San jose sustainable development
It has been shaped by a wide-ranging public consultation with participation from hundreds of organisations and individuals, including representatives from hydropower industry, NGOs, international financial institutions, NGOs, academia and research institutions.
At the heart of the Declaration is a recognition that sustainable hydropower is a clean, green, modern and affordable solution to climate change. It says that going forward, the only acceptable hydropower is sustainable hydropower. Free viewers are required for some of the attached documents. They can be downloaded by clicking on the icons below. Please enable JavaScript in your browser for a better user experience.
Data is integral to target-setting and tracking SDG achievement over time. While much attention has been given to national-level measurement and reporting systems, such as the U. National Reporting Platform NRP , less has been done to determine how these types of activities might function at the city level. This success will depend on the concerted leadership of cities and city networks to take local action towards the Global Goals. SUS has identified this main challenge: we need actionable intelligence at the city level to achieve the SDGs.
SUS is tackling the above challenge through the development of three solutions as shown in the table below, starting in the California Bay Area. These solutions combine the best of top-down structure with bottom-up innovation to turn raw data local reporting platform into intelligence dashboard that is actionable marketplace of decision-making tools for counties, cities, businesses, and communities.
SUS has focused its preliminary work at the local level in the Bay Area to work toward each of the three solutions in the table above. The California Bay Area is one of the most dynamic and diverse regions in the world.
The Bay Area has 9 counties and around 7. According to a report by the Association of Bay Area Governments, the region is growing and becoming more ethnically diverse every year, driven in no small part by an influx of international migrants seeking economic opportunity. The Bay Area suffers from an inadequate level of housing and transportation infrastructure to support the growth it is facing, resulting in a crisis of affordability, inequality, as well as unsustainable land use and transportation patterns.
Ultimately, this alignment will help move the Bay Area, and thereafter the world at large, towards a more sustainable, resilient and equitable future. It is recommended that the Bay Area platform address the challenges of data identification, collection, and storage by providing a standardized set of indicators to report, and a streamlined way of reporting them.
To begin, the SUS team is working with local stakeholders to establish which indicators can be feasibly collected and are meaningful and actionable on a local scale. Based on a review of industry standards and stakeholder preferences, SUS proposes that to be most useful and effective, a local data platform should enable:. Storing and facilitating queries on large amounts of data across a number of different formats and scales;. Frequent updating as new data is added, in a way that is user-friendly for different types of stakeholders; tools or applications integrated with the database would need to automatically reflect updated data; and.
Sharing of data across different cities and the aggregation of local data into the NRP, to maximize integration and scalability. Though SUS has not begun building this local reporting platform for cities and counties in the Bay Area, the US NRP is available online, is open-source and is designed to be replicated by other nations ; with some slight tweaks, the same reporting infrastructure can be adapted for local governments and ultimately integrated into the NRP.
For this preliminary activity of indicator development, SUS reviewed all existing SDSN initiatives which have identified local SDG indicators, and curated its own limited set of indicators that satisfy the following criteria, outlined below. May A number of community initiatives have developed online dashboards that can be used to benchmark and track progress on community well-being, including the status of implementation of the SDGs.
In Canada, the Peg initiative provides a local measurement of community well-being that incorporates indicators on education, health, the natural environment, and transport, among others.
To raise awareness on the relationship between material consumption and greenhouse gas GHG emissions, the dashboard presents neighborhood-specific estimates of per capita carbon emissions categorized by energy, food, water, goods, and mobility footprints. The Dashboard then generates comparisons of user-generated inputs with neighborhood and city averages with an option to share results via social networks.
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