Assessment of drivers and pressures leading to urban challenges across the ULLs, including spatial and temporal components. REGREEN Deliverable D2.1

  • David Fletcher
  • , Bin Zhao
  • , Gwendoline Grandin
  • , Jun Yang
  • , Marc Barra
  • , Marko Ruzic
  • , Lene Vinther Larsen
  • , Signe Iversen
  • , Yaoyang Xu
  • , Cai Chen
  • , Ellen Banzhaf
  • , Julius Knopp
  • , Xiangyu Luo
  • , Wanben Wu
  • , Gianni Vesuviano
  • , Laurence Jones

Publikation: AndetAndet bidragForskning

Abstract

This document forms part of the context-setting for the REGREEN project, and describes the main drivers and pressures associated with urbanization which are the focus of the Urban Living Labs (ULLs) within the project. The pressures are primarily environmental, but shaped by social and economic factors. The report illustrates how social factors interact with green, blue and grey infrastructure to shape the opportunities for implementing NBS to address these challenges.

Contributors to this report come from WP2 (challenges), WP3 (mapping and modelling) and all six ULLs: Paris, Aarhus, Velika Gorica, Shanghai, Beijing and Ningbo.

Each ULL ranks and describes the main pressures facing them. Air pollution, noise and heat are the top three pressures in Beijing and Velika Gorica. In Aarhus and Paris, the top three are biodiversity loss, water quality and flooding. In the other two Chinese ULLs, Ningbo and Shanghai, the top three issues are air pollution, water quality and flooding. These pressures are explored in more detail, including the health and societal impacts they cause.

Urban sprawl is separately addressed as a pressure, illustrated by a historical analysis of the rate of change in urban extent in all six ULLs since 1985. The expansion of urban area in the Chinese ULLs is substantially greater than any of the European ULLs.

Social and economic factors, which influence vulnerability and exposure to pressures, are also discussed. The literature suggests that age is the main risk factor for negative health impacts from high-temperatures, while deprivation is a risk factor for PM2.5 associated health impacts.

The report discusses the important role of spatial and temporal variability in pressures and in the potential of NBS to address these pressures. This highlights the importance of capturing spatial and temporal variation in data representing the pressures, but also that it is critical to have appropriate contextual data, particularly those data relating to people (e.g. sociodemographic and socioeconomic data) in order to provide useful spatially and temporally explicit representations of the challenges that are produced in urban environments.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Publikationsdato30 sep. 2020
UdgiverREGREEN - Fostering nature‐based solutions for smart, green and healthy urban transitions in Europe and China. Horizon2020 Grant No. 821016.
Antal sider45
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 30 sep. 2020

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