developing green cities : back to the future
Transcription
developing green cities : back to the future
‘DEVELOPING GREEN CITIES : BACK TO THE FUTURE’ DATIN PADUKA DR. DAHLIA ROSLY Director General Federal Department of Town and Country Planning, Ministry of Urban Wellbeing, Housing and Local Government Malaysia The Equatorial Hotel, Malacca 11 May 2015 Topics WORLD SCENARIOS MALAYSIA URBANIZATION BACKGROUND URBAN DEVELOPMENT CHALLENGES IN MALAYSIA IMPLEMENTING GREEN CITIES INITIATIVES TO OVERCOME CHALLENGES MALAYSIA’S INITIATIVES IN PROMOTING GREEN CITIES IMPLEMENTING GREEN CITIES INITIATIVES IN PBT’S GREEN NEIGHBOURHOOD INITIATIVE AWARDS URBAN POPULATION OF THE WORLD Percentage of Population Residing in Urban Areas in 2014, Selected Countries / Areas Source : United Nations, World Urbanization Prospects, 2014 Revision Malaysia FAILURE OF URBAN PLANNING IN ASIA World Economic Forum – Global Risk 2015 East Asia and the Pacific is perceived as least prepared for interstate conflict and failure of urban planning. Source : Global Risk Report 2015, 10th Edition, World Economic Forum, Geneva MALAYSIA URBANIZATION BACKGROUND Malaysia population census in 2010 - 28.58 million people. 2015 forecast - 30.48million people. Rapid urbanization rate :– Year 1970 - 26.8% urbanization (2.79 million of urban dwellers). Year 2010 - 71% (20.29 million of urban dwellers). Forecast 2025 - 80% (27.30 million of urban dwellers). With an average of 75% of GDP is concentrated in the cities as the engine of economic growth. Scenario on global competition – economic and urban infrastructure must be strengthened. Economy growth concentrated in the main conurbation – Greater Kuala Lumpur, Georgetown and Johor Bahru. URBAN GREEN IN ASIA GREEN CITIES IN MALAYSIA Cyberjaya Putrajaya Wilayah Iskandar, Johor Melaka Miri, Sarawak URBAN DEVELOPMENT CHALLENGES IN MALAYSIA 1. CLIMATE CHANGE AND GLOBAL WARMING A continuous and long period in rainfall which is significantly below the average expected for a region at that time of year. Kajang, Selangor, December 2011 Drought - El-Nino 97/98 URBAN DEVELOPMENT CHALLENGES IN MALAYSIA 2. RAPID URBANISATION Source : Dept. of Statistics Malaysia, Official Portal • Expected to grow to 75% by 2020. • Encroachment on agriculture areas and Environment Sensitive Areas (ESA) due to urban development. URBAN DEVELOPMENT CHALLENGES IN MALAYSIA 3. CITIES ENERGY CONSUMPTIONS Cities consume 70% of the world’s energy. Cities responsible for 40% to 50% GHG worldwide. United Nations Environment Programme Source : http://www.our-energy.com/introduction_into_energy_sources.html World energy consumption between year 1850 and 2000 compared to world population increase in same period. Energy consumption is increasing much faster than population. STRATEGIC POLICIES AND MEASURES IN MALAYSIA Policies / Initiatives Related to Sustainable Developments INTERNATIONAL UN Conference on the Human Environment UN set up the World Commission on Environment and Development Kyoto Declaration on Green House Emission Johannesburg Earth Summit 2002, Rio +10 Bruntland Report on definition and principles of SD 1972 1980 1987 1997 1992 Malaysia National Environmental Policy 2010 • Japan Future City • EU Future Cities Rio Summit: World commitment on sustainable development & Agenda 21 COP 15 Copenhagen Accord Bali Roadmap Towards International agreement on Climate Change COP 19 Warsaw Outcomes SGFC 2000 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Malaysia (Local Agenda 21) • • Planning Doctrine – holistic devt for land use planning 2004 –Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment • 2005 – National Physical Plan, Selangor Sustainable Development and Agenda 21 • 5th Fuel Policy, in the 8th Malaysia Plan • 2006 - Malaysia Ninth Malaysia Plan – 4th Thrust (Improve Standard and Sustainability of Quality of Life)- Sustainable Development Indicators (SDI) SREP (small renewal energy power program) M A L A Y S I A COP 18 Doha Climate Gateway 2002 • • COP 16 COP 17 Cancun Durban Agreement Outcomes Rio de Janeiro, The Future We Want; Rio +20 • 2006 – National Urbanisation Policy • 2009– Ministry of Energy, Technology and Water, National Green Technology Policy & Climate Change Policy 2010 2011 2010Green Building Index 2011: •MURNINET •Low Carbon Cities Framework •GBI Township •Blueprint Melaka Negeri Bandar Teknologi Hijau 2012 2013 Garis Panduan Kejiranan Hijau 2014 Pelancaran CoE JPBDSM Iskandar Malaysia Low Carbon Society LAND USE PLANNING MECHANISM The scientific, aesthetic, and orderly disposition or utilization of land, resources, facilities and services with a view to securing the physical, economic and social efficiency, health and well-being of urban and rural communities. Physical planning plays crucial role through management of resource utilization in spatial planning and planning mechanism. IMPLEMENTING GREEN CITIES TO OVERCOME CHALLENGES MALAYSIA’S INITIATIVES IN PROMOTING GREEN CITIES Green Neighbourhood / Green Cities Planning Components Of Green Neighbourhood GREEN NEIGHBOURHOOD ACTION PLAN 5 Strategic Thrust 28 Strategies 50 Actions STRATEGIC THRUST 1 STRATEGIC THRUST 2 STRATEGIC THRUST 3 STRATEGIC THRUST 4 STRATEGIC THRUST 5 LEGAL ASPECTS, POLICY AND GUIDELINES GREEN URBAN PLANNING TRAINING AND PROMOTION INCENTIVES REDUCING WASTE AND STRENGTHEN RECYCLING ACTIVITY 4 Strategies 8 Actions 13 Strategies 5 Strategies 3 Strategies 3 Strategies 23 Actions 6 Actions 3 Actions 10 Actions MATRIX OF GREEN NEIGHBOURHOOD ACTION PLAN LOW-HANGING FRUIT ACTION Responsible Agency OTHER ACTION Pedestrian Walkway Bicycle Lane Rainwater Harvesting System Waste Composting Community Farming Perlis √ - √ - - Kedah √ - √ √ √ Pulau Pinang √ √ - √ √ Perak √ - √ √ √ Selangor √ √ √ √ √ Negeri Sembilan √ - - √ √ Melaka √ √ √ - √ Johor √ √ √ - √ Pahang √ - - - √ Terengganu √ - - - - Kelantan √ - √ - - DBKL √ √ √ √ √ Sabah √ √ √ - - Sarawak √ - - √ - √ Initiative implemented at state level Form new committee or establish exiting committee at state level related to green neighbourhood development Adopting Planning Guideline for Green Neighbourhood Adopting Planning Guideline for Identification of Redevelopment of Brownfield Site Encourage properties developer/private sector/individual to participate in green building accreditation Establish database of brownfield and underused areas for redevelopment purpose Provide bicycle parks at community centre Consider safe city elements as in the Guideline of Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design and universal design elements as in the Planning Guideline for Universal Design when designing for pedestrian walkway and bicycle lane Achieve the policy of 2 hectares open space over 1,000 urban population (exclude green roof and green wall) Encourage green roof, green wall and rooftop garden Source: Monitoring Report of Action Plan for Green Neighbourhood Development No.2 (FDTCP, 2014) REPORTING THE ACTION PLAN Green Neighbourhood Planning Guidelines Action Plan for Green Neighbourhood Development Report of Action Plan for Green Neighbourhood Development to support Green Neighbourhood Planning Guidelines and Action Plan for Green Neighbourhood Development GREEN NEIGHBOURHOOD DEVELOPMENT ACTION PLAN 5 Initiatives for Green Neighbourhood Development Action Plan 1 4 Rain water harvesting system Provision of pedestrian pathway 2 Provision of bicycle lane 3 Waste composting 5 Community farming IMPLEMENTING GREEN CITIES IN PBT’S IMPLEMENTING GREEN CITIES IN PBT’S Kota Kinabalu Walkability Master Plan SustainableFutureCities IMPLEMENTING GREEN CITIES IN PBT’S Showcase of Healthy + Walkable Cities Pioneer Projects (a) (b) Covered pedestrian walkway from Kuala Terengganu Bus Terminal to Pasar Payang, Kuala Terengganu, Terengganu Covered pedestrian walkway from Kluang Train Station to Taman Merdeka, Kluang, Johore CYCLE LANE AND BIKE RENTING SustainableFutureCities PROJECT BENEFITS Cycle Lane ‘on road’ Commuter Station KKB – Town Centre (4km) 1. Direct impact on the environment 2. Potential to get sponsors. 3. Can be as ‘urban showcase’ for World Urban Forum 2018. 4. Promote healthy lifestyle. 5. Can be attributed to attractions in the city. ESTIMATED COST 1. New cycle lane – RM1.2 mil (less cost if ‘on road’) 2. Bike park– RM150K 3. Bicycles – RM1K per bicycle STRATEGIC BUSINESS PARTNER 1. 2. KTMB SPAD CARBON FOOTPRINT Bike Rent 1. Walking and cycling emit zero CO2 2. 1 km round trip walking and cycling saves 6 kg/day of CO2 (carbon savings per day compared to the use of car) (Source: www.smartertavelsutton.org). (Source: www.smartertavelsutton.org). Papan Tanda Arah COMMUNITY ORCHARD EXAMPLE OF COMMUNITY ORCHARD LAYOUT SustainableFutureCities PROJECT BENEFITS 1. 2. CORPORATE SPONSORSHIP PUBLIC AWARENESS Direct impact on the environment and carbon trapping Potential to get sponsors 3. Can be as ‘urban showcase’ for World Urban Forum 2018. 4. Greening urban areas. 5. In accordance with the concept of KKB City in a Garden . ESTIMATED COST 1. Fruit orchad – RM100K - RM150K (less cost if plant on existing park area) 2. Tress – RM50 - RM100 per tree STRATEGIC BUSINESS PARTNER ACTIVITY AND COMMUNITY RELATIONSHIP Planting Trees With ‘Marcotting Methods’ are Capable of Producing Results as Early as 2-3 Years 1. 2. 3. Tan Chong Motors Perodua UiTM/ Darul Quran CARBON FOOTPRINT 1. 1 tree absorbs 1,000 kg of CO2 (approx) 2. 1 acre of trees stores 2,600 kg of carbon/year (where tree cover for urban area is about 204 trees/acre). (Source: www.conservationfund.org/gozero). (Source: www.coloradotrees.org). RAIN WATER HARVESTING PROJECT BENEFITS Masjid Jamek Al-Rahmah in KKB is implementing the Rain Water Harvesting. The system can be improve and the approach can be extended to other prayer hall or mosque. 1. Has been implemented in Masjid AlRahmah. 2. Water saving can be calculated for assessing the effectiveness of the initiative. 3. Can be used as a model for other mosques. 4. Can be as ‘urban showcase’ for World Urban Forum 2018. 5. Cost savings ( water bill ). ESTIMATED COST CASE STUDY YAYASAN HIJAU: MASJID BUKIT INDAH, AMPANG 1. Rain water harvesting – RM150K STRATEGIC BUSINESS PARTNER 1. 2. 3. Cooperation between Yayasan Hijau, KETTHA and NAHRIM Pump machine cost: RM200K Masjid Jamek Al-Rahmah Gamuda GreenTech/ NAHRIM CARBON FOOTPRINT 1. Efficient use of valuable water resources. 2. Rainwater harvesting has a lower environmental footprint than mains water. USAGE OF ECO-FRIENDLY MATERIALS KKB food trail Joint Program with Dealers PROJECT BENEFITS 1. Involvement of local residents. 2. Rising the public awareness. 3. Can be adjusted with food attractions in KKB 4. Energy and cost savings can be calculated, easy assessment can be made. 5. Develop tourism and urban heritage preservation ESTIMATED COST 1. 2. LED Lamp – RM10K eco-friendly materials – RM20K RM50K per year STRATEGIC BUSINESS PARTNER 1. 2. 3. Perodua Tan Chong Motors Gamuda CARBON FOOTPRINT 1. A normal street light bulb consumes 250400W of energy and emits 0.17 kg of CO2. 2. Every 1 kWh of energy used emits 0.68 kg of CO2. (Source: www.gg-energy.com) 3. VBC Produk Buluh GREEN NEIGHBOURHOOD INITIATIVE AWARDS The award is given to the local authorities: Since 2011 in conjunction with the World Town Planning Day celebration every year. Five categories of award: i. provision of pedestrian pathway ii. provision of bicycle lane iii. rain water harvesting iv. waste composting v. community farming Mayors and Local Authorities Representatives with Green Initiatives Award The purpose is to promote and create awareness about the importance of green initiatives among the local authorities. CYCLE LANE Majlis Bandaraya Melaka Bersejarah Majlis Bandaraya Shah Alam Majlis Bandaraya Kota Kinabalu PEDESTRIAN WALKWAY Majlis Bandaraya Ipoh Majlis Perbandaran Kuantan Dewan Bandaraya Kuching Utara COMMUNITY GARDENING Dewan Bandaraya Kuala Lumpur Majlis Perbandaran Port Dickson Majlis Perbandaran Klang RAIN WATER HARVESTING Pusat Komuniti Kempas Tandas Awam MP Kulim Tasik Titiwangsa Pangsapuri Kos Rendah Sri Stulang Medan Selera Bandar Baru Uda Dewan Komuniti Taman Koperasi Polis Majlis Bandaraya Johor Bahru Majlis Perbandaran Kulim Dewan Bandaraya Kuala Lumpur WASTE COMPOSTING Majlis Daerah Kampar Majlis Bandaraya Kuching Selatan Majlis Perbandaran Sibu ACTION PLAN FOR IMPLEMENTATION Selection of Priority Initiatives Implementations of Selected Initiatives Showcase for Malaysia Strategic Alliance Partnership Monitoring and Evaluating Federal Department of Town and Country Planning Peninsular Malaysia Ministry of Urban Wellbeing, Housing and Local Government Malaysia www.townplan.gov.my 33