Displaying 1 - 19 of 19
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A California bill, a newly launched foundation and a city-friendly acquisition are all pieces of an evolving landscape that could determine the future of how private mobility providers and cities will work together to share and use data.
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Imagine, a city where the residents and commuters wouldn't need to own cars.
3
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Presidents and prime ministers have limited policy control over national carbon footprints. Subnational entities can prove that 'We Are Still In.'
by Daniel Esty
4
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This week: Helen Clarkson of the Climate Group and Erin Callahan of the Climate Collaborative. Plus, meet the rockstar journalist joining GreenBiz.
by Joel Makower
5
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Too much of today’s conversation focuses on energy generation rather than urban design, land-use planning and zoning interventions.
6
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A new partnership from C40 Cities and Climate-KIC will prioritize building retrofits, mobility and closed-loop systems.
7
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In this week's episode, blockchain approaches its 'singularity,' powering Puerto Rico back to life and the chemicals sector seeks a catalyst on climate goals.
by Joel Makower
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The U.N. network's executive director, Mark Watts, advocates new effort to engage American cities as U.S. turns back on Paris Agreement.
9
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There's no single motivation behind the movement. Here's background, with three ideas for where your city can start.
10
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Pay-for-success bonds backed by the Rockefeller Foundation and others seek to fund urban resilience projects.
11
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Many city leaders already are working to finance resilience projects through green bonds.
by David Hatch
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The $50 million bond will pay for transit improvements, energy-efficient street lighting and other climate-friendly upgrades.
13
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On this week's podcast: Is China taking over the green bond market? How will artificial intelligence revolutionize supply chains?
by Joel Makower
14
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In the post-COP21 era, we need data more than ever to keep us on track to reduce emissions in cities and beyond.
15
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A new tech partnership in the South Asian nation could change the way resilience planning gets done.
by Vikram Singh
16
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By opening up government data on transportation, buildings, infrastructure and air quality to citizen coders, cities and regions are solving problems.
17
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This expert has been applying data to solve big problems since before data was cool.
18
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More companies are stepping up to fill a trillion-dollar infrastructure gap. Google, IBM, Cisco and Siemens are just a few of the players.
19
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Metrics mean nothing without context. Visualization software could make it simpler to analyze the massive volumes of data collected by cities.