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Towards a Low Carbon, Resource Efficient and Climate Resilient City Presentation to Top Management Lekgotla 27 August 2013. Vision Statement.
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Towards a Low Carbon, Resource Efficient and Climate Resilient CityPresentation to Top Management Lekgotla27 August 2013
Vision Statement “In 2055, the City of Tshwane is liveable, resilient and inclusive whose citizens enjoy a high quality of life, have access social, economic and enhanced political freedoms and where citizens are partners in the development of the African Capital City of excellence.”
Urban Resilience (Sustainable/Regenerative City) …..capacity of a place to anticipate, respond and adapt successfully to challenging conditions. …..urban resilience = both a city’s capacity to withstand and recover from an external shock and its ability to adapt and transform to changing circumstances (SACN)
Sustainable Energy Reduce Carbon emissions Biodiversity & ecosystems Risks & Vulnerabilities Isn’t GDS 2055 a City Sustainability Strategy???
Technology & Innovation, capacity building & fiscal mechanisms Key focus areas & related Programs • Payment for ecosystem services, re-introduction & innovative use of indigenous vegetation • Water harvesting, effluent management & sust water metering • Waste beneficiation, - recycling, waste to energy etc. Sustainable options, City wide implementation & a clear change in city landscape • Non-motorised transport, sust. public transport system (sust mobility & connectivity) • off-grid options , large scale renewable, incl SWH rollout Liveability – integrated sustaiability programs, citizen participation, Happiness Sustainable Consumption & Production
Monitoring and Evaluation Framework Six Capitals Stock to Assess & Measure City Mitigation and Adaptation Performance
City Vulnerability & Resilience Assessment Impact on City Resilience
Sustainability TargetsPer capita proportional share of CoT targets from national and provincial targets • City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality, Population=2.921 million (2011) • Gauteng= 12.2 million people (2011 South African National Census), • Therefore CoT is 23.94% of Gauteng targets • South Africa=51 770 560 • Therefore CoT is 5.64% of SA targets
National Green economy accord targets • One million solar water heating systems by 2014/15 • COT 56400 SWH by 2015 • IDC to ensure funding of up to R25 billion for investments in Green Economy activities over the next five years • CoT 1.41 Billion potential available from IDC • Government to invest in mass-transport systems that will make it easier for South Africans to travel using public transport and thus reduce reliance on private car-use. Plans to invest R20 billion by 2014 and R130 billion beyond the period • CoT 1.21 Billion potential available from IDC by 2014 and 6.8 bn beyond
Government to reviewing the investment in rail infrastructure and rolling stock in order to ensure a greater shift of freight transport to rail instead of road transport. Transnet plans to invest about R63 billion in the freight rail system over the next five years • CoT 3.55 Billion potential available from IDC • Government to procure 3 725 Megawatts of renewable energy for use in the grid by 2016 • CoT 210 MW by 2016 • Business to develop benchmarks for sector and subsector energy efficiency and company energy-management plans in support of the National Energy Efficiency Strategy, which includes a transition to the following sectoral energy intensity targets by 2015: • Commercial and public buildings: 10% • Residential: 15% • Transport: 10% • Industry: 15% • Mining: 15%
50 000 green jobs in renewable energy activities by 2020, of which about 6 500 will be engineers and technicians, develop a ‘roof-top’ programme, that aims to install 300 000 solar PV power generation units on or at residential, commercial and industrial buildings by 2020 and to work with government to create local industrial capacity, with an initial minimum target of 35% localisation • by 2016 as a first part of an aspirational target of 75% local content CoT 2820 jobs in RE by 2020 with installation of 16920 solar PV by 2020 • Government to provide a supportive regulatory environment to facilitate the development of a local biofuels industry, finalise the recently-published mandatory blending regulations that set targets of 2% bio-ethanol and 5% bio-diesel standards to be applicable in the South African market and introduce an incentive system to kick-start the development of a local biofuels industry • 5% reduction of waste generated in next 5 years(paper and packaging, post consumer wastes)
Gauteng strategy targets with CoT share in red • A 15% reduction in energy consumption, water use and number of trips in private vehicles by 2015 (Gauteng integrated energy strategy) • Ensure that between 20-30% of work opportunities created in provincial government EPWP programme are in green jobs programmes (note: percentage will be re-determined when clarity is reached on how many EPWP job-opportunities will be forthcoming vs how many are required to make up more than 300 000 – it may be necessary to expand the current EPWP programme to make up the difference) • In collaboration with the private sector, work towards ensuring that all businesses achieve green building status by 2014 using the Green Building Council of SA standards. • Engage with national government on possible provincial and municipal support to help meet national targets for local manufacturing of green products (i.e.60% of solar water heaters to be rolled out by 2014 produced locally) • 30% of city owned vehicles to be converted to alternative fuels by 2020, 50% by 2030
Financing the Transition Different forms of support are required along the programme and project life cycle trajectory – requiring a blending of public and private capital, from international and national sources. 5. There is now a growing need to enter into Public Private partnerships especially in implementation of innovative sustainability programmes……this is a significant component moving into the future 1.Partnerships with Academic & research institutions…. 4.Municipal Bonds to expand infrastructure programme at stage 4 & 5 level 3. Use of soft loan facilities offered by the DBSA & use of donor funds (e.g. SWH,) 2. Public Sector grants & i.e. green fund, jobs fund, human settlement grants etc. Source: UNEP 2009,
Quick Wins -Pilot: Green Neighborhood - Separation at Source (Partnership approach) - Feasibility Studies – Bioenergy (GIZ/SALGA) - Green Buildings (City Owned) - Waste to Energy??? - Sustainability/Green Indicators & Targets - Economics of Ecosystem Services (ICLEI) - Concentrated Solar (10 MW in Rooiwal)
Proposed Green Neighborhood Flagship Project • Green Retrofit and/or design of low-cost houses • Retrofit would include: • solar water heaters, • insulated ceilings, • efficient lighting and heat insulation cookers. • rainwater harvesting tanks • Planting of indigenous and fruit trees • Waste separation at source & a recycling program • Non-motorised transport infrastructure • Urban farming linked to renewable energy generation (Bioenergy & solar) • The concept of smart grid modular technology • linking together consumers and local generation from renewable sources
Problem Statement • Challenges with Social Housing • No water heating systems • No regard for energy and water efficiency • No adequate insulation • Large daily temperature fluctuations • High energy levels to keep houses cool or warm • High unemployment levels • Large % of economically active population (24 to 60 yrs) • CoT Sustainability Objectives • Awareness raising & education through “doing” • Job creation & poverty reduction • Active citizenry
Objectives • to demonstrate the range of socio-economic, health and environmental benefits possible through sustainable design and resource-efficient interventions, • to illustrate that people’s quality of life can be improved, while keeping the country’s development on a low carbon and sustainable path. • It is a practical demonstration of the need to green low-income housing, and the potential impact that similar interventions could have on a national scale. • Provides a practical demonstration of the job and enterprise generation potential of going green.
Benefits • The installation of energy-efficient, food and water security interventions ensures • resilience against the effects of climate change and micro / macroeconomic fluctuations. • Ensures access to fresh food supply and use renewable energy sources. • Generates employment opportunities & enterprise creation • The activity addresses the mitigation of climate change by taking initial steps towards reducing carbon footprint of the city, • decreasing dependency on coal-generated power sources and if replicated across the country, contributing to a lower carbon future for South Africa
Next Steps • Confirm project site • Fort West • Oliewenhoutbosh Ext 27 • Refine project concept to fit selected site • Re-visit existing design concept & specs • Identify all sources of funds • Identify implementation partners • Current: GBCSA , DEA &GIZ • Commence implementation & Launch Jan/Fab 2014