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Sustainable Glasgow
Introduction
Sustainable Glasgow is a pioneering partnership between the University of Strathclyde; Glasgow City Council; Scottish Power; Scottish and Southern Energy; and Scottish Enterprise.  A wide range of additional key stakeholders are joining the partnership to help make delivering a sustainable city a reality.
Description
The Sustainable Glasgow Initiative aims to make Glasgow one of Europe’s most sustainable cities within 10 years. Cities are major concentrations of people and resources.  Globally they consume 75% of the world’s energy and are responsible for 80% of greenhouse gas emissions.   The way we live and work in cities must change if we are to be successful in tackling climate change.
Glasgow currently emits around four million tonnes of CO2 per annum linked to its energy use – around 8% of Scotland’s carbon emissions.  The long-term trend is for this to increase unless action is taken.
Based on a detailed analysis of the city – its resources, infrastructure and pattern of energy demand – Sustainable Glasgow has taken an unparalleled strategic approach to delivering a clean low-carbon energy infrastructure for the city.  This will lead to major reductions in Glasgow’s carbon emissions.
For Glasgow sustainability has to deliver more than environmental targets – sustainability must also deliver economic growth, and help tackle social issues within the city.
This city-wide strategic analysis has enabled the initiative to identify those opportunities that will deliver significant carbon emission reductions – as well as being both technically and commercially feasible.  Major opportunities have been identified in the areas of combined heat and power/district heating; waste to energy systems; renewable energy; sustainable transport; smart energy networks; and energy management.
Sustainable Glasgow is clear that delivering large scale carbon reduction emissions requires major change – in part delivered by large scale projects and investment - but also through engaging  with citizens, communities and employers and by putting in place strong and supportive public policies.
These opportunities complement each other – together they will result in tangible projects that will benefit people and businesses in Glasgow:
  • Delivering jobs
  • Attracting new businesses
  • Helping tackle fuel poverty
  • Reducing carbon emissions
  • Making Glasgow a cleaner city
  • Helping develop communities
  • Making Glasgow a leader in sustainable urban living
Partners of Sustainable Glasgow:
  • University of Strathclyde
  • Scottish and Southern Energy
  • SourceOne
  • Newcampus Glasgow
  • Scottish Water
  • Glasgow City Council
  • NHS Scotland
  • Blitzer, Clancy & Company
  • Clyde Gateway
  • GHA
  • Scottish Enterprise
  • Scotland Gas Networks
  • SPT
  • Scottish Power
Financing
  • District heating: £600 million
  • Renewable energy and energy management:£800 million
  • Urban Woodlands: £30 million
  • City Centre light rail: up to £90 million
  • Total Indicative Capital Cost:~ £1.5 billion
Potential public sector sources of funding include local authority borrowing, the Clyde Gateway project, European funding, and potentially the Scottish Government’s JESSICA fund. The EU is expected to propose a 2 to 3 billion euro allocation of funding for cities that are undertaking innovative and ambitious carbon reduction programmes. This type of infrastructure is also a strong fit to European Investment Bank funding priorities in relation to the environment – improving quality of life in urban areas, and tackling climate change through renewable energy and energy efficiency, and sustainable forestry.
Contact info
Sustainable Glasgow
Glasgow
United Kingdom
enquiries@sustainableglasgow.org.uk
http://www.sustainableglasgow.org.uk
Project start date
27/01/2010
Cities
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Links
Click here to visit the Sustainable Glasgow websiteClick here to download Glasgow's sustainable Vision (PDF report)Click here to download a leaflet (PDF)Click here to read Sustainable Glasgow's press release (PDF)Click here to download the delivery framework (PDF)

Document type
case
Themes
Urban Policy > Urban environment
Keywords
Environmental sustainability
 


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