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CTV: TO Among Cities to Go Green Under Clinton Plan (City Hall Refit?)

AlvinofDiaspar

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From CTV Toronto:

T.O. among cities to go green under Clinton plan
Updated Wed. May. 16 2007 2:16 PM ET

Toronto is among 15 cities that will be cutting carbon emissions through a project spearheaded and funded by former U.S. president Bill Clinton's foundation.

The green makeover plan to be unveiled by Clinton in New York on Wednesday afternoon calls for the renovation and retrofitting of city-owned buildings with the latest energy-saving technology.

Changes include replacing heating, cooling and lighting systems with energy-efficient networks, and the project also calls for roofs to be replaced with white or reflective material to deflect the sun's heat.

Clinton's foundation says the planned changes could cut energy use by 20 to 50 per cent. The reduction could mean a significant decrease in heat-trapping carbon emissions, as well as cost savings on utility bills.

Toronto Mayor David Miler, who is attending the C40 Large Cities Climate Summit, says the city will receive tens of millions of dollars to implement the changes.

"It'll make an enormous difference," Miller told CTV's Tim Weber over the noon hour.

"The big difference in Toronto comes from the fact that our biggest single contributor of the greenhouse gases is heating and cooling our old buildings. It's about 60 per cent of Toronto's contribution."

Some private buildings in the city will also undergo the makeover, which will help rejuvenate neighbourhoods, Miller said.

"It will improve people's lives, it will bring significant employment and it will reduce energy consumption, and therefore positively affect climate change," he said.

Major global banking institutions have committed US$1 billion to finance the upgrades in participating cities, which include New York, Chicago, Houston, London, Berlin, Mexico City and Tokyo, according to the Associated Press.

Buildings contribute largely to emissions. In New York, for example, the consumption of electricity, natural gas, fuel oil and steam needed to operate buildings generates 79 per cent of the city's total carbon count.

Ira Magaziner, chairman of the Clinton Climate Initiative, said cities and private building owners want to renovate with more energy efficiency, but often cannot pay for the startup costs.

"By bringing together cities and partnering with the private sector, President Clinton and the Clinton foundation are providing the tools to help cities achieve our goals," New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a statement.

The other cities are Rome; Karachi, Pakistan; Seoul, South Korea; Bangkok, Thailand; Melbourne, Australia; Sao Paolo, Brazil; and Johannesburg, South Africa.

The foundation expects the partnership to eventually expand to more cities and companies.

The makeover agreement comes during the second meeting of the C40 Large Cities Climate Summit. During the first meeting on Tuesday, mayors and local leaders said it was up to them to take action on climate change because federal governments are failing in that respect.

Cities cover less than one per cent of the Earth's surface but are responsible for generating 80 per cent of greenhouse gases, officials say.

With files from The Associated Press

AoD
 
participating cities, which include ... Houston"

*double-take*

Nay, *triple-take*!

Kudos to them, and to all other participants as well - the dam has now truly broken (FINALLY!) wrt this issue...
 
Great news for T.O.! Amazing that we don't even really have to pay for it!

I would'nt hold your breath on this one. I'm highly skeptical when I hear politicians from other countries wanting to give Toronto money to retrofit its buildings. Sounds like a PR stunt to me and our Mayor took the bait. It's kinda embarrassing watching our mayor bend over so freely when there is a quick buck to be had. :rolleyes:
 
Not nearly as quick to bend over as some members of the electorate on the promise of tax cuts, courtesy of certain politicians here in this country.

AoD
 
It's a low-interest loan, I believe, along with private-sector contributions. The city gets the money to retrofit the buildings, then it pays some of it back from the energy savings.

Sounds like a PR stunt to me and our Mayor took the bait.

That sounds like the musings of Sue-Ann Levy. Richard M. Daley, Ken Livingstone, Michael Bloomberg (a Republican!) and the mayors of Rome, Tokyo, Berlin and other first class cities took the bait too. Does that make the whole lot ass-kissers and opportunistic?
 
Not nearly as quick to bend over as some members of the electorate on the promise of tax cuts, courtesy of certain politicians here in this country.

Also not as quickly as some politicans in this country and others that bend over when current US Presidents want to go to war in foreign countries. Clinton's offering us something potentially very worthwhile. What has Bush I or II given us?
 
I went on the carbon calculator website and was surprised to find that the average Torontonian emits less CO2 than the average New Yorker. This may have something to do with the fact that New Yorkers are the most wasteful people on the planet (according to Futurama!), where stores with AC leave their doors wide open in the summertime and they throw glass bottles in the garbage.
 
That Futurama episode was great - the audio commentary said that they were going to make the core of the great big ball of garbage full of IKEA furniture, which I wish was included. I guess IKEA was a big advertiser on Fox at the time.

I miss that show.
 
Sean - you'll be very happy to know that there will be a new 2008 season for Futurama! Very good news if you ask me...

42
 
I don't know... I have mixed feelings about Family Guy's return. Futurama's may turn out the same way.
 

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