In this section, you can access to the latest technical information related to the FUTURE project topic.

ICLEI responds to the "Energy Independence" Executive Order of the Trump Administration

Frank Cownie, Mayor of Des Moines, IA
Gino Van Begin, ICLEI Secretary General
Angie Fyfe, ICLEI USA Executive Director


Since President Trump took office, there has been growing concern among U.S. local leaders regarding the new administration's stance on agendas critical to America's future: namely environmental protection, clean energy, and climate action.

With his 28 March Executive Order, which adds to the recent budget proposal, President Trump has once again taken an ideologically charged approach that is out of step with the values of the majority of Americans and will harm the people it purports to help.

ICLEI USA urges the President and his administration to listen to the voice of elected officials all over the country.

Local governments "“ the form of government closest to the people "“ are actively building sustainable communities. Thousands of community greenhouse gas emissions inventories are contained in ICLEI USA's ClearPath database "“ clearly demonstrating the drive toward low carbon economies.

For years, and regardless of checkered national policies on the topic, American cities and towns have kept forging a path ahead, showing by good example what can be achieved when committed leaders, engaged communities and responsible businesses partner for the well-being of the many rather than the profit of the few.

Since the early 1990s, local governments in the U.S. have been using technical tools, capacity building, and networking opportunities to quantify GHG emissions, develop local climate action plans and prepare for climate hazards. They played a tremendous leadership role in mobilising 1000+ signatories to the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement in 2005 when the Kyoto protocol entered into force and have taken center stage in UNFCCC processes in the lead-up to the landmark Paris Agreement.

The World Wildlife Fund "“ ICLEI USA Measuring Up analysis demonstrates that by mid-century the climate targets of just 116 U.S. cities have the potential to reduce carbon pollution equivalent to shutting down 86 coal-fired power plants. This is only a fraction of the potential of reducing carbon emissions in thousands of other cities across the country.

As U.S. climate leadership at the federal level falters, local leaders are, once again, stepping up to fill the void, by doing what they know best: listening to their citizens, bringing people and resources together to fix actual problems, keeping the community together and fostering a sense of shared responsibility towards our children and our planet.

Cities are going well beyond the Clean Power Plan now on review "“ they are moving toward 100% renewable energy, with Aspen, Colorado, having already achieved that goal.

Cities are made even stronger as they unite around the transition to low-carbon, highly resilient development guided by the Paris Agreement's ultimate goal to limit global warming to 1.5 °C.

ICLEI USA commends the immediate and widespread reaction by local and state leaders across the U.S. who are showing that decades of groundwork on local sustainability have strengthened local governments' ability to lead, uncompromisingly, on climate action and environment protection. This diverse and bold reaction provides further proof that U.S. communities and stakeholders will continue to be a part of the unstoppable and irreversible global action on climate and sustainability.

As the focal point of the local governments' constituency at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) ICLEI welcomes all local and state leaders to join us in raising our voices now and for the next months. As the 23rd UN Climate Change conference (COP23) starts taking shape in Bonn (Germany), ICLEI calls upon all national governments and all leaders from civil society and the business sector to join local leaders in doubling efforts on climate and environment protection and to build a new, inclusive climate leadership that will deliver on and go beyond the promises made in Paris at COP21.Image copyright: Donald Trump (Flickr) by "Gage Skidmore", licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 more   25 April 2017 UrbanWINS project calls for Citizen Bloggers in 8 European citiesThe UrbanWINS project has issued a call for talented Citizen Bloggers to write about eco-innovative activities based in or around its eight pilot cities: Cremona, Albano Laziale, Pomezia, and Torino (Italy), Leiria (Portugal), Bucharest (Romania), Manresa (Spain) and Sabadell (Spain).

UrbanWINS is a three-year EU-funded project aimed at developing and implementing eco-innovative strategic plans for waste prevention and management that will boost urban environmental resilience and contribute to a shift towards more sustainable production and consumption patterns.

The purpose of the Citizen Bloggers initiative is to enable citizens to discover how eco-innovation happens locally, through attractive and accessible stories in the local language. Blogging tasks will be agreed with the respective pilot city, and can include e.g. interviewing local stakeholders, reporting from local meetings or contributing to the project's online platform.

An honorarium is offered for selected bloggers, who must be based in or around one of the pilot cities, be good communicators in the local language and English, with a flair for the topics addressed within the UrbanWINS project. The deadline is 11 May 2017.

For more information and to apply, visit the UrbanWINS Citizen Bloggers page.Image copyright: Image (Pixabay) by "Unsplash" more

» Publication Date: 26/04/2017

» Source: Iclei Europe

« Go to Technological Watch



AIMPLAS Instituto Tecnológico del Plástico

C/ Gustave Eiffel, 4
(València Parc Tecnològic) - 46980
PATERNA (Valencia) - SPAIN

PHONE

(+34) 96 136 60 40

EMAIL

Project Management department - Sustainability and Industrial Recovery
life-future-project@aimplas.es