23 results on '"PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE"'
Search Results
2. Multi-criteria Analysis of Indicators of the Public Transport Infrastructure
- Author
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Rasa Ušpalytė-Vitkūnienė, Edita Šarkienė, and Daiva Žilionienė
- Subjects
public transport infrastructure ,priority ,bus stops lighting ,satisfaction ,multi-criteria analysis ,Transportation engineering ,TA1001-1280 - Abstract
Public transport is a key element of sustainable transport in medium and large cities. Therefore, it is important that city residents want to use it. This paper aims to determine the criteria of the public transport infrastructure which have the most influence on passenger satisfaction with the public transport system. The criteria of public transport infrastructure of stops, vehicles, and route network were analysed. The primary attention was focused on rating these criteria from the most to the least important one. The analysis of scientific papers, specialized literature, Europe Union regulations, Lithuanian legislation, and recommendations were used to explore the necessary criteria that have a significant effect on the popularity of public transport, its functionality and gives a reference on how to raise the willingness of the citizens to use public transport. The experts (14 experts were involved) and social surveys (440 respondents were involved) were used to identify the evaluation criteria of public transport infrastructure and to investigate the state of these criteria. These criteria were grouped into three larger groups according to their nature (public transport infrastructure of stops, vehicles and route network) and were rated and prioritized by the multi-criteria analysis. The results reflect the priorities of criteria parameters of public transport infrastructure. The results show that when investing in public transport infrastructure, the main priority should be attributed to the infrastructure elements, such as public transport priority in the streets, then shelters, lighting, cleanness of bus stops and vehicles, which are physically appreciable. These parameters have the most significant impact on improving the level of service of public transport infrastructure in urban areas.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Solución radiante para el acondicionamiento térmico de estancias de corta duración
- Author
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Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Ingeniería Energética, Universidad de Sevilla. TEP143: Termotecnia, Montero Gutiérrez, Paz, Cerezo Narváez, Alberto, Otero-Mateo, Manuel, Pastor-Fernández, Andrés, Álvarez Domínguez, Servando, Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Ingeniería Energética, Universidad de Sevilla. TEP143: Termotecnia, Montero Gutiérrez, Paz, Cerezo Narváez, Alberto, Otero-Mateo, Manuel, Pastor-Fernández, Andrés, and Álvarez Domínguez, Servando
- Abstract
El espacio urbano es un lugar hostil para los ciudadanos de grandes urbes del sur de Europa. Asimismo, el uso de transporte público se ve reducido en temporada estival por efectos de la isla de calor. Estas circunstancias propician que los peatones no usen las áreas urbanas para ocio. Por este motivo, la creación de refugios climáticos es fundamental para mejorar el confort térmico de sus ocupantes. Este estudio propone el diseño de una parada de autobús autosuficiente, a instalar en la ciudad de Sevilla, que proteja a sus habitantes del clima. Su autosuficiencia es posible mediante la integración de la tecnología Falling-Film e incorporación de módulos radiantes de refrigeración. A partir del prototipado de una marquesina, se evalúa su comportamiento en el seno de una cámara climática, totalmente sensorizada, con el propósito de estudiar la eficiencia de los sistemas. De esta forma, los resultados obtenidos en el experimento se centran en el análisis de flujos de calor convectivo y radiante en diferentes condiciones de funcionamiento, garantizando que el 60% del flujo de calor total se debe a la radiación. Igualmente, imágenes termográficas demuestran el correcto funcionamiento de la estancia, que alcanza condiciones de confort en 20 minutos., Urban space is a hostile place for people in large cities in southern Europe. Moreover, the use of public transport is reduced during the summer season because of the heat island. These circumstances mean that citizens do not use urban areas for leisure. For this reason, the creation of climatic shelters is essential to improve the thermal comfort of urban occupants. This study proposes the design of an energetically self-sufficient bus stop, to be installed in the city of Seville, to protect its users from the climate. Its energy independence can be achieved through the integration of Falling-Film technology and the addition of radiant cooling modules. Based on the prototyping of a bus shelter, its behaviour is evaluated in a climatic chamber, fully sensorized, with the purpose of studying the efficiency of the systems included. In this way, the results obtained in the experiment focus on the analysis of convective and radiant heat flows under different operating conditions, ensuring that 60% of the total heat flow is due to radiation. Furthermore, thermographic images prove the correct operation of the facility, which reaches comfort conditions in 20 minutes.
- Published
- 2023
4. The Transport Infrastructure of Kharkiv (Analysis of Status and the Main Tendencies)
- Author
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Volikov Volodymyr V. and Vdovychenko Volodymyr О.
- Subjects
street-road network ,transport system ,public transport infrastructure ,land transport modes ,city passenger transport system ,city public passenger transport ,Sky Way technology ,Business ,HF5001-6182 - Abstract
The article is aimed at analyzing the current status of Kharkiv public transport infrastructure and identifying the main tendencies of its development. The current status of the city public passenger transport in Kharkov was analyzed. It is substantiated, that each of kinds of public transport, though having its own infrastructure and features, should function together with the others as a uniform system with its characteristic attributes. Attention is focused on the topicality of introduction of modern innovative technologies, in particular intelligent control systems, in work of all modes of transport. It has been specified that the current unified transport system of Kharkiv consists of two levels (ground – tram, trolleybus, and bus routes, taxis, and underground – metro system) and requires improvement – development of the third level (overground). For partial solution of transport problems, it has been suggested to use the transport-infrastructure complex with the overpass rail-string track structure on the basis of applying of the Sky Way technology.
- Published
- 2017
5. The value of a tram station on local house prices: an hedonic modelling approach.
- Author
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Higgins, David M, Rezaei, Alireza, and Wood, Peter
- Subjects
- *
HOME prices , *HOME sales , *HOUSING market , *PUBLIC transit , *HOUSING - Abstract
There are many drivers of house prices. In urban locations, public infrastructure is considered one of the leading determinants. To explore this relationship, an Hedonic house pricing model was applied to an established Birmingham, the UK working class residential area which is serviced by the Metro Midland tram line. The selected Wednesbury Great Western Street station provides ease of access for the local residents to Birmingham and Wolverhampton City Centres plus there has been recent sale evidence of 100 properties within close proximity to the station. Independent variables consisted of a range of typical physical, locational and neighbourhood attributes for the Hedonic house pricing model input data. Based on the preferred linear Hedonic model, the findings from the recent 100 Wednesbury house sales showed property type, bedrooms, floor area, ambience and distance to the tram station were key explanatory factors in relation to pricing levels. On the evidence provided, property price increased by £16,878 for every km closer to the tram stop. However, when examining properties within defined distance bands with smaller datasets, the location to the tram station was not a significant statistical driver. This suggests that proximity to a public transport access point alongside key housing characteristics should form part of the housing decision making process as they are significant predictors of local house prices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Effects of Job Accessibility Improved by Public Transport System: Natural Experimental Evidence from the Copenhagen Metro.
- Author
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Rotger, Gabriel Pons and Nielsen, Thomas Sick
- Subjects
TRANSPORTATION research ,PUBLIC transit ,COMMUTING ,LABOR market - Abstract
This study examines the effect of accessibility to urban jobs via a public transport system on individual earnings and commuting behaviour. The effect of improved public transport based accessibility on these outcomes is determined by exploiting the exogenous variation in access to a public rail and Metro system resulting from the construction of a new terminal Metro station connecting southern townships to Copenhagen city centre. The results show that public transport based job accessibility has a positive and permanent effect on individual earnings. The increase in earnings is associated with a change in commuting patterns as the improved access to public transport facilitates a shift from employment within the township to better paid jobs in the city centre, as well as in other suburbs of the Copenhagen Metropolitan area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
7. Mobile Cooling : Assessment of Challenges and Options
- Author
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Ayres, Michael, Stankevich, Natalya, and Diehl, Adam
- Subjects
THERMAL STORAGE ,CONTAINER REFRIGERATION ,CLIMATE IMPACT ,REFRIGERATION ,FOOD EXPORT ,AIR CONDITIONING ,TRANSPORT LOGISTICS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,VEHICLE AIR CONDITIONING ,EMISSIONS ,REFRIGERATED TRANSPORT ,CLIMATE RESILIENCE - Abstract
This paper provides background on the issue of cooling in land transportation applications including road, rail and refrigerated container shipping. The paper analyzes the impacts of mobile cooling on energy demand, carbon emissions, economic and development issues. It also considers how mobile cooling demand will grow over time under constrained and un-constrained conditions. Additionally, the paper aims to outline technologies that could reduce the impact of mobile cooling provision and the policies that are in place to encourage take-up and efficiency. Lastly, the paper highlights the remaining policy gaps and recommendations for policy action to advance mobile cooling access and reduce its impact on the environment.
- Published
- 2020
8. Vibrant or Dull Urban Spaces: Are City of Tshwane 'A Re Yeng' and 'Gautrain' Connector Points Places of Social and Economic Interaction?
- Author
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Ndwandwe, Bongumusa and Gumbo, Trynos
- Subjects
Activity Nodes ,Place Making ,Business Operations ,Vibrant Communities ,Public Transport Infrastructure - Abstract
Public transport infrastructure investments have been widely advocated for as catalysts for economic growth and development. They have also been regarded as pivots of functionality of economic nodes and communities. Thus, considerations of innovative strategies in investing in public transport infrastructure as contributors of socio-economic transformation through facilitating growth of business operations and creation of small-scale entrepreneurship has gained momentum. The common envisaged outcome of such innovative approaches is creation of vibrant urban centers and economic spaces characterized by a variety of social and economic activities. This paper investigated the impact of implementation of innovative urban public transport systems on business operations and formation of new small-scale businesses within the City of Tshwane. The study adopted mixed research approaches where qualitative and quantitative data were gathered concurrently. Field observations, key informant interviews, questionnaire administration were used for data collection. Subsequently, content data analysis was applied through the exploration of findings under various relevant themes of public transport infrastructure and business operations. Findings reveal limited improvement on business operations or formations, especially integration of previously disadvantaged communities and informal traders to the local economy. Even for few opportunities created, limited entrepreneurial skills, knowledge and expertise amongst people previously systematically excluded restrained them from taking advantage of such opportunities. Skewed focus on public transport infrastructure roll-out coupled with limited practical focus on socio-economic benefits as trickle-down effects was observed as another obstacle hindering creation of vibrant socio-economic spaces through public transport infrastructure investments. This work recommends the creation of activity nodes for social and economic interactions at connector points to the benefit of local economy and residents. To complement such, human capacity development and entrepreneurial skills development amongst the previously disadvantaged group is advocated for in to attain socio-economic transformation., SHAPING URBAN CHANGE – Livable City Regions for the 21st Century. Proceedings of REAL CORP 2020, 25th International Conference on Urban Development and Regional Planning in the Information Society, 987-997
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Multi-criteria Analysis of Indicators of the Public Transport Infrastructure
- Author
-
Edita Šarkienė, Daiva Žilionienė, and Rasa Ušpalytė-Vitkūnienė
- Subjects
Ocean Engineering ,Legislation ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Transport engineering ,public transport infrastructure ,priority ,Multi criteria ,multi-criteria analysis ,0502 economics and business ,Engineering (miscellaneous) ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Civil and Structural Engineering ,050210 logistics & transportation ,business.industry ,Level of service ,05 social sciences ,satisfaction ,lcsh:TA1001-1280 ,Popularity ,bus stops lighting ,Sustainable transport ,Public transport ,Key (cryptography) ,lcsh:Transportation engineering ,Element (criminal law) ,business - Abstract
Public transport is a key element of sustainable transport in medium and large cities. Therefore, it is important that city residents want to use it. This paper aims to determine the criteria of the public transport infrastructure which have the most influence on passenger satisfaction with the public transport system. The criteria of public transport infrastructure of stops, vehicles, and route network were analysed. The primary attention was focused on rating these criteria from the most to the least important one. The analysis of scientific papers, specialized literature, Europe Union regulations, Lithuanian legislation, and recommendations were used to explore the necessary criteria that have a significant effect on the popularity of public transport, its functionality and gives a reference on how to raise the willingness of the citizens to use public transport. The experts (14 experts were involved) and social surveys (440 respondents were involved) were used to identify the evaluation criteria of public transport infrastructure and to investigate the state of these criteria. These criteria were grouped into three larger groups according to their nature (public transport infrastructure of stops, vehicles and route network) and were rated and prioritized by the multi-criteria analysis. The results reflect the priorities of criteria parameters of public transport infrastructure. The results show that when investing in public transport infrastructure, the main priority should be attributed to the infrastructure elements, such as public transport priority in the streets, then shelters, lighting, cleanness of bus stops and vehicles, which are physically appreciable. These parameters have the most significant impact on improving the level of service of public transport infrastructure in urban areas.
- Published
- 2020
10. Transportation infrastructure impacts on firm location: the effect of a new metro line in the suburbs of Madrid
- Author
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Mejia-Dorantes, Lucia, Paez, Antonio, and Vassallo, Jose Manuel
- Subjects
- *
TRANSPORTATION research , *TRANSPORTATION fares , *TRANSPORTATION planning , *METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Abstract: Firm location patterns emerge as a consequence of multiple factors, including firm considerations, labor force availability, market opportunities, and transportation costs. Many of these factors are influenced by changes in accessibility wrought by new transportation infrastructure. In this paper we use spatial statistical techniques and a micro-level data base to evaluate the effects of Madrid’s metro line 12 (known as Metrosur) expansion on business location patterns. The case study is the municipality of Alcorcon, which is served by the new metro line since 2003. Specifically, we explore the location patterns by different industry sectors, to evaluate if the new metro line has encouraged the emergence of a “Metrosur spatial economy”. Our results indicate that the pattern of economic activity location is related to urban accessibility and that agglomeration, through economies of scale, also plays an important role. The results presented in this paper provide evidence useful to inform efficient transportation, urban, and regional economic planning. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Understanding bus rapid transit route ridership drivers: An empirical study of Australian BRT systems
- Author
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Currie, Graham and Delbosc, Alexa
- Subjects
- *
BUS rapid transit , *BUS ridership , *EMPIRICAL research , *TRANSPORTATION , *REGRESSION analysis , *MATHEMATICAL models , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *CUSTOMER services - Abstract
Abstract: Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) systems are an increasingly popular public transport option internationally. They provide rail-like quality for bus services for a fraction of the cost of fixed rail. Many claims of high and increasing ridership have resulted from BRT system development; however, it is unclear exactly which aspects of BRT system design drive this. This paper explores whether BRT design features, among other influences, significantly increase ridership above and beyond the impact of service levels. It does so using a series of regression models undertaken on 77 BRT and non-BRT bus routes in Australia which is known for its diversity in BRT route design. Explanatory variables used included service level, frequency, speed, stop spacing, share of segregated right of way, vehicle accessibility, employment and residential density, car ownership levels and BRT infrastructure quality. Five models explored the role of these variables. Two models found that service level dominates predictions of boardings per route km although they suffer from endogeneity. Further models control for this influence by modelling boardings per vehicle km. Overall results suggest that some BRT infrastructure treatments such as right of way have a significant impact on ridership but the influence of infrastructure is within the context of high service levels. The role of accessible vehicles has also been highlighted in this research, although more research is needed to clarify this influence. The paper concludes with a discussion of the various influences on ridership and recommendations for existing policy and future research. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Effect of Metro Expansions on Air Pollution in Delhi
- Author
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Goel, Deepti and Gupta, Sonam
- Subjects
PASSENGERS ,RAIL TRAVEL ,URBAN RAIL ,TAX ,INFRASTRUCTURE ,Miscellaneous [T28] ,RAIL TRANSIT ,POLLUTION CONTROL ,DEMAND FOR TRANSPORTATION ,CAR FUEL ,TRANSPORTATION POLICIES ,CONGESTION ,ROAD ,TRIPS ,DRIVERS ,RAIL NETWORK ,ROUTES ,TRIP ,India [L13] ,CARS ,ELASTICITIES ,EMISSIONS ,TAXIS ,VEHICLE ,TRANSPORT ECONOMICS ,DIESEL ,WATER POLLUTION ,METRO RAIL CORPORATION ,AVERAGE TRIP DISTANCE ,CAR ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,HEAVY GOODS VEHICLES ,TOLL ,VEHICLE REGISTRATIONS ,EMISSIONS ANALYSIS ,COMMUTERS ,AIR POLLUTANTS ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,RIDERSHIP ,POLLUTANT EMISSIONS ,PASSENGER TRAVEL ,RAIL SYSTEMS ,TRAFFIC OPERATIONS ,POLLUTION ,DRIVING RESTRICTIONS ,FARES ,EMISSION FACTORS ,BUSES ,COSTS PER PASSENGER MILE ,BUS SERVICES ,TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,SAFETY OF PASSENGERS ,INTERSECTIONS ,RAIL ,MODE OF TRAVEL ,ELASTICITY ,MOTOR VEHICLES ,CAPITAL INTENSIVE PROJECTS ,MODERN TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,MASS RAPID TRANSIT ,TRUE ,PRIVATE TRAFFIC ,TRAVEL MODE ,POPULATION DENSITIES ,EMISSION STANDARDS ,EMISSIONS STANDARDS ,FREIGHT TRAFFIC ,NOISE POLLUTION ,RAPID TRANSIT ,RAIL PROJECT ,METRO RAIL ,HIGHWAYS ,RAIL TRANSIT CRITICISM ,COSTS ,ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS ,TRAVEL BEHAVIOUR ,RAPID RAIL ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,RAIL LINES ,DEMAND FOR TRAVEL ,TRANSIT ,FUEL ,ACCESSIBILITY ,TRANSPORT POLICY INSTITUTE ,NOISE ,ACCIDENTS ,BUS OPERATORS ,CARBON CREDITS ,TRIP DISTANCE ,MODERN TRANSPORT ,AIR QUALITY STANDARDS ,ROUTE ,VEHICLE- KILOMETERS ,TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,ROADS ,GOODS VEHICLES ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,TREND ,TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,Science and Technology [T27] ,AIR ,SUBURBS ,POLICIES ,DRIVING ,TRANSPORT RESEARCH ,AIR POLLUTION ,TRAVEL ,SAFETY ,JOURNEY ,VEHICLES ,AVERAGE VEHICLE OCCUPANCY ,AMBIENT AIR POLLUTION ,SUBWAY ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,TRANSIT SYSTEM ,TRAVEL DEMAND ,ROAD CONGESTION ,RAIL TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,ROAD EMISSIONS ,BUS TRANSPORTATION ,TRAFFIC ,TRANSPORT INVESTMENT ,MEANS OF TRANSPORT ,VEHICLE OCCUPANCY ,BUS ,FREIGHT ,RIDERSHIP DATA ,ROLLING STOCK ,TRAVEL MODES ,RAIL PROJECTS ,BUS TRANSIT ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,TRUCKS ,URBAN BUS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ,CONGESTION PRICING ,CARBON MONOXIDE ,CONGESTION ON ROADS ,ECONOMIES OF SCALE ,TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORTATION ,TRAVEL ACTIVITY ,Commerce, communications, transport ,POPULATION DENSITY ,TRANSPORT POLICY ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,URBAN RAIL TRANSIT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,URBAN RAIL TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,COST- BENEFIT ANALYSIS ,EMISSION ,RAIL TRANSIT SYSTEM ,ROAD TRANSPORT - Abstract
The Delhi Metro (DM) is a mass rapid transit system serving the National Capital Region of India. It is also the world’s first rail project to earn carbon credits under the Clean Development Mechanism of the United Nations for reductions in CO2 emissions. Did the DM also lead to localized reduction in three transportation source pollutants? Looking at the period 2004–2006, one of the larger rail extensions of the DM led to a 34 percent reduction in localized CO at a major traffic intersection in the city. Results for NO2 are also suggestive of a decline, while those for PM25 are inconclusive due to missing data. These impacts of pollutant reductions are for the short run. A complete accounting of all long run costs and benefits should be done before building capital intensive metro rail projects.
- Published
- 2015
13. Estimating the Size of External Effects of Energy Subsidies in Transport and Agriculture
- Author
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Commander, Simon, Nikoloski, Zlatko, and Vagliasindi, Maria
- Subjects
PUBLIC TRANSIT ,INFRASTRUCTURE ,FUEL SUBSIDIES ,CONGESTION ,LORRIES ,RAILWAYS ,TRIPS ,ROAD ,POLLUTION COSTS ,SPEEDS ,EXTERNALITIES ,CARS ,ELASTICITIES ,MODAL CHOICE ,TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,CONGESTION COST ,COST OF TRANSPORT ,EMISSIONS ,INVESTMENTS ,TRANSPORT ECONOMICS ,ELASTICITIES OF ROAD TRAFFIC ,VEHICLE EMISSIONS ,MOTOR VEHICLE OWNERSHIP ,RAILWAY ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,FUEL-EFFICIENT VEHICLES ,FOSSIL FUELS ,TOLL ,TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS ,TYPE OF TRANSPORT ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,SUBSIDIES ,LAND USE ACCESSIBILITY ,FUEL PRICE INCREASES ,LONG-DISTANCE TRAVEL ,INJURY ,FUEL TAX ,PRICE SENSITIVITIES ,EMISSION FACTORS ,ROAD DEATHS ,FUEL CONSUMPTION ,TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,TRUCK USE ,RAIL ,FUEL OIL ,ELASTICITY ,MOTOR VEHICLES ,URBAN MOBILITY ,CAR OCCUPANCY ,VEHICLE FUEL ECONOMY ,MARGINAL EXTERNAL COSTS ,VEHICLE AIR POLLUTION ,VEHICLE USE ,COST OF CONGESTION ,PRICE CHANGES ,PRICE ELASTICITIES ,AUTOMOBILE ,COSTS ,VEHICLE OWNERSHIP ,CONGESTION CHARGING ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,PRICE ELASTICITY ,COSTS OF TRANSPORT ,FUEL ECONOMY ,MODES OF TRANSPORT ,ACCIDENTS ,NOISE ,TAX SUBSIDIES ,VEHICLE COST ,SIGNALS ,TRAVEL COSTS ,TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,AIR ,TRANSPORT SERVICE ,ELASTICITIES OF VEHICLE TRAVEL ,POLICIES ,TRADING PATTERNS ,MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT ,AIR POLLUTION ,JOURNEY ,SAFETY ,VEHICLE TRAVEL ELASTICITY ,CRASHES ,ROAD ACCIDENTS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,FUEL COST ,TRANSPORT PRICING ,FUELS ,TRAVEL DEMAND ,INLAND TRANSPORT ,MOTOR VEHICLE AIR POLLUTION ,ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS ,VEHICLE MILES ,FREIGHT ,LONG-RUN ELASTICITIES ,LONG-DISTANCE ,TRUCKS ,VEHICLE FUEL ,TRANSPORT ,HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION ,TRANSPORTATION ,FUEL TAXES ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,GASOLINE CONSUMPTION ,MODAL CHOICES ,GAS CONSUMPTION ,ROAD TRANSPORT ,FREIGHT TRANSPORT ,EXCESS FUEL CONSUMPTION ,FUEL COSTS ,PASSENGERS ,DRAINAGE ,TAX ,GASOLINE TAXES ,TRIP ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT MODES ,LAND USE ,POPULATION GROWTH ,VEHICLE FLEET ,UNDERGROUND ,VEHICLE ,DIESEL ,TRANSPORT DATA ,TRANSPORT MODES ,CAR ,DIESEL FUEL ,TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH ,COST OF TRAVEL ,VEHICLE FUEL EFFICIENCY ,PETROLEUM GAS ,VEHICLE CLASS ,WALKING ,VEHICLE REGISTRATIONS ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,VEHICLE TYPES ,TRANSIT BENEFITS ,FUEL EFFICIENCY ,COSTS OF CONGESTION ,EFFICIENT VEHICLES ,PRICE SENSITIVITY ,POLLUTANT EMISSIONS ,VEHICLE CLASSES ,POLLUTION ,ROAD SAFETY ,ODOMETER ,TRAVEL SURVEY ,BUSES ,AIR POLLUTION DEATHS ,PASSENGERS AS WELL ,HIGH ENERGY ,TRANSPORT POLICIES ,CONGESTION COSTS ,TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT ,COSTS OF FUEL ,URBAN TRIPS ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,POPULATION DENSITIES ,MOBILITY ,FUEL PRICE ,PEDESTRIANS ,MOTOR VEHICLE ,FUEL PRICE INCREASE ,TRANSPORT NETWORK ,PRICE CHANGE ,ELASTICITY OF VEHICLE TRAVEL ,VEHICLE KILOMETERS ,TRAFFIC VOLUME ,TRANSIT ,FUEL ,ACCESSIBILITY ,CARBON DIOXIDE ,FUEL PRICES ,ROAD SECTOR ,TRAVEL TIME ,DRIVING ,HIGHWAY ,FUEL PRICE ELASTICITIES ,TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGIES ,URBAN BUSES ,ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION ,FATAL INJURIES ,EXHAUST EMISSIONS ,TRAVEL ,FUEL USE ,VEHICLES ,VEHICLE TRAVEL ,PASSENGER TRANSPORT ,TAXES ,PRICE OF FUEL ,LONG RUN ELASTICITY ,TRANSPORT DEMAND ,GASOLINE ,TRANSPORT SERVICES ,TRAFFIC ,ROAD INJURIES ,ROAD TRAFFIC ,GASOLINE PRICE ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORT ACTIVITY ,VEHICLE USAGE ,MODE OF TRANSPORT ,SUBSIDY ,GAS EMISSIONS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,CAR OWNERSHIP ,EMISSION ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT NETWORK ,VEHICLE EFFICIENCY - Abstract
It is widely accepted that the costs of underpricing energy are large, whether in advanced or developing countries. This paper explores how large these costs can be by focussing on the size of the external effects that energy subsidies in particular generate in two important sectors—transport and agriculture—in two countries in the Middle East and North Africa, the Arab Republic of Egypt (transport) and the Republic of Yemen (agriculture). The focus is mainly on the costs associated with congestion and pollution, as well as the impact of underpriced energy for depletion of scarce water resources, including through crop selection. Quantifying the size of external effects in developing countries has received relatively little analytical attention, although there is a significant body of literature for developed countries. By building on earlier research, as well as employing the United Nations ForFITS model, the paper provides indicative estimates of the external costs of energy subsidies, as manifested in congestion and pollution. The estimates using simulations indicate that these costs could be materially reduced by elimination or reduction of energy subsidies. The paper also describes the impact of energy subsidies on water consumption in a region where water resources are particularly limited. The findings provide further evidence of the adverse and significant consequences of subsidizing energy.
- Published
- 2015
14. Effects of Job Accessibility Improved by Public Transport System: Natural Experimental Evidence from the Copenhagen Metro
- Author
-
Pons Rotger, Gabriel Angel and Nielsen, Thomas Alexander Sick
- Subjects
Commuting behaviour ,Earnings ,Public transport infrastructure ,Differencein-differences ,Job accessibility ,SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities - Abstract
This study examines the effect of accessibility to urban jobs via a public transport system on individual earnings and commuting behaviour. The effect of improved public transport based accessibility on these outcomes is determined by exploiting the exogenous variation in access to a public rail and Metro system resulting from the construction of a new terminal Metro station connecting southern townships to Copenhagen city centre. The results show that public transport based job accessibility has a positive and permanent effect on individual earnings. The increase in earnings is associated with a change in commuting patterns as the improved access to public transport facilitates a shift from employment within the township to better paid jobs in the city centre, as well as in other suburbs of the Copenhagen Metropolitan area
- Published
- 2015
15. Improving Energy Efficiency in Constanta, Romania
- Author
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Mot, Manuela, Bose, Ranjan, Burduja, Sebastian, and Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel
- Subjects
AIRPORT ,TAX EXEMPTIONS ,TRAM ,THERMAL ENERGY ,WIND ENERGY ,SOLAR ENERGY ,TRAFFIC LIGHTS ,ROAD ,POWER SOURCES ,ROUTES ,WASTE GENERATION ,CARS ,SUNSHINE ,ELECTRICITY PRICES ,ENERGY PRICE ,RENEWABLE ENERGY ,INCOME ,PEDESTRIAN NETWORK ,AFFORDABLE HOUSING ,STREET LIGHTING ,LOCAL PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,PRODUCTION OF ENERGY ,CITY BUS ,CLIMATIC CONDITIONS ,OIL EQUIVALENT ,RAILWAY ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,HEAT PRODUCTION ,TURBINES ,HYDROCARBONS ,ENERGY TRANSMISSION ,COMMUTERS ,PIPELINE ,CAR USE ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,HYDROPOWER ,WOOD PROCESSING ,MARITIME TRANSPORT ,PETROLEUM ,PRIMARY ENERGY ,VOLTAGE ,WIND PARK ,ENERGY POLICIES ,ELECTRICAL POWER SECTOR ,FUEL CONSUMPTION ,OIL INDUSTRY ,ELECTRICAL POWER ,BIKE LANES ,PRIVATE TRANSPORT ,ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES ,THERMAL POWER ,ENERGY COST SAVINGS ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS ,MERCURY ,SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ,GREENHOUSE ,TRAVEL TIMES ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,NATIONAL GRID ,BIOMASS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT OPERATORS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES ,ENERGY INTENSITY ,ROADS ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,TEMPERATURE ,DESERTIFICATION ,ELECTRICITY SECTOR ,PEDESTRIAN ,AIR ,WIND FACILITIES ,IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,OIL REFINERY ,FOREST ,RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS ,PUBLIC VEHICLES ,POLICE ,TRAFFIC FLOW ,REFINED PETROLEUM PRODUCTS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT ,RESIDENTIAL BUILDING ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,POWER ,RETROFITTING ,SOLAR PANELS ,TRANSMISSION LINES ,ELECTRICITY COMPANY ,ENERGY EXPENDITURES ,WIND FARM ,EMISSIONS OF GREENHOUSES ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEMS ,BUS FLEET ,ONSHORE WIND ,TRUCKS ,HOT WATER ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ,CLEANER PRODUCTION ,ENERGY EXPENDITURE ,HEAVY TRAFFIC ,SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT ,TRANSPORTATION ,CLIMATE ,INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT ,POPULATION DENSITY ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ,GHG ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY INVESTMENTS ,REDUCING ENERGY USE ,INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS ,FUEL COSTS ,DISTRICT HEATING NETWORKS ,TAX ,PROPERTY OWNERS ,GASES ,RENEWABLE ENERGY PRODUCERS ,RENEWABLE FUELS ,PRICE OF ELECTRICITY ,DRIVERS ,TRIP ,OIL COMPANY ,PUBLIC PARTNERSHIPS ,POLLUTION PREVENTION ,DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS ,URBAN SPRAWL ,OIL ,CAR ,ENERGY SAVINGS ,CITY STREETS ,ENERGY PRODUCER ,STREETS ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY ,BIOGAS ,COLD WINTERS ,POWER SUPPLY ,WALKING ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,SOLID WASTE ,LANDFILL ,CALCULATION ,POLLUTION ,PEDESTRIAN AREAS ,PRIMARY SOURCES ,NUCLEAR PLANT ,TROLLEYBUSES ,BUSES ,ENERGY DEMAND ,ENERGY BALANCE ,HIGH ENERGY ,ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION ,SODIUM ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,PEDESTRIANS ,SAND ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,SOLAR ENERGY FACILITIES ,GENERATION ,NUCLEAR ELECTRIC POWER PLANT ,TRAFFIC RESTRAINT ,DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM ,ENERGY PRODUCTION ,GREENHOUSE EMISSIONS ,TRANSIT ,MINERAL RESOURCES ,FUEL ,POWER SECTOR ,ELECTRICITY ,COAL ,BUS LANES ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,AGENDA 21 ,PRIMARY ENERGY SAVINGS ,POWER PRODUCTION ,WIND-ENERGY ,ENERGY CONSERVATION ,AIR CONDITIONING ,DRIVING ,SEWAGE TREATMENT ,HIGHWAY ,NUCLEAR ELECTRIC POWER ,NUCLEAR POWER ,FLOOR AREA ,URBAN CENTERS ,VEHICLES ,ENERGY USE ,THERMAL POWER PLANTS ,SUPPLY OF ELECTRICITY ,HAZARDOUS WASTE ,DISTRICT HEATING ,CLEAN ENERGY ,RENEWABLE SOURCES ,HEAT ,SUSTAINABLE ENERGY ,ELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTION ,NATURAL GAS ,BUS ,UTILITIES ,POWER SECTORS ,NUCLEAR POWER PLANT ,ROLLING STOCK ,FORESTRY ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,ENERGY COSTS ,MEMBER STATES ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,AVAILABILITY ,RENEWABLE ENERGY MARKET ,BIO-FUELS ,RECYCLABLE WASTE ,WIND ,COMMERCIAL TRANSPORT ,REDUCING ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,ENERGY SOURCES ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEM ,ENERGY AUDITS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT NETWORK - Abstract
The Tool for Rapid Assessment of City Energy (TRACE) is used for conducting rapid assessments of energy use in cities. It helps prioritize sectors with significant energy savings potential, and identifies appropriate energy efficiency interventions across six sectors-transport, municipal buildings, water and waste water, public lighting, solid waste, and power and heat. It is a simple, low-cost, user-friendly, and practical tool that can be applied in any socioeconomic setting. This report is based on the implementation of the TRACE tool in Constanta in July 2013 and it outlines ideas on what the city could further do to improve its energy efficiency performance. It details the analysis carried out and the recommendations derived as a result, for district heating maintenance and upgrade, non-motorized transport, public transport development, parking restraint measures, municipal building benchmarking program, municipal buildings audit and retrofit, street lighting timing program, energy efficiency action plan and strategy, and awareness raising campaigns.
- Published
- 2013
16. Strategic IDPs Assessement
- Author
-
World Bank
- Subjects
URBAN SERVICES ,PASSENGERS ,NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT IMPROVEMENTS ,CITIES ,WASTE ,GREEN AREAS ,ECONOMIC GROWTH ,ALTERNATIVE FUEL ,RURAL DEVELOPMENT ,DESCRIPTION ,ROAD ,BOTTLENECKS ,HOUSING PROJECTS ,EXTERNALITIES ,EMPLOYMENT ,TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ,MOBILITY PROBLEMS ,PUBLIC BUILDINGS ,CRIMES ,RURAL ECONOMY ,PRIVATE VEHICLE ,TOURISM ,UNDERGROUND ,AFFORDABLE HOUSING ,ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE ,MUNICIPALITIES ,URBAN SPRAWL ,MEDIEVAL HISTORY ,TEENAGERS ,TOWNS ,LOCALITIES ,CAR ,CRIMINALITY ,ENABLING ENVIRONMENT ,INHABITANTS ,PEDESTRIAN ZONES ,MOBILITY INITIATIVES ,CULTURAL HERITAGE ,URBAN PLANS ,DISABLED PERSONS ,INTERVENTION ,WALKING ,PRIORITIES ,INTERVENTIONS ,MULTIMODAL TRANSPORT ,SOCIAL INCLUSION ,TRANSPARENCY ,AREA DEVELOPMENT ,CYCLIST ,INTERNATIONAL TOURISTS ,URBAN REGENERATION ,CONSERVATION ,SOCIAL ISSUES ,BASIC ,METROPOLITAN AREAS ,REGIONAL PLANS ,DEVELOPMENT IMPACT ,SCHOOLS ,SUSTAINABILITY ,POLLUTION ,PEDESTRIAN AREAS ,SETTLEMENTS ,RURAL AREAS ,URBAN PLANNING ,PROPERTY RIGHTS ,PRESERVATION ,HISTORIC AREA ,MODERNIZATION ,RESTORATION ,FUEL CONSUMPTION ,INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT ,RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT ,RAIL ,SOCIAL COHESION ,ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF TRANSPORT ,URBAN REDEVELOPMENT ,RING ROAD ,BIKE LANES ,DEVELOPMENT POLICY ,PUBLIC GARDENS ,AUTOMOBILE TRAFFIC ,TRUE ,GREEN BELT ,HISTORIC HERITAGE ,URBAN TRANSPORTATION ,HOSPITALS ,TOURIST AREA ,YOUTH CENTERS ,TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE PROJECTS ,SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ,RAIL PROJECT ,BUILT HERITAGE ,URBAN STREETS ,AUTOMOBILE ,CAR TRAFFIC ,ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ,COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ,SPATIAL PLANNING ,ENDOGENOUS DEVELOPMENT ,TARGETING ,DIVERSITY ,MUSEUMS ,DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS ,TRANSIT ,MEDIUM SIZED CITIES ,ACCESSIBILITY ,URBAN POVERTY ,HISTORIC BUILDINGS ,URBAN DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS ,HISTORIC CENTRE ,CRAFTS ,DEVELOPMENT GOALS ,TOURISTS ,DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY ,TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,ROADS ,DEVELOPMENT PLANNING ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,ARCHITECTURE ,PEDESTRIAN ,URBAN ECONOMY ,VACATIONS ,HIGHWAY ,RENOVATION ,URBAN POLICY ,REGULATORY FRAMEWORK ,URBAN LAND ,NEIGHBORHOOD ,RING ROADS ,URBAN CENTERS ,YOUTH ,INFRASTRUCTURES ,HUMAN CAPITAL ,SAFETY ,CULTURAL CENTERS ,SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT ,CHURCH ,PUBLIC PARTICIPATION ,DEVELOPMENT PLANS ,ART ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,MOTORIZED TRANSPORTATION ,GEOGRAPHY ,SOCIAL EXCLUSION ,LEARNING ,MOBILITY PROJECTS ,HERITAGE BUILDINGS ,LEGISLATION ,CHURCHES ,UTILITIES ,LIMESTONE ,PEDESTRIAN PATHS ,SHELTER ,STRATEGIC PLANNING ,REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT ,RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT ,URBAN ENVIRONMENT ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES ,HOMES ,COASTAL ROAD ,DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES ,URBAN GOVERNANCE ,SMART GROWTH ,ARCHITECTS ,COMMUNES ,DOCUMENTATION ,EXTERIOR WALLS ,SUSTAINABLE MOBILITY ,TOURISM DEVELOPMENT ,ECONOMIES OF SCALE ,PROTECTED AREAS ,TRANSPORTATION ,BUILT ENVIRONMENT ,CAPACITY BUILDING ,PUBLIC WORKS ,URBAN AREAS ,URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE ,DISABILITIES ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,URBAN DEVELOPMENT ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Integrated Development Plans (IDPs) have been introduced in Romania as a prerequisite for accessing EU funds under the Regional Operational Program (ROP). The IDPs designed for growth poles represent a specific category of strategic planning documents as: 1) they need to be considered within the frame of the national policy to whose implementation they contribute; and 2) they represent a first endeavor to think of development across functional areas rather than confined to the administrative borders of the main cities. The objectives of this report are: i) to carry out a strategic evaluation of the seven IDPs and assess how the current plans compare with the diagnostic of the challenges identified in the work on urban development; and ii) to provide clear recommendations for the improvement of existing IDPs which will contribute to the elaboration of the future generation of plans implemented during the next programming period and will help improve the targeting of investments to enhance their economic impact.
- Published
- 2013
17. Improving Energy Efficiency in Timisoara, Romania
- Author
-
Mot, Manuela, Bose, Ranjan, Burduja, Sebastian, and Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel
- Subjects
AIRPORT ,ILLUMINATION ,TAX EXEMPTIONS ,CITIES ,TRAM ,THERMAL ENERGY ,WIND ENERGY ,CROSSING ,SOLAR ENERGY ,TRAFFIC LIGHTS ,ROAD ,POWER SOURCES ,ROUTES ,CARS ,ELECTRICITY PRICES ,ENERGY PRICE ,RENEWABLE ENERGY ,INCOME ,PEDESTRIAN NETWORK ,AGRICULTURAL RESIDUES ,CRUDE OIL ,STREET LIGHTING ,ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE ,ENERGY SECTOR ,PRODUCTION OF ENERGY ,CITY BUS ,CLIMATIC CONDITIONS ,OIL EQUIVALENT ,RAILWAY ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,RENEWABLE ENERGY POTENTIAL ,HEAT PRODUCTION ,ENERGY TRANSMISSION ,COMMUTERS ,PIPELINE ,CAR USE ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,HYDROPOWER ,GEOTHERMAL ENERGY ,BIOMASS SOURCE ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY INTERVENTIONS ,PRIMARY ENERGY ,VOLTAGE ,ENERGY POLICIES ,ELECTRICAL POWER SECTOR ,SOLAR SOURCES ,FUEL CONSUMPTION ,ELECTRICAL POWER ,RING ROAD ,BIKE LANES ,THERMAL POWER ,ENERGY COST SAVINGS ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS ,MERCURY ,SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ,GREENHOUSE ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,GREEN ENERGY ,NATIONAL GRID ,BIOMASS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT OPERATORS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES ,INDUSTRIAL ACTIVITIES ,ENERGY INTENSITY ,CORN COBS ,HOT WATER BOILERS ,ROADS ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,PHOTOVOLTAIC CELLS ,ELECTRICITY SECTOR ,PEDESTRIAN ,AIR ,WIND FACILITIES ,IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,FOREST ,RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS ,PUBLIC VEHICLES ,POLICE ,PRIMARY ELECTRICITY ,TRAFFIC FLOW ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT ,CO2 ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,FUELS ,POWER ,RETROFITTING ,SOLAR PANELS ,PEOPLE WALKING ,COLLECTION SYSTEM ,ENERGY EXPENDITURES ,EMISSIONS OF GREENHOUSES ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEMS ,BUS FLEET ,AUTOMOTIVE SECTOR ,HOUSING ,RATIONAL USE OF ENERGY ,TRUCKS ,HOT WATER ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ,ENERGY BILLS ,ENERGY EXPENDITURE ,HEAVY TRAFFIC ,SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT ,TRANSPORTATION ,CLIMATE ,INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,GHG ,BATTERIES ,GAS CONSUMPTION ,FUEL COSTS ,DISTRICT HEATING NETWORKS ,BIO-GAS ,TAX ,PROPERTY OWNERS ,GASES ,RENEWABLE ENERGY PRODUCERS ,URBAN AREA ,RENEWABLE FUELS ,PRICE OF ELECTRICITY ,DRIVERS ,TRIP ,NATURAL GAS CONSUMPTION ,INTERNATIONAL FLIGHTS ,PUBLIC PARTNERSHIPS ,DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS ,TRANSMISSION SYSTEM ,URBAN SPRAWL ,OIL ,CAR ,ENERGY SAVINGS ,CITY STREETS ,STREETS ,BIOGAS ,COLD WINTERS ,POWER SUPPLY ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,SOLID WASTE ,GARBAGE COLLECTION ,AIR TRAFFIC ,ELDERLY PEOPLE ,LANDFILL ,CALCULATION ,POLLUTION ,PEDESTRIAN AREAS ,PRIMARY SOURCES ,ENERGY REQUIREMENTS ,MUNICIPAL AUTHORITIES ,TROLLEYBUSES ,ENERGY DEMAND ,ENERGY BALANCE ,HIGH ENERGY ,ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION ,CITY AUTHORITIES ,TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT ,SODIUM ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,SOLAR ENERGY FACILITIES ,GENERATION ,TRAFFIC RESTRAINT ,DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM ,ENERGY PRODUCTION ,BIOFUELS ,GREENHOUSE EMISSIONS ,TRANSIT ,FUEL ,POWER SECTOR ,ACCESSIBILITY ,ELECTRICITY ,COAL ,ROUTE ,BUS LANES ,RAILWAY NETWORK ,SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT USERS ,PRIMARY ENERGY SAVINGS ,STEAM BOILERS ,POWER PRODUCTION ,ENERGY CONSERVATION ,AIR CONDITIONING ,DRIVING ,SEWAGE TREATMENT ,ENERGY MARKET ,DISTRIBUTION NETWORK ,FLOOR AREA ,URBAN EXPANSION ,ENERGY USE ,THERMAL POWER PLANTS ,SUPPLY OF ELECTRICITY ,DISTRICT HEATING ,ELECTRICITY COSTS ,CLEAN ENERGY ,RENEWABLE SOURCES ,HEAT ,SUSTAINABLE ENERGY ,ELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTION ,ELECTROCHEMISTRY ,NATURAL GAS ,BUS ,UTILITIES ,ENERGY RESEARCH ,RENEWABLE ENERGIES ,PEDESTRIAN PATHS ,POWER SECTORS ,ROLLING STOCK ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,ENERGY COSTS ,DISTRICT HEATING SECTOR ,MEMBER STATES ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,AVAILABILITY ,BIO-FUELS ,WIND ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY MEASURES ,ENERGY SECTOR MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE ,REDUCING ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,ENERGY SOURCES ,URBAN AREAS ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEM ,ENERGY AUDITS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE - Abstract
The Tool for Rapid Assessment of City Energy (TRACE) is used for conducting rapid assessments of energy use in cities. It helps prioritize sectors with significant energy savings potential, and identifies appropriate energy efficiency interventions across six sectors-transport, municipal buildings, water and waste water, public lighting, solid waste, and power and heat. It is a simple, low-cost, user-friendly, and practical tool that can be applied in any socioeconomic setting. This report is based on the implementation of the TRACE tool in Timisoara in April 2013 and outlines ideas on what the city could further do to improve its energy efficiency performance. It details the analysis carried out and the recommendations derived as a result, for district heating maintenance and upgrade, non-motorized transport, public transport development, parking restraint measures, municipal buildings audit and retrofit, street lighting timing program, and active leakage of water and pressure management.
- Published
- 2013
18. Improving Energy Efficiency in Cluj-Napoca, Romania
- Author
-
Mot, Manuela, Bose, Ranjan, Burduja, Sebastian, and Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel
- Subjects
PUBLIC TRANSIT ,TAX EXEMPTIONS ,CITIES ,POWER CONSUMPTION ,TRAM ,THERMAL ENERGY ,WIND ENERGY ,APPROACH ,SOLAR THERMAL ,SOLAR ENERGY ,TRAFFIC LIGHTS ,POWER SOURCES ,ROUTES ,CARS ,ELECTRICITY PRICES ,ENERGY PRICE ,EMISSIONS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY ,PEDESTRIAN NETWORK ,PRIVATE VEHICLE ,STREET LIGHTING ,ENERGY SECTOR ,PRODUCTION OF ENERGY ,CITY BUS ,CLIMATIC CONDITIONS ,OIL EQUIVALENT ,ENERGY SAVING ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,GAS ,HEAT PRODUCTION ,CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS ,TURBINES ,ENERGY TRANSMISSION ,COMMUTERS ,ENERGY SOURCE ,PIPELINE ,POWER STATIONS ,CAR USE ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,HYDROPOWER ,NATURAL GAS PRICES ,BOILERS ,CITY TRAFFIC ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY INTERVENTIONS ,PRIMARY ENERGY ,VOLTAGE ,BICYCLES ,ENERGY POLICIES ,FUEL CONSUMPTION ,RAIL ,ELECTRICAL POWER ,RING ROAD ,BIKE LANES ,PRIVATE TRANSPORT ,PUBLIC PARKING ,THERMAL POWER ,ENERGY COST SAVINGS ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS ,MERCURY ,GREENHOUSE ,HYDRO-POWER ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,NATIONAL GRID ,BIOMASS ,BUS OPERATORS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT OPERATORS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES ,ENERGY INTENSITY ,CONVENTIONAL ENERGY ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,TEMPERATURE ,STREET TRAFFIC ,FERMENTATION ,PEDESTRIAN ,AIR ,THERMAL PLANT ,WIND FACILITIES ,IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS ,CO ,TRAFFIC FLOW ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,SAFETY ,EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,HEAT TARIFF ,POWER ,RETROFITTING ,SOLAR PANELS ,COGENERATION ,ENERGY COST ,EMISSIONS OF GREENHOUSES ,THERMAL SYSTEM ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEMS ,BUS FLEET ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY PLAN ,TRUCKS ,HOT WATER ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ,ENERGY EXPENDITURE ,HEAVY TRAFFIC ,SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT ,CLIMATE ,INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT ,HEAT PUMPS ,POPULATION DENSITY ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,GHG ,GAS CONSUMPTION ,FUEL COSTS ,DISTRICT HEATING NETWORKS ,TAX ,ENERGY INPUT ,HEAT DEMAND ,GASES ,RENEWABLE ENERGY PRODUCERS ,URBAN AREA ,BURNERS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY PRODUCTION ,RENEWABLE FUELS ,PRICE OF ELECTRICITY ,DRIVERS ,TRIP ,INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ,NATURAL GAS CONSUMPTION ,HIGH FUEL CONSUMPTION ,OIL COMPANY ,PUBLIC PARTNERSHIPS ,UNDERGROUND ,ELECTRICITY TARIFFS ,URBAN SPRAWL ,CENTRAL HEATING ,OIL ,CAR ,ENERGY SAVINGS ,TRANSPORT ALTERNATIVES ,TRANSPORT MODES ,CITY STREETS ,STREETS ,BIOGAS ,COLD WINTERS ,POWER SUPPLY ,WALKING ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,ENERGY SUPPLY ,SOLID WASTE ,GARBAGE COLLECTION ,THERMAL POWER PLANT ,LANDFILL ,MODAL SPLIT ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY STANDARDS ,CALCULATION ,POLLUTION ,PUBLIC UTILITIES ,PRIMARY SOURCES ,DAILY TRIPS ,BUSES ,ENERGY PLANTS ,ENERGY DEMAND ,ROAD NETWORK ,ENERGY BALANCE ,HIGH ENERGY ,ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION ,CITY AUTHORITIES ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY FUNDS ,SODIUM ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,SOLAR ENERGY FACILITIES ,GENERATION ,TRAFFIC RESTRAINT ,TRANSPORT NETWORK ,ENERGY PRODUCTION ,BIOFUELS ,GREENHOUSE EMISSIONS ,ENERGY SUPPLIERS ,FUEL ,POWER SECTOR ,ELECTRICITY ,PHOTOVOLTAIC SYSTEMS ,COAL ,ROUTE ,BUS LANES ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS ,PRIMARY ENERGY SAVINGS ,POWER PRODUCTION ,ENERGY CONSERVATION ,LIGHT TURNS ,AIR CONDITIONING ,DRIVING ,HEAT GENERATION ,SEWAGE TREATMENT ,COOLING ,DISTRIBUTION NETWORK ,FLOOR AREA ,RING ROADS ,URBAN CENTERS ,URBAN EXPANSION ,VEHICLES ,ENERGY USE ,THERMAL POWER PLANTS ,MUNICIPAL SERVICE ,DISTRICT HEATING ,POWER SUPPLY SYSTEM ,CLEAN ENERGY ,HEATING ENERGY ,RENEWABLE SOURCES ,HEAT ,POWER GENERATION ,SUSTAINABLE ENERGY ,ELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTION ,NATURAL GAS ,BUS ,POWER SECTORS ,ROLLING STOCK ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,ENERGY COSTS ,VEHICLE USAGE ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,RAIL CONNECTION ,AVAILABILITY ,HEAT METERS ,BIO-FUELS ,TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM ,WIND ,ENERGY SECTOR MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE ,REDUCING ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,ENERGY SOURCES ,URBAN AREAS ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEM ,ENERGY AUDITS ,GAS PRODUCER ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE - Abstract
The main impetus for this report (and for the reports prepared for the other six growth poles) is a request received from the Ministry of Regional Development and Public Administration. The request came within the context of on-going preparations for the 2014-2020 programming period, with energy efficiency being one the major themes of the Europe 2020 strategy, and a critical priority for all EU member countries. Within Romania, local authorities that will want to access energy efficiency funds under the 2014-2020 Regional Operational Program will need to first prepare energy efficiency strategies. The TRACE tool is specifically targeted at local authorities, and is a good instrument for drafting such strategies after the 1989 Revolution; Romania began its transition from a centralized system to a market-run economy. Today the country is a member of the European Union (EU) and NATO. After more than a decade of economic restructuring and political change, the country has taken significant steps to catch up with the economic performance of more developed EU countries. Although radical reforms brought about significant changes, the standard of living of Romanians is still behind the EU average. Cluj-Napoca (Cluj) is one of cities where such disparities are less pronounced, as the region is more developed and prosperous than most regions in the country. Cluj has developed quite well in the past few years, and it has become one of the most flourishing cities in the country, having a good growing potential. At present, the city is an important economic center, home to several local brands that have become famous nationwide as well as in Europe. Moreover, Cluj is known today as the 'capital' of the IT sector in the country, due to an aggressive expansion of this field in recent years.
- Published
- 2013
19. Improving Energy Efficiency in Iasi, Romania
- Author
-
Mot, Manuela, Bose, Ranjan, Burduja, Sebastian, and Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel
- Subjects
AIRPORT ,TAX EXEMPTIONS ,TRAM ,THERMAL ENERGY ,WIND ENERGY ,SOLAR ENERGY ,TRAFFIC LIGHTS ,ROAD ,TRIPS ,POWER SOURCES ,ROUTES ,CARS ,ELECTRICITY PRICES ,ENERGY PRICE ,RENEWABLE ENERGY ,INCOME ,STREET LIGHTING ,PRODUCTION OF ENERGY ,CITY BUS ,CLIMATIC CONDITIONS ,OIL EQUIVALENT ,ENERGY GENERATION ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,HEAT PRODUCTION ,ENERGY TRANSMISSION ,COMMUTERS ,PIPELINE ,CAR USE ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,HYDROPOWER ,PRIMARY ENERGY ,VOLTAGE ,ENERGY POLICIES ,ELECTRICAL POWER SECTOR ,FUEL CONSUMPTION ,ELECTRICAL POWER ,BIKE LANES ,PET ,THERMAL POWER ,ENERGY COST SAVINGS ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS ,MERCURY ,SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ,GREENHOUSE ,ENERGY INTENSIVE ,ORGANIC WASTE ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,NATIONAL GRID ,BIOMASS ,BUS OPERATORS ,NOISE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT OPERATORS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES ,ENERGY INTENSITY ,ROADS ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,TEMPERATURE ,ELECTRICITY SECTOR ,PEDESTRIAN ,AIR ,WIND FACILITIES ,IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS ,PUBLIC VEHICLES ,CO ,PRIMARY ELECTRICITY ,TRAFFIC FLOW ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,FUELS ,BIOLOGICAL TREATMENT ,POWER ,RETROFITTING ,SOLAR PANELS ,COLLECTION SYSTEM ,ENERGY EXPENDITURES ,EMISSIONS OF GREENHOUSES ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEMS ,BUS FLEET ,TRUCKS ,HOT WATER ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ,ENERGY EXPENDITURE ,HEAVY TRAFFIC ,SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT ,CLIMATE ,INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT ,POPULATION DENSITY ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ,GHG ,INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS ,FUEL COSTS ,DISTRICT HEATING NETWORKS ,TAX ,GASES ,RENEWABLE ENERGY PRODUCERS ,RENEWABLE FUELS ,PRICE OF ELECTRICITY ,DRIVERS ,TRIP ,LANDFILLS ,PUBLIC PARTNERSHIPS ,UNDERGROUND ,VEHICLE ,DIESEL ,DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS ,URBAN SPRAWL ,OIL ,ELECTRICITY BILLS ,CAR ,ENERGY SAVINGS ,TRANSPORT ALTERNATIVES ,LIGHTNING ,CITY STREETS ,STREETS ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY ,BIOGAS ,COLD WINTERS ,POWER SUPPLY ,WALKING ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,SOLID WASTE ,LANDFILL ,CALCULATION ,POLLUTION ,SANITATION ,PEDESTRIAN AREAS ,PRIMARY SOURCES ,BUSES ,ENERGY DEMAND ,ENERGY BALANCE ,HIGH ENERGY ,ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION ,TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT ,SODIUM ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,SOLAR ENERGY FACILITIES ,GENERATION ,TRAFFIC RESTRAINT ,ENERGY AUDIT ,DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM ,ENERGY PRODUCTION ,GREENHOUSE EMISSIONS ,TRANSIT ,FUEL ,POWER SECTOR ,ELECTRICITY ,COAL ,HEAVY VEHICLES ,ROUTE ,BUS LANES ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT USERS ,AGENDA 21 ,PRIMARY ENERGY SAVINGS ,POWER PRODUCTION ,ENERGY CONSERVATION ,AIR CONDITIONING ,DRIVING ,SEWAGE TREATMENT ,NETWORK OF BIKE LANES ,ENERGY MARKET ,DISTRIBUTION NETWORK ,FLOOR AREA ,ENERGY USE ,THERMAL POWER PLANTS ,DISTRICT HEATING ,ROAD LINKS ,CLEAN ENERGY ,RENEWABLE SOURCES ,HEAT ,SUSTAINABLE ENERGY ,ELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTION ,NATURAL GAS ,BUS ,PEDESTRIAN PATHS ,POWER SECTORS ,ROLLING STOCK ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,ENERGY COSTS ,MEMBER STATES ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,AVAILABILITY ,HEAT SUPPLY ,BIO-FUELS ,RECYCLABLE WASTE ,WIND ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY MEASURES ,REDUCING ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,ENERGY SOURCES ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEM ,ENERGY AUDITS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE - Abstract
The Tool for Rapid Assessment of City Energy (TRACE) is used for conducting rapid assessments of energy use in cities. It helps prioritize sectors with significant energy savings potential, and identifies appropriate energy efficiency interventions across six sectors-transport, municipal buildings, water and waste water, public lighting, solid waste, and power and heat. It is a simple, low-cost, user-friendly, and practical tool that can be applied in any socioeconomic setting. This report is based on the implementation of the TRACE tool in Iasi in July 2013 and it outlines ideas on what the city could further do to improve its energy efficiency performance. It details the analysis carried out and the recommendations derived as a result, for energy efficiency action plan and strategy, district heating maintenance and upgrade, non-motorized transport, public transport development, traffic flow optimization, parking restraint measures, municipal building benchmarking program, traffic restraint measures, municipal buildings audit and retrofit, and street lighting timing program.
- Published
- 2013
20. Improving Energy Efficiency in Ploiesti, Romania
- Author
-
Mot, Manuela, Bose, Ranjan, Burduja, Sebastian, and Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel
- Subjects
AIRPORT ,TAX EXEMPTIONS ,PEDESTRIAN INFRASTRUCTURE ,TRAM ,THERMAL ENERGY ,WIND ENERGY ,SOLAR ENERGY ,RAILWAYS ,TRAFFIC LIGHTS ,ROAD ,POWER SOURCES ,TAX EXEMPTION ,ROUTES ,CARS ,ELECTRICITY PRICES ,ENERGY PRICE ,RENEWABLE ENERGY ,PEDESTRIAN NETWORK ,PRIVATE VEHICLE ,STREET LIGHTING ,LOCAL PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,PRODUCTION OF ENERGY ,CITY BUS ,CLIMATIC CONDITIONS ,OIL EQUIVALENT ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,HEAT PRODUCTION ,RED LIGHT ,ENERGY TRANSMISSION ,COMMUTERS ,PIPELINE ,CAR USE ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,HYDROPOWER ,RIDERSHIP ,TRAM LINE ,BOILERS ,PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES ,BICYCLISTS ,PETROLEUM ,PRIMARY ENERGY ,VOLTAGE ,FARES ,ENERGY POLICIES ,OIL INDUSTRY ,ELECTRICAL POWER ,BIKE LANES ,PRIVATE TRANSPORT ,PUBLIC PARKING ,VEHICLE USE ,THERMAL POWER ,ENERGY COST SAVINGS ,FOSSIL FUEL ,DIESEL BUSES ,HEAT UTILITIES ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENTS ,MERCURY ,DIESEL ENGINE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ACCESS ,GREENHOUSE ,WASTEWATER TREATMENT ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,NATIONAL GRID ,ACCIDENTS ,BIOMASS ,NOISE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT OPERATORS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES ,GAS EMISSION ,CONVENTIONAL ENERGY ,OIL PLATFORMS ,PETROCHEMICAL INDUSTRY ,ROADS ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,TRANSPORT ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT AUTHORITY ,PEDESTRIAN ,AIR ,THERMAL PLANT ,WIND FACILITIES ,IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,OIL REFINERY ,ENERGY RESOURCES ,RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS ,TRAFFIC FLOW ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT ,OIL REFINERIES ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,FUELS ,POWER ,RETROFITTING ,TRANSPORT INVESTMENT ,NONMOTORIZED TRANSPORT ,TRANSIT CAPACITY ,EMISSIONS OF GREENHOUSES ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEMS ,BUS FLEET ,TRUCKS ,HOT WATER ,MODE SPLIT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ,ENERGY EXPENDITURE ,HEAVY TRAFFIC ,SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT ,TRANSPORTATION ,CLIMATE ,INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT ,POPULATION DENSITY ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ,GHG ,SOLAR ENERGY RESOURCES ,FUEL COSTS ,TRANSPORT AUTHORITY ,PASSENGERS ,DISTRICT HEATING NETWORKS ,TAX ,ENERGY INPUT ,TRANSPORTATION CORRIDORS ,GASES ,RENEWABLE ENERGY PRODUCERS ,RENEWABLE FUELS ,TRAVEL BEHAVIOR ,PRICE OF ELECTRICITY ,DRIVERS ,TRIP ,TRAFFIC MONITORING ,FOSSIL ,HIGH FUEL CONSUMPTION ,TAXIS ,VEHICLE FLEET ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT MODE ,PUBLIC PARTNERSHIPS ,DIESEL ,ELECTRICITY TARIFFS ,URBAN SPRAWL ,SPEED LIMITS ,OIL ,CAR ,ENERGY SAVINGS ,TRANSPORT ALTERNATIVES ,CITY STREETS ,STREETS ,DIESEL BUS ,PRIVATE CAR OWNERSHIP ,BIOGAS ,PETROLEUM GAS ,BUS STOPS ,COLD WINTERS ,POWER SUPPLY ,WALKING ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,SOLID WASTE ,LANDFILL ,MODAL SPLIT ,CALCULATION ,POLLUTION ,PEDESTRIAN AREAS ,RED LIGHTS ,PRIMARY SOURCES ,DAILY TRIPS ,GOLD ,TROLLEYBUSES ,ALTERNATIVE TRANSPORT ,BUSES ,ENERGY DEMAND ,ENERGY BALANCE ,HIGH ENERGY ,ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION ,TRANSPORT POLICIES ,TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT ,SODIUM ,EMISSION STANDARDS ,PEDESTRIANS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,HEATING SYSTEMS ,SOLAR ENERGY FACILITIES ,GENERATION ,TRAMWAY ,TRAFFIC RESTRAINT ,OIL PRODUCER ,ENERGY AUDIT ,DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM ,TRANSPORT NETWORK ,ENERGY PRODUCTION ,GREENHOUSE EMISSIONS ,TRANSIT ,FUEL ,POWER SECTOR ,ELECTRICITY ,COAL ,BICYCLE USE ,AGENDA 21 ,ALTERNATIVE TRANSPORT MODE ,TRANSPORT CORRIDORS ,PRIMARY ENERGY SAVINGS ,POWER PRODUCTION ,SUBURBS ,ENERGY CONSERVATION ,AIR CONDITIONING ,DRIVING ,DISTRIBUTION NETWORK ,FLOOR AREA ,ENERGY USE ,THERMAL POWER PLANTS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SERVICES ,LIQUEFIED PETROLEUM GAS ,DISTRICT HEATING ,CLEAN FUEL ,CLEAN ENERGY ,RENEWABLE SOURCES ,BUS ROUTES ,TRAFFIC POLICE ,HEAT ,POLLUTION LEVEL ,GASOLINE ,PROMOTING ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,SUSTAINABLE ENERGY ,NATURAL GAS ,LOCAL TRANSPORT ,UTILITIES ,POWER SECTORS ,BIKES ,ROLLING STOCK ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,ENERGY COSTS ,VEHICLE USAGE ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,BIO-FUELS ,OIL PRODUCTION ,WIND ,REDUCING ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,ENERGY SOURCES ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEM ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,BIKE PATH ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT NETWORK - Abstract
The Tool for Rapid Assessment of City Energy (TRACE) is used for conducting rapid assessments of energy use in cities. It helps prioritize sectors with significant energy savings potential, and identifies appropriate energy efficiency interventions across six sectors-transport, municipal buildings, water and waste water, public lighting, solid waste, and power and heat. It is a simple, low-cost, user-friendly, and practical tool that can be applied in any socioeconomic setting. This report is based on the implementation of the TRACE tool in Ploiesti in February 2013, and it outlines ideas on what the city could further do to improve its energy efficiency performance. It details the analysis carried out and the recommendations derived as a result, for energy efficiency action plan, district heating maintenance and upgrade, non-motorized transport, public transport development, parking restraint measures, traffic restraint measures, municipal buildings audit and retrofit, and street lighting timing program.
- Published
- 2013
21. Urban Mass Transport Infrastructure in Medium and Large Cities in Developing Countries
- Author
-
World Bank and Asian Development Bank
- Subjects
PUBLIC TRANSIT ,CYCLISTS ,TRAM ,FUEL SUBSIDIES ,TRAFFIC DEMAND ,CITY TRANSPORT ,COMMUTER RAIL ,CONGESTION ,RAILWAYS ,TROLLEY BUS ,ROAD ,TRANSPORT PLANNING ,TRIPS ,EXTERNALITIES ,MASS TRANSIT SYSTEM ,PEDESTRIAN WALKWAYS ,CARS ,TRANSPORT MANAGEMENT ,CARBON EMISSIONS FROM TRANSPORT ,ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE ,BICYCLE FACILITIES ,CITY BUS ,RAILWAY ,TRANSIT STATIONS ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT ,FOSSIL FUELS ,MASS TRANSIT ,AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS ,ARTERIAL ROADS ,MULTIMODAL TRANSPORT ,CAR USE ,PRIVATE VEHICLES ,INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS ,RIDERSHIP ,DEMAND FOR CAR OWNERSHIP ,LAND USE PATTERNS ,TRANSPORT PROBLEMS ,URBAN TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,FARES ,METROPOLITAN TRANSPORT AUTHORITY ,TRAFFIC GROWTH ,VEHICLE ENGINE ,CARBON EMISSIONS ,TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,URBAN TRANSPORT PLANNING ,RAIL ,TRANSPORT PROJECTS ,ROAD PRICING ,ROAD SPACE ,TRUE ,EMISSION REDUCTIONS ,VEHICLE USE ,URBAN TRANSPORTATION ,URBAN TRANSPORT POLICY ,NOISE POLLUTION ,RAPID TRANSIT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS ,ROAD DESIGN ,SUBURBAN RAIL STATIONS ,VEHICLE OWNERSHIP ,TRAVEL TIMES ,CONGESTION CHARGING ,EFFICIENT TRAVEL ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,FUEL ECONOMY ,NOISE ,ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ,SUBWAY SYSTEM ,METROPOLITAN TRANSPORT ,ROADS ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,DEMAND FOR TRANSPORT SERVICES ,INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION ,PEDESTRIAN ,TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,PUBLIC TRANSIT USE ,AIR ,TRANSPORT EMISSIONS ,TRAVELERS ,TRAFFIC FLOW ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSION ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,JOURNEYS ,SAFETY ,ROAD ACCIDENTS ,TRANSPORTATION OPTIONS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT USE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,FARE STRUCTURE ,ROAD BUILDING ,TRANSPORT INVESTMENT ,LOWER CARBON EMISSIONS ,MODAL SHIFT ,ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS ,ROAD TOLLS ,NONMOTORIZED TRANSPORT ,FREIGHT ,BULLET TRAIN ,TRANSPORTATION ALTERNATIVES ,SIDEWALKS ,CONGESTION PRICING ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ,DEMAND FOR TRANSPORT ,HEAVY TRAFFIC ,TRANSPORT ,TRANSPORTATION ,FUEL TAXES ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,SUBURBAN RAIL SYSTEMS ,ROAD TRANSPORT ,INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS ,RAIL CARS ,PASSENGERS ,TRANSPORT STRATEGY ,TAX ,PERSONAL VEHICLES ,SUBURBAN RAIL ,TRANSPORTATION DEMAND ,LAND TRANSPORT AUTHORITY ,WALKING DISTANCE ,TRIP ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT MODES ,LAND USE ,POPULATION GROWTH ,TAXIS ,RAPID TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,UNDERGROUND ,VEHICLE ,INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT ,AVERAGE TRAFFIC SPEEDS ,CAPITAL INVESTMENTS ,HYBRID VEHICLES ,TRANSPORT FINANCE ,TRANSPORT DATA ,CAR ,TRANSPORT MEASURES ,STREETS ,PERSONAL MOTOR VEHICLES ,BUS STOPS ,PUBLIC TRANSIT NETWORK ,WALKING ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,LIGHT RAIL ,LIGHT RAIL TRANSIT ,CAPITAL INVESTMENT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION NETWORK ,CONGESTION CHARGES ,LAND TRANSPORT ,RAIL INFRASTRUCTURE ,MODAL SPLIT ,TRANSIT CORRIDORS ,POLLUTION ,INTELLIGENT TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,FARE REDUCTIONS ,ROAD SAFETY ,BUSES ,BUS SERVICES ,FUEL TAXATION ,TRAINS ,RAIL SYSTEM ,ROAD NETWORK ,MASS RAPID TRANSIT ,PEDESTRIAN NEEDS ,TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,MOBILITY ,PEDESTRIANS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEMS ,HIGHWAYS ,METRO RAIL ,TRAMWAY ,VEHICLE KILOMETERS ,TRAFFIC VOLUME ,RAIL LINES ,TRANSIT ,TRANSPORT DECISIONS ,FUEL ,ACCESSIBILITY ,VEHICLE FLEETS ,ROUTE ,URBAN ROAD ,TRANSPORTATION TERMINALS ,ROAD SECTOR ,TRANSPORT CORRIDORS ,SUBURBS ,DRIVING ,TRANSPORTATION INVESTMENTS ,PUBLIC TRANSIT SYSTEMS ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SERVICES ,REGIONAL TRANSPORT ,SUBWAY ,GREENHOUSE GASES ,TRANSPORT DEMAND ,TRAFFIC ,DEMAND FOR MOBILITY ,ELECTRIC VEHICLES ,ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS ,ROAD SYSTEMS ,RAIL LINE ,BUS ,ROAD TRAFFIC ,ROLLING STOCK ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT PROVISION ,BUS SERVICE ,RAILWAY STATIONS ,TRANSPORT ACTIVITY ,TRANSPORT FACILITIES ,SMART GROWTH ,TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM ,STREET SPACE ,INFRASTRUCTURE POLICIES ,BICYCLE LANES ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT NETWORKS ,TRANSPORT COMMUNITY ,AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES ,EMISSION ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT NETWORK ,TRANSIT OPTION - Abstract
Developed at the request of the Mexican G20 Presidency for consideration by the Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors at the G20 Leaders' Summit in Mexico, and jointly prepared with the Asian Development Bank, this policy paper positioned green transport in the context of cities development. Urban transport determines the shape of a city and its ecological footprint. Many cities in low and middle income countries are at a crossroads. Policy decisions taken now, while car use is still relatively low and cities retain a relatively transit friendly, compact urban form, will affect how people will live in their cities for many decades into the future. A new paradigm of urban transport can be part of the solution to reversing the deteriorating situation in some cities of developing countries, and supporting others to embark on a sustainable, low carbon, green growth path: developing a city for people rather than cars, and including public and mass transport as a major component of the modal structure. Implementing such a new paradigm can be truly transformational. This joint World Bank and Asian Development Bank paper lays out six aspects, which are most difficult to align, yet, are critical to ensure the sustainability of urban transport systems, visionary leadership, integrated strategy for land use and urban transport, coordination among agencies, domestic capacity, adequate cost recovery, and private participation in the operation and construction of urban transport systems. The paper proposes a set of new initiatives for G20 leaders' consideration, including the development of an umbrella toolkit to guide policy makers in charge of urban planning to make transport decisions best suited to their local contexts.
- Published
- 2012
22. Thailand : Clean Energy for Green Low-Carbon Growth
- Author
-
World Bank Group and Thailand National Economic and Social Development Board
- Subjects
PUBLIC TRANSIT ,RENEWABLE ENERGY DEVELOPMENT ,URBAN RAIL ,APPROACH ,CONGESTION ,ROAD ,TAX CREDITS ,TRANSPORT PLANNING ,TRIPS ,MASS TRANSIT SYSTEM ,AUTOMOBILE FUEL ,OIL SUPPLY ,SULFUR OXIDE ,EMISSIONS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY ,NEGATIVE IMPACTS ,BUS SYSTEM ,ELECTRICITY USAGE ,OIL EQUIVALENT ,NOX ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,FUEL-EFFICIENT VEHICLES ,SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT ,FOSSIL FUELS ,URBAN PASSENGER ,MASS TRANSIT ,LOCAL AIR POLLUTANTS ,TRANSPARENCY ,ELECTRIC CARS ,CAR USE ,SMALL POWER PRODUCERS ,FEEDSTOCK ,SULFUR ,PARTICULATE ,SULFUR DIOXIDE ,ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGES ,RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION ,BUS SECTOR ,FUEL TAX ,GLOBAL WARMING ,PRIMARY ENERGY ,LOW-CARBON ,VEHICLE REGISTRATION FEES ,ENERGY POLICIES ,CARBON EMISSIONS ,ROAD PRICING ,AVERAGE CAR OWNERSHIP ,CARBON FOOTPRINT ,ENVIRONMENTAL ,VEHICLE FUEL ECONOMY ,EMISSION REDUCTIONS ,FOSSIL FUEL ,HISTORICAL EMISSIONS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY APPLICATIONS ,RAPID TRANSIT ,AUTOMOBILE ,CARBON INTENSITY ,GREENHOUSE ,CARBON TECHNOLOGIES ,WEALTH ,TAX RATE ,ENERGY MIX ,ENERGY POLICY ,WASTEWATER TREATMENT ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,LANDFILL GAS ,MARKET PRICES ,FUEL ECONOMY ,BIOMASS ,POWER PRODUCER ,ALTERNATIVE ENERGY DEVELOPMENT ,GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE ,ROADS ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,OIL CONSUMPTION ,AIR ,ENERGY RESOURCES ,FOREST ,TRANSPORT EMISSIONS ,CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS ,DIFFUSION ,CO ,MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT ,POLICE ,EFFICIENCY POTENTIAL ,AIR POLLUTION ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSION ,AIR EMISSION ,EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT ,CO2 ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,TRANSIT SYSTEM ,SMART PLANNING ,RETROFITTING ,SO2 ,SUGARCANE ,NONMOTORIZED TRANSPORT ,ENVIRONMENTAL TAXES ,POLICY INSTRUMENTS ,OILS ,CARBON EMISSION ,RAIL TRANSPORTATION ,EMISSION LEVEL ,AIR QUALITY ,CARBON MONOXIDE ,VEHICLE FUEL ,CORN PRODUCTION ,GASOLINE PRICES ,INSPECTION ,TRANSPORT ,CLIMATE ,ENERGY NEEDS ,UNEP ,FUEL TAXES ,POPULATION DENSITY ,TRAFFIC CONGESTION ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ,SOX ,GHG ,HIGH TRANSPORT ,RAIL TRANSIT SYSTEM ,ROAD TRANSPORT ,BIOMASS POWER ,TAX ,GEOTHERMAL HEAT PUMPS ,PERSONAL VEHICLES ,RAIL TRANSIT ,GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT ,TONS OF COAL EQUIVALENT ,ENVIRONMENTAL TAX ,SOLAR WATER HEATERS ,LAND USE ,FOSSIL ,VEHICLE ,DIESEL ,PRIMARY FEEDSTOCK ,TRAFFIC SYSTEM ,URBAN SPRAWL ,OIL ,CAR ,DIESEL FUEL ,ENERGY SAVINGS ,FOSSIL FUEL USE ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY ,WALKING ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,LIVABLE CITIES ,ENVIRONMENTAL TARGETS ,POWER PLANTS ,FUEL EFFICIENCY ,AMBIENT AIR ,CONGESTION CHARGES ,LAND TRANSPORT ,LANDFILL ,FEEDSTOCK FOR ETHANOL ,TRANSIT CORRIDORS ,CALCULATION ,POLLUTION ,SANITATION ,FINANCIAL INCENTIVES ,ENERGY MANAGEMENT ,GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY ,SUSTAINABLE WATER ,ENERGY DEMAND ,HIGH ENERGY ,MASS RAPID TRANSIT ,TRANSPORT POLICIES ,TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT ,VEHICLE REGISTRATION ,WASTE MANAGEMENT ,GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS ,URBAN PASSENGER TRANSPORT ,EMISSION STANDARDS ,MOBILITY ,UTILITY BILL ,PARTICULATES ,GENERATION ,EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS ,NITROGEN OXIDE ,ENFORCEMENT OF REGULATIONS ,WIND POWER ,ELECTRICITY ,COAL ,PARTICULATE MATTER ,CARBON DIOXIDE ,KILOWATT-HOUR ,AMBIENT AIR QUALITY ,ALTERNATIVE FUELS ,TRANSIT AUTHORITY ,ALTERNATIVE ENERGY ,PUBLIC PARKS ,ENERGY CONSERVATION ,AIR CONDITIONING ,HEAT GENERATION ,GRID INTEGRATION ,ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION ,RENEWABLE ENERGY USE ,FUEL USE ,VEHICLES ,LAND USE CHANGE ,EMISSIONS INTENSITY ,VEHICLE-KILOMETERS ,CLEAN ENERGY ,HEAT ,GASOLINE ,TRAFFIC ,ELECTRIC VEHICLES ,POWER GENERATION ,SUSTAINABLE ENERGY ,NATURAL GAS ,BUS ,RENEWABLE ENERGY SUPPLY ,ETHANOL ,CARBON TAX ,POLLUTION DAMAGES ,FORESTRY ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,AVAILABILITY ,GREEN POWER ,WATER QUALITY ,WIND ,NITROGEN ,CARBON CAP ,CARBON ENERGY ,PUBLIC WORKS ,POWER MIX ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT NETWORKS ,AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES ,EMISSION ,VEHICLE TRAFFIC ,TONS OF CARBON ,FOREST AREAS - Abstract
Thailand needs to avoid the high-carbon growth path of many developed countries and, instead, take a low-carbon growth path. A green low-carbon growth path is in Thailand's own interest as it can simultaneously tackle local environmental degradation, global climate change, and energy security challenges. It can also position Thailand as a regional leader in green, sustainable growth. Green low-carbon growth in Thailand could focus on the following four pillars: 1) maintaining rapid economic growth while adjusting the country's economic structure toward a less energy, and carbon-intensive economy; 2) achieving greater urbanization while shifting toward green livable low-carbon cities; 3) meeting the huge thirst for energy while transforming the energy sector toward one of high energy efficiency and widespread diffusion of low-carbon technologies; and 4) improving quality of life while shifting toward a resource-efficient and sustainable lifestyle.
- Published
- 2011
23. Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-City : A Case Study of an Emerging Eco-City in China
- Author
-
World Bank
- Subjects
CARBON FINANCE ,POWER PLANT ,POLLUTION CONTROL ,APPROACH ,SOLAR ENERGY ,TRIPS ,ROUTES ,PRIMARY ENERGY SUPPLY ,EMPLOYMENT ,CARS ,POLICY MAKERS ,WASTE RECYCLING ,EMISSIONS ,AGGREGATE LEVEL ,RENEWABLE ENERGY ,AFFORDABLE HOUSING ,STREET LIGHTING ,TRANSPORTATION NETWORK ,WATER POLLUTION ,TOTAL EMISSIONS ,TRANSPORT SECTOR ,EUTROPHICATION ,SPACE HEATING ,EMISSION REDUCTION POTENTIAL ,WIND RESOURCES ,ENERGY SYSTEMS ,PIPELINE ,SULFUR ,BOILERS ,ELECTRIC POWER PLANTS ,GEOTHERMAL ENERGY ,RESOURCE CONSERVATION ,RESOURCE MANAGEMENT ,SULFUR DIOXIDE ,DEMOGRAPHIC GROWTH ,QUALITY OF WATER ,ENVIRONMENTAL BONDS ,GLOBAL WARMING ,PRIMARY ENERGY ,BICYCLES ,CARBON EMISSIONS ,TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,OZONE ,GHGS ,DRINKING WATER ,GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL FACILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL ,EMISSION REDUCTIONS ,THERMAL POWER ,DEMOGRAPHICS ,ENERGY USAGE ,REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION ,LNG ,NOISE POLLUTION ,RAPID TRANSIT ,SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ,FINANCIAL RISK ,GREENHOUSE ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS ,GREEN FIELD ,RECLAMATION ,ROAD DESIGN ,CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE ,WASTEWATER TREATMENT ,CLIMATE CHANGE ,ANAEROBIC DIGESTION ,LANDFILL GAS ,ARABLE LAND ,COST BENEFIT ANALYSIS ,NOISE ,CARBON ,AUDITS ,METHANE ,ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ,GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE ,TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,ROADS ,ENERGY CONSUMPTION ,RESOURCE USE ,PEDESTRIAN ,AIR ,RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS ,CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS ,BENEFIT ANALYSIS ,AIR POLLUTION ,INDUSTRIAL WATER ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM ,TRANSPORTATION PLAN ,ENERGY TAX CREDIT ,PRECIPITATION ,LIQUEFIED NATURAL GAS ,SOLAR SYSTEMS ,ELECTRICITY COGENERATION ,AMBIENT AIR POLLUTION ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT ,ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ,RECYCLING ,TRAVEL DEMAND ,POWER ,SO2 ,COGENERATION ,GWP ,URBAN PLANNERS ,COLLECTION SYSTEM ,TARIFF STRUCTURES ,CARBON EMISSION ,GREEN BUILDING PROGRAM ,ECONOMICS ,HOT WATER ,AIR QUALITY ,PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ,TRANSPORT ,CLIMATE ,FLOOR SPACE ,POLLUTION LEVELS ,BUS NETWORK ,POPULATION DENSITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ,PROPERTY SALES ,GHG ,CLEAN DEVELOPMENT MECHANISM ,CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION ,DRAINAGE ,TAX ,ECONOMIC GROWTH ,GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT ,WALKING DISTANCE ,TRIP ,POLLUTANTS ,POLLUTANT EMISSION ,LAND USE ,POPULATION GROWTH ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT MODE ,VEHICLE ,URBAN SPRAWL ,RADIOACTIVE WASTE ,ELECTRIC POWER ,BALANCE ,REBATES ,SOLID WASTE GENERATION ,GLOBAL WARMING POTENTIAL ,BIOGAS ,ECOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES ,WALKING ,RISK MANAGEMENT ,GREENHOUSE GAS ,ENVIRONMENTAL TARGETS ,WATER HEATING ,ENERGY SUPPLY ,LIGHT RAIL ,LIGHT RAIL TRANSIT ,HOT WATER SUPPLY ,CAPITAL INVESTMENT ,AMBIENT AIR ,POLLUTANT EMISSIONS ,ENERGY EFFICIENT TECHNOLOGIES ,LANDFILL ,MODAL SPLIT ,COST ANALYSIS ,DAILY TRIPS ,GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY ,SUSTAINABLE WATER ,VEHICLE SPEED ,DECISION MAKING ,ENERGY DEMAND ,ROAD NETWORK ,WIND POWER PLANTS ,WASTE MANAGEMENT ,MOBILITY ,RAPID TRANSPORT ,ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ,AIR POLLUTION CONTROL ,SOLAR ENERGY FACILITIES ,ACIDIFICATION ,ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ,GENERATION ,PEAK LOAD ,TRANSPORT NETWORK ,TRIP DATA ,WIND POWER ,ECOLOGICAL BENEFITS ,ELECTRICITY ,COAL ,NARROWER ROADS ,CARBON DIOXIDE ,HEATING SYSTEM ,AMBIENT AIR QUALITY ,POLLUTION CONTROL SYSTEM ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,BICYCLE USE ,IPCC ,TRANSPORT CORRIDORS ,AIR CONDITIONING ,DRIVING ,DRINKING WATER QUALITY ,HIGH SPEED RAIL ,ECONOMIC IMPACT ,ENVIRONMENTAL IMPROVEMENT ,ENERGY USE ,THERMAL POWER PLANTS ,EMISSION REDUCTION ,ENERGY PLANNING ,REGIONAL TRANSPORT ,DISTRICT HEATING ,GREENHOUSE GASES ,RENEWABLE SOURCES ,HEAT ,SUSTAINABLE ENERGY ,ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS ,EXPENDITURES ,RESIDENTIAL ENERGY ,NATURAL GAS ,BUS ,URBAN TRANSPORT ,ARTERIAL ROAD ,ENERGY EFFICIENCY ,AVAILABILITY ,HEAT SUPPLY ,POLLUTION REDUCTION ,WIND ,NATURAL RESOURCES ,TRANSPORT POLICY ,ENERGY SOURCES ,DISTRICT HEATING SYSTEM ,WASTE DISPOSAL ,TRAVEL DEMAND MANAGEMENT ,PUBLIC TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE ,EMISSION ,CLEAN FUELS - Abstract
China is experiencing rapid and large scale urbanization, and the resulting local and global urban environmental challenges are unprecedented. The Chinese Government has fully recognized these challenges and is aiming to promote more sustainable urbanization in line with the objectives of the eleventh five year plan, which calls for 'building a resource-conserving and environmentally friendly society'. Various initiatives are being pursued to support this objective, both at the national and local levels. At the local level, cities have responded by developing 'eco-cities', which aim to promote a more sustainable urbanization model. More than one hundred eco-city initiatives have been launched in recent years. One such initiative is the Sino-Singapore Tianjin eco-city. The purpose of this report is to review the Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-City (SSTEC) project from a comprehensive perspective with a view to achieving the following principal objectives: (i) create a detailed knowledge base on the project; (ii) provide policy advice on key issues, especially those related to the Global Environment Facility (GEF) project; (iii) estimate SSTEC's Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emission reduction potential; and (iv) contextualize the project among the broader ecological urban development initiatives in China. Broadening the World Bank's engagement beyond the GEF was assessed as important given the project's complexity, and its potential to shed light on China's sustainable urban development challenges
- Published
- 2009
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