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Energy|Industrial
Energy|Industrial
energy|industrial

WWF starts One Planet City Challenge 2019

13th February 2019

By: Marleny Arnoldi

Deputy Editor Online

     

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The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has launched the One Planet City Challenge 2019, which asks cities to show how they aim to deliver on the Paris Agreement by limiting their climate impact.

The new assessment framework for the One Planet City Challenge will be based on data from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Participating cities will be asked to compare their current emissions with the emission reductions needed to reach the less than 1.5 ˚C above pre-industrial levels target.

“By joining the WWF’s One Planet City Challenge, local authorities receive a professional assessment of their current performance and advice about the most effective steps they can take to limit global warming to below 1.5 ˚C,” says WWF South Africa urban future programme manager Louise Scholtz.

She adds that the assessment will establish the ambition levels required, taking into account each city’s level of development. Local governments will also receive guidance as to how they can most effectively bring about reductions and advice on how best to adapt to the anticipated impacts of climate change.

The challenge concludes in 2020 with an international expert jury nominating winners in each participating country. From those cities, the jury will choose a global winner – with the most compatible action plan to limit warming to 1.5 ˚C.

Cities are already responsible for more than 70% of global carbon dioxide emissions. The WWF anticipates that 66% of the global population will be living in cities by 2050, so leading cities have an important role to play in showing the way forward.

“By demonstrating how it is done, cities can have a major influence on the rest of the world. The WWF wants to work with these cities to help them make the most effective choices and to spread their learning to other cities,” says Scholtz.

South African cities that have participated in the One Planet City Challenge, which was previously known as the Earth Hour Challenge, in the past, are eThekwini (2018 national winner), Cape Town (global winner 2014) and Tshwane (twice a national winner).

During the 2018 competition, eThekwini was deemed to be the strongest competitor in South Africa for its “well-rounded focus” on energy consumption targets and actions, as well as for expanding its mobility offering.

Previous global winners include Uppsala, Sweden (2018); Paris, France (2016); Seoul, South Korea (2015); Cape Town, South Africa (2014), and Vancouver, Canada (2013).

The WWF’s One Planet City Challenge began in 2011 and is the world’s largest and longest-running challenge of its type.

The assessment criteria, which integrate data from the IPCC are new for 2019.

So far, more than 400 cities around the world have taken on the challenge. These have already reported over 5 700 actions.

This year, the challenge will be run in about 20 countries that are home to half the world’s population.

Edited by Chanel de Bruyn
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor Online

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