The World Economic Forum, in partnership with four leading organizations, is launching a first-of-its-kind platform for urban decarbonization, the Toolbox of Solutions, at a session on Zero-Carbon Buildings and Cities at COP27.
By 2050, it is estimated that 68% of people will live in cities, resulting in greater energy consumption and infrastructure demand, and, as a result, increasing carbon emissions. Cities have a critical role to play in the race to reach net zero. Although most of the solutions to reduce global carbon emissions exist, they are not being adopted and scaled rapidly enough.
To help address this challenge, the World Economic Forum, supported by knowledge partner Accenture, is collaborating with the National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA), Sustainable Energy for All (SEforALL), the Basel Agency for Sustainable Energy (BASE), and the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) to gather global best practices, curated in the Toolbox of Solutions. Together, this group will continue working to promote and share successful examples with city stakeholders worldwide.
“For urban ecosystems, the solutions and innovations needed to reduce emissions already exist. We know that to shift the climate change trajectory, urban ecosystems and the economy must become far more efficient, electric and circular. The toolbox contains inspiration from around the world to reduce emissions while also boosting economic development, creating jobs and improving air quality,” said Kristen Panerali, Head of Energy, Materials and Infrastructure Program, Clean Power, Electrification and Net-Zero Carbon Cities, World Economic Forum.
The Toolbox of Solutions contains over 300 case studies drawn from more than 150 cities. It enables its users to access solutions through a search tailored to each city’s strategic planning priorities as well as specific attributes including electricity grid health, population density and income level. The toolbox contains knowledge and proven examples which result in lower emissions, as well as advancing economic development, job creation and improved human health through better air and water quality.
“A just, inclusive and equitable energy transition will be impossible without data-driven technologies and solutions. Our collaboration with the World Economic Forum on the Toolbox of Solutions aligns with our existing initiatives, including the SEforALL Knowledge Hub and ‘This is Cool’, which support sharing of knowledge and solutions to accelerate SDG7 and a clean energy future,” said Damilola Ogunbiyi, CEO and Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Sustainable Energy for All and Co-Chair of UN-Energy.
The toolbox has been designed to work in tandem with the City Sprint process – a structured workshop series which convenes local business and city leaders to identify new pathways and partnerships. The objective of the City Sprint is to foster public-private collaboration by creating a coalition of local stakeholders that can implement projects in each city after the City Sprint workshops have concluded.
The World Economic Forum and its delivery partners have completed over 10 City Sprints in the past year and plan to conduct more with new cities in 2023.
“Climate change and its impacts are not bound by jurisdictions and require a collaborative approach. Sharing of responsibilities by players across the spectrum – at various scales of planning and implementation is a key to the path of net zero. NIUA through their collaboration with the Forum is sharing knowledge via the Toolbox of Solutions and leading their own series of City Sprints in India with a focus on mainstreaming climate actions in the local development agenda to enable Indian cities towards a sustainable and resilient future as part of the Sustainable Cities India Program,” said Hitesh Vaidya, Director, National Institute of Urban Affairs.