http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=318806&version=1&template_id=46&parent_id=26


Sustainable cities are the solution 
By David Owen/New York


The key to New York's relative environmental benignity is its extreme 
compactness To most people, big, densely-populated cities look like ecological 
nightmares, wastelands of concrete and garbage and diesel fumes and traffic 
jams. But, compared to other inhabited places, cities are models of 
environmental responsibility. 

By the most significant measures, the greenest community in the US is New York 
City, the only American city that approaches environmental standards set 
elsewhere in the world. The average New Yorker generates 7.1 metric tons of 
greenhouse gases annually; that is more than the average Swede, who generates 
5.6 metric tons, but it is less than 30% of the US average of 24.5 metric tons. 
Residents of Manhattan, the most densely populated of the city's five boroughs, 
generate even less.

The key to New York's relative environmental benignity is its extreme 
compactness. Manhattan's density is approximately 67,000 people per square 
mile, or more than 800 times that of the US as a whole and roughly 30 times 
that of Los Angeles. 
Moving people closer together reduces the distances between their daily 
destinations and limits their opportunities for reckless consumption, as well 
as forcing the majority to live in some of the most inherently energy-efficient 
residential structures in the world: apartment buildings.

New Yorkers, individually, use less water, burn less fossil fuel, and produce 
less solid waste. Their households also use much less electricity: 4,696 
kilowatt hours per year, compared with 16,116 kilowatt hours in Dallas, Texas. 
Most important, New York's highly concentrated population and comprehensive 
public transit system enable the majority of residents to live without owning 
automobiles, an unthinkable deprivation almost anywhere else in the US. 

Some 82% of employed Manhattanites travel to work by public transit, bicycle, 
or on foot. That's 10 times the rate for Americans in general, eight times the 
rate for workers in Los Angeles County, and 16 times the rate for residents of 
metropolitan Atlanta.

At an environmental presentation in 2008, I sat next to an investment banker 
who was initially skeptical when I explained that New Yorkers have a 
significantly lower environmental impact than other Americans. "But that's just 
because they're all crammed together," he said. 

Well, yes. He then disparaged New Yorkers' energy efficiency as "unconscious", 
as though intention were more important than results. In fact, unconscious 
efficiencies are the most desirable ones, because they require neither 
enforcement nor a personal commitment to cutting back.

I spoke with one energy expert, who, when I asked him to explain why per-capita 
energy consumption was so much lower in Europe than in the US, said: "It's not 
a secret, and it's not the result of some miraculous technological 
breakthrough. It's because Europeans are more likely to live in dense cities 
and less likely to own cars." In European cities, as in Manhattan, the most 
important efficiencies are built-in. And for the same reasons.

China and many other non-Western countries are rapidly urbanising. That is, 
their populations are undergoing a general migration from rural areas to 
cities. This trend, which has been under way worldwide for decades, is often 
decried by American environmentalists, who generally prefer people to move in 
the opposite direction, toward "the land". 

But urbanisation is usually a good thing, both for those moving to cities and 
for civilization in general. Urban families live more compactly, do less damage 
to fragile ecosystems, burn less fuel, enjoy stronger social ties to larger 
numbers of people, and, most significantly, produce fewer children, since large 
families have less economic utility in densely settled areas than they do in 
marginal agricultural areas.

The world's population is expected to reach 9bn by 2042. That's an increase of 
seven times the current population of the US, or of the combined current 
population of India and China. If we are to sustain a world of that size, 
growth must occur almost entirely in cities.

Unfortunately, many global trends are pushing in the opposite direction. 
Dependence on automobiles is growing in parts of the world that formerly got by 
without them. 
China's pool of licensed drivers is growing exponentially, and India is a 
decade into one of the largest road-building projects in history, a 3,600-mile 
superhighway known as the Golden Quadrilateral, which links the country's four 
largest cities, plus an extensive network of feeder roads. All those new 
highways, in combination with India's brand-new "People's Car", the $2,500 Tata 
Nano, represent an environmental, economic, and cultural disaster in the 
making. 

If America's long history of energy-and-emissions gluttony proves anything, 
it's that an automobile-dependent society is vastly easier to create than to 
un-create. Moving from walking, bicycling, and public transit to driving is 
relatively simple, because it requires only wealth, a desire for independence 
and status, and an inability or unwillingness to look very far into the future.

Moving from driving back to transit, bicycling, and walking is far harder, 
because the cars themselves are only part of the problem. Much more critical is 
the inherent inefficiency of the way of life that cars both enable and make 
necessary, and of the sprawling web of wasteful infrastructure that high levels 
of individual mechanised mobility lead affluent societies to create.

Sooner or later, whatever else happens, the world will run out of inexpensive 
oil. Countries with expanding economies would be better off using their new 
wealth to create ways of life that can be sustained beyond that inescapable 
point, rather than recklessly investing in a future that has no future. Not 
jumping off a cliff is easier than turning around in mid-fall.- Project 
Syndicate 
l David Owen's latest book, Green Metropolis: Why Living Smaller, Living 
Closer, and Driving Less are the Keys to Sustainability, has just been 
published.

Reply via email to