Monday, January 17, 2011

Getting around might have just got more expensive...


The floods across Eastern Australia have one clear consequence (among others): they have savagely reduced the transport infrastructure that has been put into place over the last decade or so - a catch up of the previous decade's lack of investment. Now what? The ABC reports:
The Local Government Association of Queensland (LGAQ) estimates the floods will cost councils in excess of $1 billion. In Queensland, 51 of the 73 council areas have been disaster declared.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

The fine balance of local and global action

The conclusion of a report on a new co-operative venture between cities in Brazil, Mexico and California is well-put:
Research suggests that, while the growing experimentation with subnational climate-change responses is a result of a growing disillusionment with the international process, it is reliant on continued forms of international cooperation. For example, in the case of California, Chiapas and Acre, cooperation has been spurred by the emergence of carbon offsetting, carbon markets and the idea of REDD, all of which stem from the international arena and without which any subnational cooperation would be unthinkable. Ironically, then, subnational action on climate change is reliant on both the failure and the success of international cooperation, and it is likely that the fine balance between these two extremes will dictate the nature and extent of future subnational cooperation in this field.