~ sustainable development > poverty & inequity  ecological crises ~ two major aspects need to be combined: > meeting human needs > keeping natural capital intact ~ two key principles need to be observed: > inter-generational equity > intra-generational equity

  11. Sustainable Cities • Critics of dominant definition (ecological sustainability): ~ critics: emphasize the need to discuss & define development goals > SD means more, not less, growth * growth eliminate poverty & inequity > SD demands social change * re-distribute assets & resources > SD requires trade-offs * reconcile conflicting development goals

  12. Sustainable Cities • Ambiguous definition  confusions ~ What does a “sustainable city” mean? > “keeping an urban human settlement functioning”? or > “cities that contribute to SD goals”? ~ Our Common Future’s principles: > meeting human needs in cities > minimizing the transfer of costs from city-based production, consumption or waste generation to other people or ecosystems, both now & in the future

  13. Sustainable Cities • What is a “sustainable city”? ~ a provisional definition: “a city designed, built, and managed in a manner where all its citizens are able to meet their own needs without endangering the well-being of the natural world or the living conditions of other people, now or in the future”

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