Displaying 1 - 12 of 12
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Article
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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Article
Imagine, a city where the residents and commuters wouldn't need to own cars.
3
Article
Pay-for-success bonds backed by the Rockefeller Foundation and others seek to fund urban resilience projects.
4
Article
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.
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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
7
Article
In the post-COP21 era, we need data more than ever to keep us on track to reduce emissions in cities and beyond.
8
Article
A new tech partnership in the South Asian nation could change the way resilience planning gets done.
by Vikram Singh
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Article
By opening up government data on transportation, buildings, infrastructure and air quality to citizen coders, cities and regions are solving problems.
10
Article
This expert has been applying data to solve big problems since before data was cool.
11
Article
More companies are stepping up to fill a trillion-dollar infrastructure gap. Google, IBM, Cisco and Siemens are just a few of the players.
12
Article
Metrics mean nothing without context. Visualization software could make it simpler to analyze the massive volumes of data collected by cities.