6,509 research outputs found

    The fall and rise of the green economy

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    It is five years since the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) and its knock-on effects are still playing out in ways that are likely to have longer-term implications than those purely financial in nature; namely, its impact on the green agendas of governments and industries and the brake it has placed on an emerging green economy. The green economy has been identified as the next major long wave of structural economic and socio-technical change at a global level (see key reference list at end of article). It can be expected to exert a more significant triple bottom line impact than that of the information economy, the last major post-industrial societal transition whose emergence accelerated through the latter half of the 20th century and continues to exert transformational change today via its links with new media and communications, the knowledge economy and the creative economy. The drivers of a green economy are different but equally powerful and go to the heart of global sustainability in the 21st century: averting highly disruptive climate change, living within the finite resource limits of the planet, avoiding the environmental degradation currently associated with industrial and urban development, and supporting a projected nine billion population

    HERA Diffractive Structure Function Data and Parton Distributions

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    Recent diffractive structure function measurements by the H1 and ZEUS experiments at HERA are reviewed. Various data sets, obtained using systematically different selection and reconstruction methods, are compared. NLO DGLAP QCD fits are performed to the most precise H1 and ZEUS data and diffractive parton densities are obtained in each case. Differences between the Q^2 dependences of the H1 and ZEUS data are reflected as differences between the diffractive gluon densities.Comment: Contributed to the Proceedings of the Workshop on HERA and the LHC, DESY and CERN, 2004-200

    Perth freight link: good idea, wrong port

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    The Perth Freight Link (PFL) has been announced as a major transport opportunity to solve the heavy goods truck problems in Perth. By taking trucks via a toll road around an extended Roe Highway, through Stock Road and Leach Highway to the Fremantle Inner Harbour it has been proposed to alleviate the current congestion and match the expected increase in truck traffic over the coming years. This paper takes a contrary view by analyses and suggests that the PFL is very poor planning; it is likely to harm the city of Fremantle and damage the operations of the port. The findings demonstrate the real need is to create good road and rail connections to a new container port in the Fremantle Outer Harbour

    The Oil Transition and its Implications for Cities and Regions

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    Emergent Urbanism as the Transformative force in Saving the Planet

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    The most significant force in saving the planet is when cities begin to grow without using fossil fuels. The great urban revolution of the twentieth century was based around a continuing growth in the total and per capita consumption of fossil fuels leading to the problems of climate change, oil security, air pollution and urban sprawl. The twenty-first century is beginning to show that this reversal may well be underway and that a new kind of city is emerging where economic growth is decoupling from fossil fuel growth and new greener, more competitive cities are emerging (Glaeser 20 I 0). Some of this evidence will be presented before outlining how we can ensure the trends continue

    The rise and rise of renewable cities

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    The decoupling of fossil fuels from growth in economic activity has been proceeding rapidly for most of the 21st century and is analysed globally in terms of structures and technologies for energy efficiency and for switching to renewable energy in the world’s cities. This is leading to the decline of coal and oil. The evidence suggests that the changes are based on demand for the structures and technologies that are emerging, facilitating a disruptive process. The rise of renewable cities can therefore be expected to accelerate

    Density, the Sustainability Multiplier: Some Myths and Truths with Application to Perth, Australia

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    The paper suggests that the divisive urban issue of density has criticalimportance for sustainability. It is particularly important to resolve for the low density cardependent cities of the world as they are highly resource consumptive. Ten myths aboutdensity and 10 truths about density are proposed to help resolve the planning issues socommonly found to divide urban communities. They are applied with data to Perth toillustrate the issues and how they can be resolved

    Sustaining our future: resolving the conflict over population models

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    If we are to sustain our future we have to resolve some fundamental issues about how to live on this planet. However underneath it all is a major issue: are there just too many of us? This paper will try to assess the question by looking at two conflicting models that stem from biology and from economics and try to suggest that the conflict can be resolved with new approaches to sustainable cities. It suggests that population issues on a global level need to be addressed as a matter of human rights but fear of population can be a dangerous diversion and prevent cities from grasping the opportunities (provided by growth) to achieve significant urban sustainability gains
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