Jared Blumenfeld: World Environment
Day 2005
When San Franciscans think about the environment,
they often think they have to leave the City to get
to it. Truth is, when it comes to our health, economy
and well-being, the City is our environment. And it's
the same the world over.
For the first time in history, the majority of the
world's people live in cities. Cities use 75
percent of the world's natural resources -
and discharge 75 percent of the waste. Today, cities
are tackling the world's most complex environmental
challenges. Successful environmental solutions will
have to engage cities in the process.
The importance of cities to global environmental
health is why promoters of the United Nations World
Environment Day (WED) chose "Green Cities: Where
the Future Lives" as its theme this year. World
Environment Day is celebrated every June in more than
100 countries where governments, individuals, organizations
and businesses participate in activities aimed at
improving the environment. Each year, the United Nations
selects a major city to host the celebrations. For
the first time in the event's 35-year history,
United Nations World Environment Day selected a U.S.
city to be the global host: San Francisco.
San Francisco and its metropolitan Bay Area, with
more than seven million inhabitants, can be counted
among the world's mega-cities. And while we
can benefit from the environmental lessons of others,
we also have much to share.
At 63 percent total recycling, no other U.S. city
of comparable density saves as much material from
landfills as San Francisco. The City has nearly 1,000
vehicles in its clean air fleet, establishing us as
a leader in alternative fuel vehicle technology. We
are leaders too in energy conservation and renewable
energy, with municipal funding sources in place to
underwrite solar panels and a program to test the
viability of non-polluting tidal power. Our landmark
environmental policies serve as models, nationally
and internationally.
To that end, San Francisco's World Environment
Day 2005 will bring together mayors of the world's
largest and most environmentally significant cities
to share best practices, establish universal benchmarks
of urban environmental progress and identify the tools
needed to achieve the targets. This collaborative
process will be formalized as the San Francisco Urban
Environmental Accords and may be the greatest legacy
of San Francisco's turn as WED host.
But there is more, because WED 2005 is designed to
educate and motivate all city dwellers - not
simply their mayors.
Each day of the five-day event will focus on a specific
environmental theme: Urban Power (energy, renewable
energy sources and energy conservation); Cities on
the Move (transportation); Redesigning Metropolis
(waste diversion and the built environment); Pure
Elements (food, water and air); and Flower Power (open
space, bio-diversity and greening the urban environment).
As the biggest international environmental gathering
to hit San Francisco in years, WED 2005 will present
hundreds of exciting, informative cultural and recreational
events. Highlights include Green Screen, an environmental
film festival sponsored by San Francisco State University;
California Tomorrow, a clean energy festival; and
the Green Cities Expo, a three-day show featuring
environmentally friendly products and services that
make it easy to incorporate sustainability into everyday
life.
Come to WED 2005, June 1-5. There is bound to be
something to inspire all Bay Area residents to improve
the environment. The promise of World Environment
Day 2005 is a healthier, greener urban life locally
- and globally. It's our responsibility
as citizens of San Francisco and the world to show
up and take action.
Jared Blumenfeld is director of SF Department
of the Environment. For a more comprehensive list
of World Environment Day activities, visit WED2005.org.