Displaying 1 - 17 of 17
1
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Taking a look at Lansink's waste hierarchy and the circular economy to challenge the 2,000-year-old method of using landfills for waste disposal.
by Conor Riffle
2
Article
The role of the public sector, citizen engagement and advocacy are essential.
3
Article
Comprehensive plans are great, but small, low-budget changes can make a big difference, too.
by Nate Berg
4
Article
Conservation is the foundation upon which all of our sustainable water management strategies are based.
5
Article
From supply chain to waste management, cities are trying to develop local circular economies.
6
Article
From China's sludge-to-energy program to South Africa's online waste exchange to India's biogas buses, global cities are creating better systems.
by Anne Maassen
7
Article
It's an ambitious plan to arrest urban flooding, but can it overcome local constraints?
by Asit Biswas
8
Article
Pay-for-success bonds backed by the Rockefeller Foundation and others seek to fund urban resilience projects.
9
Article
Many city leaders already are working to finance resilience projects through green bonds.
by David Hatch
10
Article
The $50 million bond will pay for transit improvements, energy-efficient street lighting and other climate-friendly upgrades.
11
Article
On this week's podcast: Is China taking over the green bond market? How will artificial intelligence revolutionize supply chains?
by Joel Makower
12
Article
A look into how L.A., New York City and Chicago are tackling their respective urban freshwater concerns.
13
Article
As sea levels rise, planners are looking at innovative ways to make Rotterdam and Hamburg more resilient.
14
Article
Designing our buildings and infrastructure to function like the natural ecosystems that preceded them.
15
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.
16
Article
Companies like MillerCoors and General Mills are at the forefront of influencing water supply chains in positive ways.
by Mark Tercek
17
Article
From Bangkok to Boston, explosive urban population growth and increasing pollution are compromising city water supplies.