{"title":"FACILITATING STAKEHOLDER DIALOGUES ON A CARBON NEUTRAL CITY: WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT CARBON (AND AIR QUALITY)","authors":"E. Prestwood, J. Longhurst, Ian. Townsend, Thomas Haines, Eleftheria Tsiarapa","doi":"10.2495/AIR180461","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"© 2018 WIT Press. The issues surrounding successful public engagement with climate change mitigation policy and decision-making have been extensively researched and identified as barriers to long-term civic and civil engagement. The challenge of transforming our urban spaces to mitigate and adapt to climate change was a key theme of the Bristol Urban ID project, which explored the “business as usual” approaches in policy, practice and engagement that limit truly transformational actions. As part of the project, a Carbon Neutral Bristol 2050 roundtable was held with civic leaders and stakeholders. Discussions focussed on defining carbon neutrality targets, “scopes” and boundaries for Bristol, exploring the opportunity for Bristol to be a carbon neutral city leader, how to build political, business and citizen space for engagement with carbon neutrality, and the role of Bristol Green Capital Partnership (BGCP), a cross-sector network of over 800 organisation working for a sustainable city, as an enabler and facilitator of change. The findings demonstrate a need for organisations working on interconnected environmental, social and wellbeing, and economic issues in cities, such as carbon neutrality and air pollution, to communicate and collaborate. Partnership working is essential to improving city-wide engagement in carbon and air quality management decision making, and to developing integrated city sustainability management strategies that recognise co-benefits and trade-offs. A set of guidelines highlight the need to create political space for people and organisations to talk about carbon and air pollution to develop city plans.","PeriodicalId":165416,"journal":{"name":"Air Pollution XXVI","volume":"15 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-06-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Air Pollution XXVI","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2495/AIR180461","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4
促进利益相关者就碳中和城市进行对话:我们需要讨论碳(和空气质量)
©2018 WIT出版社。已对公众成功参与减缓气候变化政策和决策的问题进行了广泛研究,并将其确定为公民和民间长期参与的障碍。改变我们的城市空间以缓解和适应气候变化的挑战是布里斯托尔城市ID项目的一个关键主题,该项目探索了政策、实践和参与方面的“一切照旧”方法,这些方法限制了真正的转型行动。作为该项目的一部分,与公民领袖和利益相关者举行了碳中和布里斯托尔2050圆桌会议。讨论的重点是确定布里斯托尔的碳中和目标、“范围”和边界,探索布里斯托尔成为碳中和城市领导者的机会,如何建立参与碳中和的政治、商业和公民空间,以及布里斯托尔绿色资本伙伴关系(BGCP)的作用,这是一个由800多家组织组成的跨部门网络,致力于可持续城市的建设,作为变革的推动者和推动者。研究结果表明,致力于城市中相互关联的环境、社会和福祉以及经济问题(如碳中和和空气污染)的组织需要进行沟通和合作。合作伙伴关系对于提高城市范围内碳和空气质量管理决策的参与度,以及制定认识到共同利益和权衡的综合城市可持续管理战略至关重要。一套指导方针强调,需要为人们和组织创造政治空间,让他们讨论碳排放和空气污染,从而制定城市规划。
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