Since 1 August, the internet portal for sustainable settlements and neighbourhoods has been offered under the domain www.siedlungen.eu and as a WordPress version with extended functions.
Keywords: Quarters, Settlements, sdg21 news
Since 1 August, the internet portal for sustainable settlements and neighbourhoods has been offered under the domain www.siedlungen.eu and as a WordPress version with extended functions.
0:43 min, 2020
Project Info: http://sdg21.eu/db/arkadien-asperg
Show building projects by Joachim Eble / EMP: http://sdg21.eu/planungsbueros/emp
Keywords:
Building Biology, DE-News, Movies, Movies < 4 Min, Wood construction, News Blog Baden-Württemberg, Water, Water design
A socially responsible coal phase-out is feasible and affordable, according to a report commissioned by ver.di.
"We expect that in none of the scenarios, even at peak times around 2030, will annual costs of more than 250 million euros be incurred for early retirement, but also for retraining and other career-related measures," explained ver.di Federal Executive Board member Andreas Scheidt.
The Enervis report commissioned by ver.di can be downloaded here as a PDF:
Link to the short info and pdf-download of the study: ver.di - A socially responsible coal phase-out is feasible!
Keywords:
DE-News, Climate protection, New books and studies, Social / Culture, Environmental policy
Publisher: Sennestadt GmbH
Publisher: Fraunhofer IRB Verlag
2017, 150 pages
At the "Good Climate in Neighbourhoods" conference week, 250 experts from all over Germany discussed issues relating to sustainable and climate-friendly neighbourhood development. The seven conferences in September 2016 provided important insights, many new ideas and innovative concepts for transformation processes in neighbourhoods. This book presents the contributions and results on the topics of energy supply in times of energy transition, new construction, energy-efficient refurbishment, mobility and identity, supplemented by expert interviews, checklists and a glossary to create a compact reference work. Both planning and conservation aspects of sustainable and climate-friendly neighbourhood development are highlighted. There is a consensus that climate protection must begin in the neighbourhood.
Keywords:
New books and studies, Quarters, Settlements
Hamburg (8 July 2017). In Hamburg, 19 heads of government from the largest economies jointly reaffirmed their commitment to the swift implementation of the Paris Climate Agreement and rejected US President Trump's attempt to undermine the Paris Agreement.
According to the leaked results, the final declaration sets out the differences between the USA and the other 19 partners on climate protection. The 19 emphasise the irreversibility of the agreement, commit to rapid implementation and adopt a detailed climate and energy action plan. "The action plan is the most concrete result on climate policy that the G20 has ever produced," explains Christoph Bals, Political Director of Germanwatch. "It shows that it is no longer just about reaffirming the Paris Agreement, but about taking steps to implement it."
In the document, the 18 states plus the EU emphasise, among other things, the importance of long-term climate protection strategies, which are to be presented by 2020. They commit to aligning development aid and infrastructure investments with climate targets and specify steps that can be taken to encourage companies and investors to disclose their climate strategies. Bals: "We welcome the fact that the 19 partners are also recognising their responsibility for the poor and those particularly vulnerable to climate change and are launching a global partnership for financing and climate insurance solutions."
The US government's attempt to obtain a free pass for fossil fuel exports was curbed as the US accepted the UN's global Sustainable Development Goals as a framework for the energy transformation in the joint section of the G20. "This means they accept that the share of renewable energies will grow substantially by 2030 and that the pace of energy efficiency improvements will double," explains Bals.
Chancellor Merkel is criticised. She cannot "put the phase-out of coal, oil and gas on the international agenda by the middle of the century and refuse a plan at home for the rapid, socially acceptable phase-out of coal," emphasises Bals. "It cannot push ahead with plans to accelerate the international climate transition and at the same time have no strategy in Germany for the transport sector, which still has emissions as high today as they were in 1990."
The complete press release:
http://germanwatch.org/de/14097
Keywords:
Stakeholders, Climate protection, News Blog Europe (without DE), SDG 2030, Environmental policy, Ecology