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Why and how metropolitan governance brings together climate and SDG agendas, for the best health of all!

June 20, 2017 por Benoit Lefevre Leave a Comment


The air pollution we breathe -not always visible- has damaging effects on living things and the environment. Air pollution challenges and solutions are primarily urban; that’s why, to achieve the ambition of the Paris Climate Agreement and SDG agenda, we better look at cities.

Local and global urban pollutions are better addressed at the metropolitan level than at the municipal level. This is a key message from the last year Habitat III summit in Quito. Metropolitan authorities also constitute the right interlocutor for the local implementation of NDC.

Therefore, fighting climate change and achieving the sustainability ambition of the SDG is not uniquely a question of financing. Setting up efficient metropolitan governance structure, transferring required competencies, building technical capacity are also key elements for the success of spending better to achieve more and unlocking investment in sustainable infrastructure.

Let’s take an example of the transport sector. In the metropolitan area of Mexico, 40% of the inhabitants cross at least one municipal boundary to get to work, the Mexico-Puebla corridor registers about 760,000 people who travel daily. Obviously, the challenges and the alternative solutions are not at the municipal scale.

With continued urbanization, cities become more functionally interdependent with their surrounding settlements and hinterlands, creating metropolitan regions with a single economy and labor market, with functional relationships of resource cycles, a community with common interests and benefits of joint actions in various sectors. At the request of Chilean Ministry of Interior, the IDB is supporting the Chilean decentralization reform to:

  • build the technical capacity of the future Metropolitan Area Departments;
  • provide recommendations on the alternative governance structures and competencies.

 

Establishing a metropolitan governance is a complex process. Here are some key principles based on international experiences:

  • “No silver bullet”: There are many alternative models of governance, there is no model that stands above the rest;
  • “Focus on the process”: The process of implementing a metropolitan structure is crucial to success of the outcome;
  • “Adapt to the circumstances”: The most appropriate metropolitan governance depends on the circumstances, both nationally and locally;
  • “Flexibility”: Not only do different governance models work in different cities, models can evolve over time in any city; “Sources of resources”: fiscal resources must be adequate to the responsibilities.

 

Must know:

  • Cities are associated with approximately 70% of global energy use and 73% of global energy-related greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
  • According to WHO, outdoor pollution causes an estimated 3 million premature deaths each year.
  • Air pollution is the cause of our most common illnesses: 36% of the lung cancer deaths, 34% of stroke deaths, 27% of heart disease deaths
  • World Bank estimates air pollution cost the global economy more than USD5 trillion annually in welfare costs.
  • Because of climate change impacts, the LAC region could lose between 1.5% and 5% of its GDP by 2050 and an additional 3,5 million people could be condemned into poverty by 2030.

 

 

 

 

COPYRIGHT © by Joshua Tree National Park (Public Domain Mark 1.0) – FLICKR

 


Filed Under: Climate change, Institutionality

Benoit Lefevre

Benoit Lefevre, PhD is an urban economist and an engineer in agronomics working as a senior specialist at the Climate Change division of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), currently based in the country office of the Dominican Republic. His work focuses on design and implementation of national and local policy and investment in all sectors of the bank, and on improving climate friendliness of IDB-Group operations for both mitigation and adaptation, leveraging climate finance and catalyzing private investment in clean and resilient solutions. Prior to joining the Dominican office of IDB, Benoit worked at IDB Headquarter in Washington DC where he led or participated in operations on transport, energy, cities and natural disasters in Mexico, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Panama, Colombia, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Peru, Ecuador, and Paraguay. Benoit also represented the IDB in the MDBs joined Working Group for Mitigation Climate Finance Tracking, and in the IFI Technical Working Group on GHG accounting. Previously, Benoit worked for the World Resources Institute (WRI) as Global Director of Energy, Climate & Finance of the Center for Sustainable Cities. In this role he led activities on alternative business models, municipal finance, capacity-building, upstream project preparation, urban energy modeling and integrated transport-land use policies. Prior to joining WRI, Benoit was director of the Urban Fabric program at IDDRI and visiting scholar at Berkeley University. Trained engineer, he holds a PhD in economics and finance, and did his post-doctorate at Colombia University. Benoit was Lead-author for 5th Assessment Report of the IPCC. He is author of 5 books, several academic papers and opinion columns.

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This blog is a space to reflect about the challenges, opportunities and the progress made by Latin American and Caribbean countries on the path towards the region’s sustainable development.

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