This is a quick look see at the efforts been put forward in the city
of Vancouver to improve the green footprint of the city and make it
even better than it is. What is worth understanding here is that the
city itself is forward looking and what we have done here is been
actively imitated elsewhere until everyone forgets who were the first
adopters.
We want to be the first adopters here and it always shows.
Thus what is been tried here is likely in time to be also put in
place at a city near you in the years to come.
Most important is that we have a ten year plan that prevents
political gamesmanship just as long term urban plans allow cities to
prosper. Infrastructure decay is pretty hard to hide from a forty
year capital plan.
How Vancouver got
its green on: A talk with Andrea Reimer
By Brian Merchant
Vancouver was bright
green decades before that term was invented. Ever since residents
rallied to block development of a major interstate back in the
’60s, the city has kept highways out and brought good public
transit in. Its neighborhoods routinely rank among the most walkable,
bikeable, and livable anywhere — it’s like a mecca for
the anti-Robert Moses crowd. And according to municipal stats,
it has the lowest per capita carbon footprint of any city in North
America.
But evidently, all
this is not enough. In 2009, Mayor Gregor Robertson announced his
intention to make Canada’s largest west coast city the greenest in
the world. Three years, thousands of expert opinions, and
an outpouring of public support later, the city council
voted overwhelmingly to approve the 162-page Greenest City 2020
Action Plan. Now, a hugely ambitious agenda calling for separated
bike lanes, energy efficient building retrofits, emissions
reductions, more green spaces, a green economic development plan, and
more — 15 targets in 10 different areas — has been enacted into
law.
City councilor and
deputy mayor Andrea Reimer has been crucial to the plan’s
success thus far. Reimer made a name for herself in 2002, when she
was elected Vancouver School Board Trustee under the Green Party
banner — the first Canadian ever to do so. She’s been a powerful
advocate of the Greenest City plan, and has worked to increase bike
and transit ridership, reduce homelessness, oppose oil
infrastructure, and work up support for the city’s climate goals.
I caught up with
Reimer at the recent Social Change Institute conference, where
she was a keynote speaker. We discussed the action plan, how she’s
fended off conservative opposition, and why Vancouver’s 600,000
residents have rallied around the idea that their city should be as
green as possible.
Q. Can you give
us a couple examples of the Greenest City Initiatives?
A. There are 15
targets in 10 different areas. So for example, with climate
emissions, we’re the only major city on the continent that has
met Kyoto [Protocol targets] — this year, we’ll be 6
percent below the 1990 levels. So we have some history we’re
building on, but we want to be 33 percent below by 2020.
We want to be fossil-fuel-free by 2050, because that’s
ultimately where we need to go. That’s one of the reasons we’ve
taken strong positions on pipelines and tankers. We just don’t see
the point in investing in infrastructure now that we believe we won’t
need in 40 years. Because that’s 100-year infrastructure. Let’s
build infrastructure that’s building towards that future we see.
Buildings are our
single largest greenhouse gas emitter. Over half our greenhouse gas
emissions come from buildings. So we have to retrofit 20 percent of
our private building stock, which is pretty steep, a difficult goal
to meet.
We want 50
percent-plus-one of people on active transportation — bike,
walking, or transit — by the year 2020.
We want to double our
food assets. That one’s kind of interesting. Because originally the
target was a 33 percent decrease in greenhouse gas emissions related
to food by 2020. The problem is, it’s a target you just can’t
measure. But we can measure that we’ve increased our
local food assets by 50 percent. It’s been interesting. We thought,
what if we also talked about doubling our climate zero emission
assets? That is a lot more inspiring than fight, fight, fight all the
time.
Q. And have
people responded to this? I understand that it’s a popular measure
as a whole –
A. It’s huge.
Q. – that
Greenest Cities is something that people are proud of. How does it
galvanize folks?
A. Any
organization — whether it’s a family, like a husband, wife (or
husband-husband) and a couple kids, or a school, or a city — does
better when you have one goal you’re working towards, right? It
gives you a sense of purpose if you understand how you fit into that
plan, right?
That’s what this is
all about. It’s given the city a lot of pride and purpose. We’ve
had over 1,600 cities around the world contact us for advice for a
cut-and-paste policy that they just want to put in, to understand,
how do those bike lanes work? How have you reduced water by such a
dramatic amount over this period of time, and why do you all seem so
excited about it?
It’s not 100
percent, but there were things that even three years ago seemed
impossible — like, “That will never happen.” Not only have they
happened, but people will bring visitors to look at these things that
were never supposed to happen three years ago.
Q. What aspect of
the Greenest City initiatives are you most proud of?
A. It’s not
meant as a copout at all, but what I’m most proud of is that we had
the collective courage to set a 10-year plan. Because that’s what
it’s gonna take. You’re not going to fix, you know, the 300 years
since the industrial revolution in a three-year term. And yet there’s
political pressure to do things in three years — that’s a long
time in politics, right?
Also, how we went
about it. There was a lot of public pressure to have an engagement
process to come up with the goals. The climate doesn’t care how you
feel about the targets, right? It has a very clear bottom line. So we
set up an expert panel that came up with the goals — what would it
take, from a scientific bottom line.
Q. A lot of
cities’ green plans get met with resistance from conservative
politics. Did that happen in Vancouver?
A. Yeah. The
first two years, the conservatives voted with us on everything all
the way through. Then the election year rolled around, and suddenly
it was this massive wedge issue. Certainly, conservative media
commentators had been hammering away on us on bike lanes, hens — we
legalized hens in the city of Vancouver, something that’s existed
for years in New York, in U.S. cities, right?
Q. They tried to
make it seem funky or out of touch.
A. Yeah, so
during the election year, they did Mayor McGregor, like McDonald. Or
Mayor Moonbeam, that kind of thing.
Q. But it didn’t
take.
A. The
conservative party in Vancouver, that’s all they ran the election
on. No other issue. They ran it on bike lanes, chickens, street food
— we have a vastly expanded street food program that requires a
certain amount of local and healthy food. They wanted to run on that,
and they just got clobbered. In many ways, they managed to get the
message out about a bunch of stuff that people were really excited
about and proud of [laughs].
Q. Still, how did
you manage to get all this off the ground in a single term?
A. There was a
strong citizen mandate: Vision Vancouver, my party, had 16,000
registered citizen advocates, and we think that’s more than any
other party on the English-speaking part of the continent. That’s a
huge mandate.
And one of the 10
pieces of Greenest City is green economy. We’re a city that has
never had an economic development strategy. We were elected a month
after the global meltdown. And it made people kind of go, “Whoa,
wait a second, do we have a plan here?” And the answer was no, no
we don’t. [laughs] We’ve always just depended on looking good and
hoping people show up, right?
So the green capital
piece, which is about doubling the number of green jobs and
investment — we’ve well exceeded our goals on investment in two
years. The jobs piece we’re still bringing along, but of the 10
goals, that’s the one I’m least worried about.
So that’s a
rubber-hitting-the-road moment. That’s not about a bunch of
barefoot, bike-riding, street food-eating hippies — that’s about
the future of the economy, right?
Brian Merchant is a
freelance writer and editor in Brooklyn, NY. A contributing editor
at Treehugger.com, his work has appeared in Slate, Salon, GOOD,
and more. He runs the Utopianist and is still trying to Get
Samy Out of Burma.
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