Cities worldwide are setting climate goals that are far more ambitious than the targets agreed upon by national governments, leading to clashes between urban leaders and national ones, Reuters reported Monday.
“Just over half the world’s population lives in urban areas, meaning municipalities will help to determine whether the historic shift from fossil fuels to cleaner energy agreed in Paris succeeds or fails,” Reuters notes. “But as many cities become more assertive, governments are reluctant to cede control.”
Oslo, for example, is battling Norway’s right-wing coalition government to enact an aggressive plan to cut the city’s carbon emissions.
The city is pushing “to more than halve the capital’s greenhouse gas emissions within four years to about 600,000 tons,” Reuters reports. “The plan for the city of 640,000 people includes car-free zones, ‘fossil-fuel-free building sites,’ high road tolls, and capturing greenhouse gases from the city’s waste incinerator.”
Yet the national government’s “Transport Ministry is dragging its feet” on the plan, introducing delays that have slowed the introduction of new tolls and car-free zones for months, Oslo’s deputy mayor told Reuters.
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