If
we want to confront the climate crisis successfully, greening everything and
here especially our cities is key, argued Alan Simpson in the fifth talk of his
COP 27 series. Rather than paving over everything in our cities, which is often
the cause of flooding, we need to enlarge our green spaces.
Non-woodland
trees are one of the key elements in greener cities. They function as CO2
storage, offer cooling in summer and provide nesting space for birds. In short,
they are an essential part of our general well-being. Vertical gardens too are
excellent for biodiversity in cities as well as the absorption of greenhouse
gases. Pavement planting as in Montreal/Canada, for example, combined with streets
free of cars are another important step.
As
always, positive examples do already exist. Thammasat University has the largest urban rooftop farm in Asia, covering 22000 square meters. In Copenhagen/Denmark,
people have planted fruit trees in the streets with a direct impact on
people’s nutrition and general well-being, while providing food for birds at
the same time. Miyawaki
forests in cities are part of the solution as is Madrid’s
plan for a forest belt around the city. In the UK, Rotherham’s
rivers of flowers are an example of what can be possible when greening our
cities. In Uttar
Pradesh/India, 800000 volunteers planted 50 million trees in one day. The
list goes on.
In
Nottingham, we could establish vegetable and fruit gardens on University ground
in a collaboration between students and the local community. Anchor
institutions such as the local hospitals could commit themselves to buy local
for their catering operations. Volunteers have already lined up for greening
the courtyard of the Clive Granger building on University Park. Planters in
roundabouts could be filled with berry bushes instead of ornamental flowers,
streets could develop wild edges. The solutions are there, what is necessary is
the political will to enact them!
Andreas Bieler
Professor of Political Economy
University of Nottingham/UK
Andreas.Bieler@nottingham.ac.uk
12 December 2022
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