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Four central cities join One Planet City Challenge

07/12/2017

   Four cities in Việt Nam, Huế, Đà Nẵng, Hội An and Đồng Hà, have agreed to enter World Wild Fund for Nature (WWF)’s One Planet City Challenge programme to show how cities can be a hub for creativity, ambition and innovation in dealing with climate change.

Solar panels on the roof of a residential apartment in Đà Nẵng, 30% of the city’s population are using solar powered water-heaters.

   A WWF statement on Wednesday said cities generate 70 per cent of the world’s carbon emissions, and WWF’s One Planet City Challenge is a biennial competition that recognizes and rewards cities for developing infrastructure, housing, transport and mobility solutions to power the global transition to a low-carbon, climate-resilient future. Director General of WWF International Marco Lambertini said, cities can be the blueprint and inspiration for a sustainable world. Progressive climate policy by local governments can radically reduce the impact of transport, housing and other high-emitting sectors and deliver greener, healthier and more livable cities and homes for people.

   The One Planet City Challenge was designed by WWF to mobilize action and support from cities in global climate efforts, including the goals now set forth by the Paris Agreement. Open for participation to cities in 25 countries this year, the competition invites interested cities to register at carbon® Climate Registry (cCR), the leading global climate reporting platform for local and subnational governments managed by ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability. According to Secretary General of ICLEI Gino Van Begin, active reporting is an important way for local governments to prove they are major players in global climate efforts. Since the carbon Climate Registry was launched, we have seen over 700 cities, towns, states and regions from across the world reporting more than 6,100 mitigation and adaptation commitments.

   Last year, for the first time, Việt Nam had Huế join the City Challenge and also be one of 18 in the world to be a National Earth Hour City. To gain that honor, Huế submitted a target of decreasing greenhouse gas emissions by 20 per cent from 2011 emission levels by 2020, along with six action plans focusing on urban greening, green tourism development, effective disposal of trash and wastewater, intelligent public lighting systems, renewable energy and use of environmentally friendly construction materials. While this year, Đà Nẵng, Hội An City in Quảng Nam Province and Đông Hà City in Quảng Trị Province have committed to enter the OPCC 2017 - 2018. Commitments and action plans for each city will be developed and ready to be submitted this September, with technical support from WWF Việt Nam.

   Entrants will be evaluated by an international jury of experts on areas ranging from urban planning and transport to consumer behavior and energy systems. The most ambitious cities will be recognized as national winners, and, from among these, one city will be crowned the global winner of the One Planet City Challenge. WWF will profile the winning cities’ achievements in a global digital campaign designed to strengthen public support for city-led climate action.

   This year marks the 5th anniversary of the competition, formerly known as the Earth Hour City Challenge, which has engaged over 320 cities across five continents since its inception. Submissions will be evaluated on the below criteria outlined by WWF. There will also be a special focus on level of ambition and ability to deliver on commitments and transformational change; ability to integrate actions into coherent and overarching climate action plans; determination to align with a transparent, science-based GHG emission reduction trajectory; and innovative approaches to addressing urban mobility.

Châu Long/VEM

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