Articles by UEA members, and for UEA publications.
Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in these articles may not always represent
the views of Urban Ecology Australia or the newsletter editor.
2008
Reducing
Australia's Greenhouse Emissions through Urban Passenger Transport Reform
Michael Robertson
UEA Submission to the Garnaut Climate Change Review on
the topic of Transport, planning and the built environment
The world needs to reduce greenhouse emissions. What
should Australia do? First, try no regrets emissions reduction. For example
reducing urban passenger transport emissions, which will result in direct
cost savings and savings in kind.
Introducing Westwyk
Mike Hill
Westwyk is an eco-village development in Melbourne. How is it going?
What does it mean - clean and green?
Effie Best
How clean and green is non-GM canola?
Buying a house? Think environment!
Margaret Rohde
Buying a house is usually the most expensive purchase of a lifetime and the decision about where to buy has far reaching effects on family life and the environment.
Climate science, an Introduction.
Sophia van Ruth
It is fast becoming a very real possibility
that the climate system will not be able to regulate carbon dioxide well enough
anymore to maintain liveable global temperatures.
2007
Proposal
for Compact Urban Growth in Adelaide
Michael Robertson and Andrew Tidswell
UEA submission to Planning SA concerning proposed changes
to Adelaide's urban growth boundary.
Future urban growth in Adelaide should occur within established
urban areas, close to activity centres and along public transport corridors,
preferably within 10 km of the metropolitan centre. It should not occur
on the periphery of the metropolitan area, some 40 or 50 km from its centre.
Carbon
Offset Schemes - Can you trust them?
Michael Robertson
Households or organisations that have occasion to engage
in activities that result in significant greenhouse gas emissions may wish
to offset these emissions and so become “carbon neutral”. There
are various schemes that will offset your emissions for a price. But how
can you be sure you get what you pay for?
Ecological
Footprint (PDF)
Sharon Ede
What is an ecological footprint? How is it calculated?
What is overshoot? How many planets would be needed if everyone had the
ecological footprint of the average Australian?
Sick
Cities Make a Sick Planet
Chérie Hoyle
We’ve heard a lot about ‘sick buildings’,
but with global warming we need to talk about ‘sick cities’.
So what sort of questions do you ask to find out if your city is ‘sick’?
Proposal
for a Global Emission Permit Scheme
Michael Robertson
UEA submission to the Prime Ministerial Task Group on Emissions
Trading.
We need a globally coordinated, adequate response to
global warming, that puts a price on greenhouse emissions, uses the money
raised to fund technology development and other projects that will accelerate
the transition from a carbon-intensive to a low-carbon economy, and to
fund projects that will help human communities and natural ecosystems adapt
to climate change.
Responding
to Global Warming
Michael Robertson
Rapid global warming is disrupting human settlements
and natural ecosystems. By slowing global warming, and other measures,
we can help humans and nature adapt. We need the political capacity to,
as a community, face the challenge of global warming, negotiate solutions,
and reassign shared resources. And the creative capacity to develop and
apply technology.
A
Better Way to Sell Australian Coal
Michael Robertson
Currently, when you buy Australian coal, that’s
all you get - coal. But that doesn’t give us much of an advantage
over our competitors. We should throw in something extra, like help to “ kick
the coal habit”.
2006
Innovation
Culture - An Answer for Resource Constraints
Michael Robertson
In order to meet stringent restrictions on material resource
consumption and still have economic growth we need to develop new solutions
and apply existing solutions more rigorously. To this end we should develop
a society-wide culture of innovation.
2005
Time
for a New Story
Adam Johnstone (Village Well)
How can we move beyond the rhetoric, dropping our personal
agendas, and activate new measurements of sustainable progress? How do
we enrich the lives of our local communities, local businesses, youth and
elders? How can we access the knowledge, leadership, wisdom and creativity
in our communities?
Revitalising
Adelaide
Michael Robertson
Adelaide's urban environment can be improved by reducing
motor vehicle traffic, greening local streets and making them safer for
children, calming main roads, and revitalising urban centres with mixed
use development. (Shorter version of Revitalising Metropolitan Adelaide).
Revitalising
Metropolitan Adelaide
Michael Robertson
UEA submission for the Planning Strategy for South Australia.
Urban Ecology Australia recommends that Adelaide's urban
environment be improved by reducing motor vehicle traffic, greening local
streets and making them safer for children, calming main roads, and revitalising
urban centres with mixed use development.
Energy
Efficiency - Cushioning against Future Energy Price Rises
Michael Robertson
Australia needs more investment in energy conserving
infrastructure so that households and businesses are not caught by rising
energy prices over the next ten or twenty years.
Canberra
Cohousing
Craig Downsborough
Canberra Cohousing Association is a group that plans
to create intentional communities in urban Canberra. We are currently negotiating
to obtain a suitable site in Gungahlin, Canberra, for our first cohousing
development, which will contain 26 environmentally friendly townhouses.
Using
Cycling to Take Cars Off the Road
Michael Robertson
Encouraging urban cycling can help reduce density of
car traffic on urban roads. But we need to address the safety of urban
roads, both main roads and local streets.
A
Draft Proposal for a Car Share Scheme for Adelaide
Joan Carlin
Proposal: That a CarShare scheme be set up in Adelaide
- in the first instance in the South West corner of the city. Similar schemes
operate in many European and US cities and now in Sydney and in Melbourne.
A
Long Time to Change: Why Is There Only One Christie Walk in Adelaide?
Andrew Tidswell
Many housing developments of a similar scale are being
constructed, but none with anything like the environmental or community
credentials of Christie Walk. With so much good publicity and commendation
why havent more like it been developed? With so many visitors on
site tours commenting favourably, why haven t more like it been designed
or demanded?
Are
Biofuels the Answer?
Joan Carlin
Shifting the public transport fleet onto biodiesel might
be a good idea, but how feasible is it to shift the entire transport fleet
onto biofuel?
Household
Air Conditioners - How to Reduce Their Incidence and Use
Michael Robertson
Increasing use of air conditioners in Australian cities
is putting strain on local electricity transmission infrastructure and
is adding to greenhouse gas emission from fossil-fuel powered electricity
generators.
Good
Urban Design in Adelaide
Douglas Clarke
Examples of good urban design in and around Adelaide.
2004
Inner
City Residential Energy Performance
Monica Oliphant
UEA Report for SENRAC.
Data collected on energy consumption comparing homes
at Christie Walk with more typical South Australian homes shows that Christie
Walk homes consume less electricity and gas, and therefore causes fewer
CO2 emissions, per occupant, than the average South Australian home.
Christmas has a huge environmental impact but there are alternatives
to over-consumption while still entering into the spirit of the season. You
could choose not to give a gift, or give recycled or home produced gifts
and if buying new goods, consider the environmental and social impact of
your purchase.
The
Geopolitics of Emissions Reduction.
Michael Robertson
Alarmed by the prospect of global warming, a number of
countries may sign up to a "Beyond Kyoto" Protocol with the aim
of stabilising world greenhouse emissions for the next 30 years (after
which they will be reduced). But what happens if the United States doesn't
join up, and refuses to significantly cut back its emissions? Two measures
could be used: moral pressure and trade sanctions.
Compensating
Nature for Loss of Land and Water Resources
Michael Robertson
Over the last two centuries, more and more land and water
has been diverted from natural ecosystems for human use. But can humans
compensate for this? Without simply returning to nature all land and water
currently diverted, can we make up for the loss by maximising the value
to nature of the land and water that remain to its use?
Gaviotas
-"Reinventing the World" in Colombia
Ron Nicholls
Designed to be self-sufficient, Gaviotas has produced
many innovative, cost-effective projects and made them available as viable
alternatives for social and economic development in both rural and urban
areas. The community has implemented advanced examples of zero emissions
principles and practice and continues to illustrate that these principles
are the only way to secure the long-term success of both economic and environmental
initiatives.
Lessons
from Our Travels
John Boland & Chris Bryant
The whole of Cuba has embraced organic agriculture. In
about 1990, some Australian permaculturists spent some time in Cuba working
with people setting up permaculture systems. It was then adopted as a model
for the country. In Germany the large barns that house the livestock in
the winter often have 3-4 kW of photovoltaic cells on them. Why? Because
Germany has signed the Kyoto agreement, and so it is worth it to the country
to subsidise those generators who can provide clean energy. So the PV cells
on the barns are an investment for the farmers, just as much as their dairy
cows.
Sustainable
Cities Public Hearing - UEA Convenor's Report
Matt Fisher
Representatives of UEA were invited to participate in
a public hearing with members of the House of Representatives Environment
Committee as part of their Sustainable Cities Inquiry. We discussed how
to get from ideas to reality, and how the government might provide leadership
by funding the development of significant working examples of sustainable
urban practices.
Celebrating
Adelaide Using Urban Greenspace
Michael Robertson
What is distinct about Australian cities that tourists
marvel at and travel half-way around the world to see? It is our unique
fauna and flora, including melifluous birds and expressive, sinuous trees.
We should put them up-front and centre on our main city streets.
Unpaving
Streets to Create Urban Greenspace
Michael Robertson
Many streets in Adelaide are wider than needed for current
traffic levels. With little inconvenience to traffic, councils could take
up half the space in many streets and restore them to greenspace.
Can
the Revegetation of South Australia Start in Your Garden?
Glenn Christie
Massive scale planting is required to reverse the damage
caused by land-clearing. But to take the tonnes of seed required out of
remnant bush would have huge environmental impacts on native fauna food
chains. Household gardens planted with local native plants can be sources
of local native seed, and can build a knowledge base for the creation and
management of larger scale seed orchards.
Urban
Forest - One Million Trees Program
Hugh Kneebone
The Urban Forest's One Million Trees initiative aims
to redress the loss of local native biodiversity across metropolitan Adelaide.
Over a thousand hectares of suitable open space will be planted with a
mixture of local trees, bushes and ground-covers creating new urban woodlands
as well as helping to buffer, link and protect existing remnant bushland.
Trees
for Life - Bush for Life Program
Rita Reitano
Remnant vegetation in South Australia needs protecting.
It has been heavily cleared and fragmented. The Bush For Life program is
now protecting 293 sites of conservation significance with the help of
700 volunteers.
Vegetarian
Diets: How Sustainable?
Barbara Sheppard
Eating meat can be sustainable, if the meat is sourced
from kangaroos, whose abundant numbers roam the country without damaging
the soil, or from plague locusts, harvested for food rather than killed
by pesticides.
Considerations
in Reducing Fossil Fuel Use
Michael Robertson
To reduce demand for fossil fuel use and optimise economic,
social and environmental benefits, we should accomodate lifestyle and business
aspirations.
Urban
Ecology Australia's Energy Auditing Service
Margaret Rohde
As an energy auditor for UEA, the challenge has been
to help people understand how their lifestyle affects their electricity
bills. Getting a bill once every three months means that the actions contributing
to the bill are long forgotten.
Bioregionalism:
A Context for Sustainable Patterns of Living
Ron Nicholls
Identifying the region in which we live as a bioregion
- a geographically defined area that embraces a local ecosystem - can create
a space for a new social behavior that promotes and enriches natural systems
and relationships.
2003
Sustainable
Cities 2025: A Blueprint for the Future
Matt Fisher and Michael Robertson
UEA submission to the Australian Parliament House of Representatives
Inquiry into Sustainable Cities.
Sustainable cities allow people to have a good quality
of life in balance with nature by integrating social, economic and environmental
factors on a community scale. To begin the conversion of existing cities
to a sustainable cities, UEA recommends concentrated change to selected
urban sites to create working examples that will change public perceptions
and aspirations, and to develop a skills and industry base for conversion
on a larger scale.
Ideas
for Sustainable Cities
Michael Robertson
We should turn our talents and creative energies to developing
cities that provide good quality of life with minimal material consumption,
that restore natural habitats and strengthen human communities. Luckily,
these are goals that can be pursued simultaneously.
Cohousing
- Socially and Environmentally Sustaining
Guy Dundas
Communities intended primarily as great places to grow
up, grow old, or grow veges often turn out to be showpieces of environmental
design. The desire for social connection creates a concern for the health
of the living environment of the community.
The
Somerville Ecovillage
Paul Antonelli
Ecovillages are about more than living sustainably. They
create that sense of place within a community that we all crave and need.
Ecovillages are our hope for the future by recreating what we once had.
Ecological
Design - Some Questions and Answers
Paul Downton responds to some questions on ecological
design from Michelle Breton, a Year 12 student at Salisbury East High School.
Ecopolis
Development Principles
Paul Downton
Ten principles by which to repair, replenish and support
the processes that maintain life and so minimise ecological footprints
and maximise human potential.
UEA
Submission to Draft South Australian Transport Plan
Michael Pilling
We need to focus on equity and accessibility in transport
planning, and not over-rely on technical fixes.
2002
Cities
for a Greenhouse World
Paul Downton
Turning our cities into "sustainable communities" is
a key response to the social and environmental challenges of adapting to
a greenhouse world.
Do
We Fit On The Planet?
Sharon Ede
Sustainability, food systems and the ecological footprint.
Can
Adelaide Become a City for People not Cars?
Joan Carlin
Professor Jan Gehl's ideas for improving public space
in Adelaide.
2007.10.24