Cities Set the Pace on Fighting Poverty, Climate Change but Who Will Pay?
New York. Fast-growing cities will determine how the world manages to fight poverty, disease and climate change in coming decades but increased resilience is likely to come with a hefty price tag, said urban development experts.
While cities are poised to benefit from technological innovation, tackling crippling inequality is crucial to help cope with shocks and stresses which are set to rise alongside urban populations, said experts at a New York summit organized by the Rockefeller Foundation-backed 100 Resilient Cities.
"The way we design food systems, community health systems, economies that create opportunities across the socioeconomic spectrum and public infrastructure... will very much define how the world performs in the fight against poverty, hunger, disease, inequality and against climate change," said Rajiv Shah, president of the Rockefeller Foundation.
Cities from London to Lagos, San Francisco to Seoul have signed up to 100RC's $164 million program in a bid to boost their resilience as cities continue to swell, with the United Nations predicting two thirds of the world's population will live in cities by 2050, up from 54 percent in 2014.
Better protecting urban populations from flooding, heatwaves, hurricanes and earthquakes, improving housing and basic amenities, reducing crime and inequality, and developing better transport options top the list for many cities.
However, financing resilience remains a crucial issue for cities with many struggling to raise revenues and hammer out much needed private sector partnerships.
In the United States, cities can create jobs and cut social inequality as they reduce global warming but must act quickly since the nation took a "wrong turn" on climate change, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said.
Some 300 US cities have stepped up and said they would work to meet the Paris climate goals, sidestepping President Donald Trump's decision to pull the country out of the 2015 pact to limit global warming, the mayor said.
"Cities are taking matters into our own hands, because we have no illusion that things will change otherwise," he said.
Counting the Cost
With cities needing to spend an estimated $78 trillion on infrastructure over the next decade, they should consider collective action to influence markets and shape policies, as they try to design cities to protect the vulnerable, said Michael Berkowitz, president of 100RC.
"If we're going to be building $78 trillion of infrastructure, let's build it better and smarter and in a more resilient way," he told the summit.
Better tackling inequality would make "our cities better able to handle whatever the shocks and stresses they face, that will make them resilient," he said.
New technologies such as 3-D printed buildings are set to revolutionize infrastructure, while the internet of things and big data projects would help develop smarter cities, said Judith Rodin, former president of the Rockefeller Foundation that partners with the Thomson Reuters Foundation on a project focused on building resilience.
Vertical farms – producing food in stacked layers – could help feed urban populations while self-driving cars and technology entrepreneur Elon Musk's proposed "Hyperloop" highspeed underground transport system would revolutionize transport for cities of the future.
"It's clear the future of cities will be increasingly interconnected both physically and digitally," Rodin said.
But financing these new innovations will not be easy.
Ede Ijjasz-Vasquez, senior director of social, urban, rural and resilience global practice at the World Bank, said a recent review of 500 cities showed only 20 percent had a credit rating high enough to borrow on domestic markets and only four percent could raise capital on international markets.
"There needs to be clarity of the rules of the game, the investment in cities is enormous, everyone needs to contribute, so national governments need to do their transfer of funds in a systematic and transparent manner," Ijjasz-Vasquez said.
"That's the only way everybody, the citizen and household, the city and the national government will continue together to fill this financial gap... whatever we bring as donors, international philanthropy, is a small drop in the bucket."
Reuters
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