1:30 min., Published by: Municipal Housing Association Augsburg
Project Info: http://sdg21.eu/db/tes-energy-facade-gruentenstrasse
Keywords: Stock, DE-News, Movies, Movies < 4 Min, News Blog Bavaria, Contests & Prizes, Housing
1:30 min., Published by: Municipal Housing Association Augsburg
Project Info: http://sdg21.eu/db/tes-energy-facade-gruentenstrasse
At the end of the UN conference Habitat III in Quito (Ecuador), the environmental and development organization Germanwatch draws a mixed balance. "Around 50,000 people took part in the conference. This alone shows that cities are considered to be of great importance on the way to a sustainable world. It is very good that the adopted New Urban Agenda recognises cities as important players in achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris climate targets," says Lisa Junghans, expert on climate change, adaptation and urban transformation at Germanwatch. However, she qualifies: "The New Urban Agenda is not concrete enough in parts. Citizens will not feel directly addressed and there is a complete lack of measurable goals and criteria for monitoring the success of the agenda. It remains to be seen to what extent the agenda really supports cities in their development towards greater sustainability and a higher quality of life. Civil society in particular will have a key role to play in the coming years to ensure that the principles adopted here for future urban development have an impact."
Habitat III was the third World Conference on Human Settlements and Sustainable Urban Development after 1976 and 1996 and is intended to define guidelines for future urban development. Despite the highly participatory process in the preparation of the New Urban Agenda, the negotiations in the final phase took place, as expected, exclusively within the circle of government negotiators. Junghans: "Although this process is a classic UN process driven by states, it is problematic that city representatives are excluded from the final decisions on their own development."
Germanwatch is particularly positive about the fact that the final document grants cities more self-determination and ownership in the implementation of the New Urban Agenda and that "no one is to be left behind" - a reference to the particularly vulnerable population groups that must be included in the planning and implementation of future urban development policy.
The hope that a larger number of cities would lead the way with voluntary commitments, for example towards climate neutrality, has unfortunately not materialised. "Although there have been some very good announcements from civil society as well as from Germany and the EU regarding the creation of housing and climate-friendly mobility, concrete announcements from local governments themselves have been very limited," says Junghans.
Source: Germanwatch press release, 20 October 2016
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DE-News, Communities, Quarters, SDG 2030, Settlements, City, UN (United Nations), Housing policy
Press release: Deutsche Post DHL makes Bonn a model city for CO2-free delivery vehicles
Link: www.dpdhl.com/...co2_freie_zustellung_bonn.html
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Bonn, DE-News, News Blog NRW
Rob Hopkins has been developing a method for preparing our societies for the coming upheavals for almost fifteen years.
5 min., available from 6.12.2019 to 8.12.2021
www.arte.tv/...die-klimakatastrophe-ueberwinden/
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Stock, Citizen Energy, Renewable, Movies, Movies 4 to 10 Min, Climate protection, Communities, Media, Sustainable management, News Blog Europe (without DE), News Blog Great Britain, Participation, Permaculture, Quarters, Resource efficiency, Build it yourself, Social / Culture, Sufficiency, Transition Town, Environmental policy, Ecology
Contrary to the agreements in the coalition agreement, the draft budget presented by the Federal Minister of Finance, Olaf Scholz, on 2 May 2018 does not include tax incentives for the energy-efficient refurbishment of buildings. Deutsche Umwelthilfe (DUH) considers this a worrying revelation. The environmental and consumer protection organisation calls on the federal government to immediately launch a programme for tax incentives for the energy-efficient refurbishment of buildings and to increase the refurbishment rate for existing buildings from the current 0.8 percent to at least 2 percent per year.
"If the Federal Minister of Finance does not anchor this measure, which was agreed in the coalition agreement and is central to climate protection, in his draft budget, then he shows that he has either forgotten or already abandoned the climate policy promises of the new government after only a few weeks in office.", says Sascha Müller-Kraenner, Federal Executive Director of DUH.
Energy-efficient building refurbishment is a central element of the energy transition and climate protection. However, climate protection in the building sector will only be successful if the renovation rate in the building stock increases from the current 0.8 percent to over 2 percent annually.
"The two previous governments already failed to set the course for tax incentives in time and thus make a decisive contribution to achieving the 2020 climate protection target"Müller-Kraenner continues. "The reservations of the Länder that tax incentives would create a budget gap for them have been known for a long time. It is time to bring acceptable counter-financing solutions to the table."
After all, tax incentives for refurbishment costs are an important incentive not only for large housing associations but also for private homeowners to invest their own funds. The starting signal for this must now be given urgently.
Source: DUH PM of 07.05.2018
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Stakeholders, Stock, DE-News, Funding, Climate protection, Environmental policy, Housing policy, Thermal insulation