To support global climate efforts, start by supporting your local mayor
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During this year’s UN Climate Change Conference, COP26, which begins on Sunday in Glasgow, Scotland, much of the attention will be on what national governments can do to cut emissions more quickly and uphold a previous commitment to provide $100 billion annually in climate finance for low- and middle-income countries.
These are critical issues. But there is another group of leaders whose actions are also essential to the efforts to tackle climate change, and who together are showing what is possible: the world’s mayors.
In fact, pledging more support for, and partnerships with, the cities that are pursuing climate adaptation and mitigation is one of the most important steps that national governments can take at COP26.
As home to a growing majority of the world’s population, cities are responsible for about three-quarters of global energy use and 70 percent of carbon dioxide emissions. Fortunately, mayors have considerable authority with which to address the biggest sources of those emissions, not least transportation and the energy use of buildings.
Mayors also have powerful incentives to act. Toxic air pollution from burning fossil fuels is often concentrated in cities, causing illness and premature deaths, and local governments are often the first line of defense against natural disasters.
Moreover, interventions such as enhancing public transport, creating more parks and green spaces, improving the energy efficiency of buildings, and replacing fossil fuels with clean power can make an immediate and measurable difference in the lives of city inhabitants.
Since 2017, we have been working together through the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy, an alliance that now includes more than 11,000 cities that are collectively home to more than one billion people.
Mike Bloomberg & Frans Timmermans
Mayors and city leaders have proven that they are willing and able to lead. In Italy, Milan is converting its entire public-transport fleet to electric power. In the US, Pittsburgh is enacting a plan to run 100 percent on renewable energy. Accra in Ghana is on track to cut emissions by more than 25 percent this decade, even as its population continues to grow. Lima in Peru will plant two million trees by 2022. In South Korea, Seoul is providing low-interest loans for zero-energy buildings. Quezon City in the Philippines responded to the pandemic with an emergency employment program that puts people to work protecting and restoring the environment. And in Malaysia, Putrajaya is switching to solar energy as the default option for all official buildings.
But cities cannot save the planet alone. Now more than ever, they need support. The economic devastation of the pandemic has hit cities particularly hard, decimating municipal budgets. City leaders know that fighting climate change and driving a green economic recovery go hand in hand, because the same measures that reduce carbon dioxide emissions also spur growth, generate jobs and create conditions that attract new residents and businesses.
The more we do to support cities, the faster our progress will be against both the climate crisis and COVID-19.
Since 2017, we have been working together through the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy, an alliance that now includes more than 11,000 cities that are collectively home to more than one billion people. Each of these cities has made a bold commitment to cut emissions and adapt to climate change — and, through the alliance, they are sharing strategies and solutions.
While international climate negotiations are often hindered by conflicts about who should be doing more, cities are working together with a spirit of common purpose and shared destiny. They are collaborating because they understand the benefits of collective action.
For its part, the Global Covenant enables cities to access resources — including technical assistance to identify opportunities and design innovative projects, as well as funding from a wide range of partners — to help them do more, faster. The alliance also gives cities a way to speak together as one, advocating policies that can help them aim even higher and continue leading the way on climate change.
In recognition of the work cities have been leading, the Global Covenant won the second annual Gulbenkian Prize for Humanity. The prize money will be used to provide direct support to help acutely vulnerable African cities respond to the climate crisis in ways that also support their economic recoveries from the pandemic. We will share lessons learned through the global network, encouraging cities across Africa and around the world to take similar steps.
National governments have strong reasons to help their cities in this respect. Cities, after all, generate three-quarters of global gross domestic product. They are engines of economic mobility, industry and technological innovation. Strong and thriving cities make for strong and thriving countries – and smart municipal climate action helps all city residents live better, healthier lives.
As COP26 begins, cities collectively offer the best reason for hope in the battle against climate change. They are ready to do more, and the Global Covenant, the European Commission and Bloomberg Philanthropies stand ready to help them. We will continue to cultivate widespread public support and engagement, unlock new funding, and offer tools to help cities deliver bolder and even more ambitious climate solutions.
But Global Covenant cities and their one billion inhabitants are also calling out for more support from national governments. When one billion people speak with one voice, leaders should listen. COP26 is a chance for world leaders to show that they are.
• Mike Bloomberg, the UN secretary-general’s special envoy for climate ambition and solutions, and Frans Timmermans, the executive vice-president of the European Commission, are co-chairs of the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate & Energy.
Copyright: Project Syndicate