San Diego is well on its way to becoming a city destined for environmental salvation. According to the non-profit Environment California Research & Policy Center San Diego Ranks second in the nation in terms of solar power usage. We are doing well in protecting our environment and ensuring a sustainable future. That doesn't mean we can't do more.
Creating streamlined processes for solar power installation approval as well as encouraging higher levels of solar power reliance is beneficial for setting the framework for sustainable cities. If there are any unnecessary restrictions on installing solar panels it will raise the overall customer costs and slow the pace of solar integration.
There are advantages to developing solar panels that include less reliance on outside sources of energy, lowering long-term costs, and reducing environmental costs. As more renewable sources are developed the city will lower its overall carbon footprint and slow its contribution to environmental problems.
Finding the right policies, awareness processes, and incentives helps to ensure people make a equitable choice to use renewable sources. With solar panels there is often a higher initial investment but much lower costs spread out over the duration of the panels. Making sure people understand where they can get panels and their true costs can tip the scales in consumer choice.
Solar panels and ecologically designed cities are the way of the future. Those cities in the process of transformation and building new infrastructure should consider the benefits of developing ecologically sound practices. San Diego is in a strong position to foster ecological hubs that spur new industries in environmental and blue economic development.
http://www.environmentcaliforniacenter.org/
The blog discusses current affairs and development of national economic and social health through unique idea generation. Consider the blog a type of thought experiment where ideas are generated to be pondered but should never be considered definitive as a final conclusion. It is just a pathway to understanding and one may equally reject as accept ideas as theoretical dribble. New perspectives, new opportunities, for a new generation. “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.”—Thomas Jefferson
Showing posts with label ecological development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ecological development. Show all posts
Monday, March 30, 2015
Friday, January 31, 2014
The Economic Development of Platforms in History
It can sometimes be fun to think of where society is
heading. Perhaps it is more wishful thinking than concrete concept but there is often a little bit of
science behind projections. If we look at the trends of data development,
global warming, and global business trajectories we may find that pressures
will create impetus to redevelop the declining urban cores into something more
economically and ecologically sustainable. Decision-makers are seeking
opportunities to raise economic activity and lower costs while reducing
pollution. The next economic platform will be based in the varying pressures
of the environment in which it develops.
Economic platforms often mirror city planning through the
design and development of a city’s infrastructure. City planning is something
that has existed before the Roman Empire all the way back to Plato’s Republic.
Europe is full of cities that once started off of the Roman designs and
continued to develop beyond these platforms to create mazes of unique chaotic charm.
This is one reason why you can find narrow streets mixed with eclectic shopping
districts. The American system is newer and may be in the process of
transformation.
Each platform is related to the economic and social needs of
the people. In ancient history, early settlements focused on protecting individuals from nature’s
elements and predators. As people moved away
from simple hunting- gathering societies and into agrarian existence they
naturally sought marketplaces where they could sell their items and seek
protection from invading groups. Most cities were located in agricultural land,
near waterways, or nestled in easily protected areas.
Eventually cities moved beyond agriculture to include the
production of cottage industry goods and industrialization. It was these
cottage industries that grew into the mega-corporations of today. This required
expansion of slim roadways previously designed for horse and buggy to those that could
handle larger vehicles and goods. Airports, railways, industrial complexes, and skyscrapers became
part of the mainstream. Those who did not like the industrial core moved out to
the suburbs creating economic hubs around cities. The dirty and polluted urban
core was abandoned by those who had access to wealth.
The next development of economic platform is not so easily
defined and is open to considerable debate. There is greater opportunity to
develop the high data and eco-city that reduces its carbon footprint while
increasing the economic capacities of its habitants. Old skyscrapers will be
rejuvenated, new technology implemented, and suburbs will be drawn back into
the city through civic, resource and data connectivity. Sprawl will decline as
resources move inward back to their urban centers where strong infrastructure investment
can be pointed.
The eco-city will be designed as an economic hub that uses
existing rail and roads with new data systems to create higher connectivity
between various components. Wi-Fi, fiber optic cables, mini parks, creative
spaces, coffee shops and other improvements will match to larger industrial
sectors to interconnect economic activity and development. A good idea can come from anywhere and
businesses will capitalize on them.
As a nation, we were once worried about exploiting our
natural resources. We are now more concerned about competing on an
international market and will need to match creativity with practical
production to develop better products and services. This cannot happen unless
the infrastructure of a city encourages creative activity, proper social
relationships, and economic advancement. Such economic centers will connect to
other areas to draw in physical and virtual resources for development.
The Information Age is marked more by the rapid and proper
use of data streaming into the powerful hands of the individual user. Each
person will be more connected to the system and able to control their
education, time, economic opportunities, and development. Cities will be better
managed with higher levels of interactivity that allow people to work virtually
with much less energy. Economic strength will be enhanced through collective
effort.
These systems are based on the ability to provide the
platforms needed for economic and ecological growth. Today’s businesses are
more information oriented than in the past and use physical resources at a much
more efficient pace. Maximum development
will require the connection of the individual to worldwide economic activity
through small shop and large organizational pathways. The individual within the
larger economic structure will take precedence through greater development of
the virtual organization. Education and training will be on the top of the list
for human capacity development while greater balance between small and large
business will be sought to ensure pipelines of innovative ideas.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Economic, Social, and Environmental Resilience of Cities
Creating sustainability within cities can be
difficult. A paper by Luigi Fusco discusses how cities can develop economy
synergy by fostering creativity, resilience, and sustainability (2011). His
work is more focused on port cities but does highlight the concept that human
elements are important considerations in the development of cities that will
survive change. These factors may
actually be measured to help ensure that cities are moving in the right
direction.
Creativity is a powerful energy source for redevelopment.
With creativity people can solve problems, develop new products, and find new
ways to doing things. This creativity helps develop an economic engine with new
ideas and marketable solutions.
Synergy can be seen as the relation principles that help
discus the interconnected nature of business and people. As businesses and
people connect together they develop interactions that can enhance the economic
system. Synergy is based on these social and business networks that focus on a
shared perspective of development.
The author breaks down development into economic
resilience, social resilience, and environmental resilience. The paper focuses
primarily on creating sustainable eco-cities that are economically viable. The
measurements are as follows:
Economic
Resilience:
Funding from local foundations and banks/year
Innovative public procurement
supporting local industries
Regeneration capacity of economic
activities (variations overtime of innovative activities in the area/total
number of activities)
Localization of new creative,
flexible and adaptive activities
Density of networks among
companies
Variation of informal sector
economy
Industrial production activities
integrated in spatial and social context/Total of industrial production
activities
Innovative research
activities/Total of research activities
Number of university
spin-off/year
Incubators of activities
Number of design patents/year
Number of cooperatives
enterprises/Total number of enterprises
Number of micro-businesses/Total
number of enterprises
Density of networks among public
authorities, enterprises and research center
Social
Resilience:
Increase of social cohesion sense
as reflection of circular economic-ecological processes
Percentage of reduction of
unemployed people living in the area
Experiences of self-organization
capacity in neighborhoods
Implementation and upgrading of
existing “public spaces”(number of squares closed to traffic)
Conservation of elements
expressing the area’s cultural identity and memory
Number of events, festivities,
ceremonies, as expression of collective/social memory, in the year
Percentage of people involved in
forums and participative processes/year
Involvement of the III sector in
specific programs/projects/activities (housing cooperative networks, social
housing associations, etc.)
Density of cooperative and
partnership networks
Involvement of local people in
urban planning
Capacity of learning from
explorative experiences
Openness of people to differences
and diversities
Level of interpersonal trust
Perception of belonging to a
specific community
Number of donors/10.000
inhabitants
Environmental
Resilience:
Reduction of vulnerability and
risks levels
Conservation and increase of
green areas (tree planting and maintenance, promotion of green roof and green
façade)
Percentage of local materials
used in productive processes
Conservation and improvement of
landscape quality
Reduced car travel demand
Reduction of motor traffic
Air pollution reduction
Water pollution reduction
Recovery/recycling/regeneration
of waste material (percentage of plastic, metals, tires, slag, cans, glass,
paper reused, recycled and regenerated)
Water recycling (rain water
percentage recovered)
Waste management (self-organized
waste management)
Percentage of local renewable
sources (new electric power plants localization, based on energy innovation)
used in productive processes
Organic waste recycled percentage
(local composting production/year)
Percentage of activities included
in a smart energy grid (to use a variety of fluctuating energy sources)
Localization of new industries
with a low environmental load (ISO and Emas certified)
Number of modern eco-compatible
buildings/Total number of buildings
Luigi, F. (2011).
Multidimensional evaluation processes to manage creative, resilient, and
sustainable city. Aestimum, 59.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)