International post doctoral research fellowship programme final report title of the research



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2219
INTERNATIONAL POST DOCTORAL RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMME
FINAL REPORT

TITLE OF THE RESEARCH : CLIMATE CHANGE AND URBANIZATION IN NEW YORK CITY: EFFECTS AND IMPLICATIONS

RESEARCHER NAME: ASSOC. PROF. DR. ELİF ÇOLAKOĞLU
DIRECTOR NAME: PROF. REBECCA BRATSPIES



GENERAL INFORMATION



RESEARCH TITLE

CLIMATE CHANGE AND URBANIZATION IN NEW YORK CITY: EFFECTS AND IMPLICATIONS





RESEARCHER NAME

ASSOC. PROF. DR. ELİF ÇOLAKOĞLU





RESEARCH FIELD

URBANIZATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES





RESEARCH DURATION

FROM JUNE TO SEPTEMBER 2013






Final Report Format:


  1. Introduction

Today, more than before, the changing global climate is defined as a new, direct and multifaceted issue threatening national security all over the world. Considering the effects of climate change, especially through extreme weather events, the situation seems quite serious. The future of humankind and our planet may be in jeopardy due to it. Storms, droughts, forest fires and floods have caused environmental impairments and longer-lasting drought not recycled and this situation has adversely affected the food, water and sanitation security of millions of people and mass migration has happened for more than a decade. The most devastating effects of these problems are those affecting developing countries which have scarce natural resources and limited facilities to adapt to these challenges caused by climate change. They are state’s most costly and destructive natural disaster. Conversely, it is possible that the problems created by climate change can lead to conflicts and tensions among the states and communities, especially in the world’s most unstable regions, as well as threatening economic and political stability, peace and tranquility.

When the U.N. report1 explains that the world population has passed about 7 billion and that more than half of this population lives in cities, it highlights changes and trends about threats we will face. Cities have responsibility for 75 percent of the total global energy consumption and that is, for 80 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas (“GHG”) emissions2. Moreover, the world population is expected to reach 10 billion of this by 2100, an increase of nearly 50 percent from today’s population of 7 billion3. GHG effect is felt rather in cities and has turned to be an environmental problem as a result of human activities. Because of this pollution, especially in these cities, urban heat islands occur as a result of the effect of inversion. These heat islands occur since cities get warmer than the rural areas as a result of unplanned and distorted urbanization, and it becomes a source of environmental problems from which many environmental consequences emerge.

Thus, cities and local governments that are directly affected by this process are required to cope with the natural disasters such as thirst and sudden floods – for example the European heatwave of 2003 caused 35,000 deaths, Hurricane Katrina in the U.S. in August 2005, Myanmar’ Cyclone Nargis disaster in May 20084, the 2010 heavy floods in Pakistan5, and long-term droughts in the Amazon Basin, Australia and East Africa.6 Given that this process is so rapid in cities like Istanbul, Ankara, and Bursa that grows rapidly the inventory of GHG in the cities in Turkey must be documented as soon as possible and the re-creation of energy, agriculture and water resources must be realized, and management and planning of reduction targets should be specified and monitored. With urban infrastructure regulations created in this framework, sustainable and livable cities can be created. Sustainable cities are the locations that make socio-economic benefits available to citizens in accordance with environmental and energy concerns in order to ensure the sustainability of the rural change and development. Developments in these cities are planned to parallel sustainable social development. Accordingly, necessary measures to be taken regarding reduction and restriction of carbon emission rate used in the prevention of climate change are important in the process of creating a sustainable city.

One of New York City’s (“NYC”) best practices for tackling climate change and the creating sustainable city is the NYC administration and its applications. The Administration comes forward particularly in this regard to commissioning expert scientific advice, formulating policy goals, setting standards and developing new institutions for environmental governance and sustainability7, although the City faces as a result of more frequent heavy precipitation, sea level rise and rising temperatures which are climate change-related challenges. Hurricane Sandy, which occurred in October of 2012, can be an important touchstone for that and also, is a clear example for need to tackle climate change. Because this Hurricane struck and swept through the Caribbean and up the East Coast of the nation, it was the deadliest and most destructive hurricane of the 2012 Atlantic hurricane season, besides the second-costliest hurricane in the nation history. It affected 24 states, including the entire eastern seaboard from Florida to Maine and west across the Appalachian Mountains to Michigan and Wisconsin, with especially severe damage in New Jersey and New York, and caused the death of hundreds of people. Its storm surge hit NYC, flooding streets, tunnels and subway lines and cutting power in and around the city. In affected region, over 7,000 transformers and 15,200 poles were damaged and fuel pumps at gas stations did not work due to power outages and lack of back-up generation8. It caused large financial losses; over $50 billion in damage in the nation, total surpassed only by Hurricane Katrina. Hurricane Sandy is the nation’s most expensive storm since Hurricane Katrina, which caused $128 billion in damage, according to the 2013 data9, and this mainly will be paid by federal funds, but many other tax bills will reflect to the public10. Despite all this, the author believes the NYC Administration was protected from the possible more adverse results because of the measures taken to increase the NYC’s resilience to extreme weathers.



Our study examines policies and programs related to GHG emissions arising in NYC within the scope of the efforts local governments to ensure urban sustainability against the climate change. This study shows how the NYC’s climate policy developed in the context of a comprehensive long-term sustainability plan and model, which is PlaNYC, since 2002. The NYC Administration stands out in challenging climate change, and its initiatives are the examples of best practices at the municipal level. In this framework, our study consists of three sections. The first section discusses NYC’s administrative structure in the light of current studies. This section also provides climate change projections for NYC and identifies some of the potential risks to the city’s critical infrastructure posed by climate change. In the second section, NYC’s policies and measures for the realization of goals set for its GHG emissions reduction are analyzed. In the third and final section, local legal documents determining the City’s climate policy and offering significant opportunities for implementation is examined.



  1. Studies in report terms




  1. Term: Evaluation in the light of Current Studies related to Effects of Climate Change at the City of New York

In the first term, the City’s government policies based on greenhouse gas emissions inventory to determine of the carbon footprint related to the City generally were evaluated. The effects of climate change at New York City with interpretation of available data were exposed. It was exposed why this City especially tend to this problem.

  1. Term: National and International Legal Documents

After the studies related to greenhouse gas emissions inventory were examined, national and international legal documents providing implementation of these politics. They, at these documents which arising from demand of creating some common rules and standards, are included in detailed information about at energy, transportation, housing, public health etc. Thus, it is be becoming important if they are included in these studies.

  1. Term: Adopt Measures Taken in the Direction of Mitigation Target

In this term, politics and measures determined at the City level in order to achieving the targets mentioned were analyzed. Here is to find answers to questions related to what can be done, and what measures can be applied for greenhouse gas emissions reduction in New York City. In this context, it was included in executed strategies and policies and measures related to sustainable energy politics, transportation, housing, urban planning and land use, waste management, sustainable use of water resources and forests as a whole. In other words, it was exposed what is done issues such as dissemination of clean and renewable energy, encouragement for abandonment of fossil fuel consumption, dissemination and increasing the use of photovoltaic systems in buildings, give place to more green space with new land use planning, afforestation and increasing the reafforestation, prevention of deforestation, more efficient public transportation by new transportation planning and regulation of infrastructure for pedestrian and bicycle transportation, development and dissemination of hybrid electric vehicles, recycling and reuse of solid waste to man-made emission mitigation and reproduction and strengthening of carbon holder medium (sinks). And then, the results of the implementation process were also included because of emerge from to what extent can be accessed at determinated targets for greenhouse gas emissions targets.


  1. Term: Final Report Writing

In the fourth term, generally New York City’s climate policy was evaluated, analyzed and interpreted in city-wide, and the final report was written.


  1. Research results




  1. Addressing climate change of the New York City administration

To begin dealing with risks posed by changing climate, NYC administration11, or rather the Bloomberg administration has needed to take concrete steps to protect the City’s vulnerability to climate change since 2002. The NYC administration with regard to climate change and adaptation12 has focused on managing and reducing effectively the City’s emissions. Till today, the NYC administration has actively applied and pursued programs, and legal and policy measures to reduce emissions of GHG emissions, with mostly 30 percent below current levels by 2030. But the administrations who served in the previous terms13 had taken no action on this issue14, despite their acceptance of the existence of climate change as a problem. For example, the Giuliani administration (1994-2001) opposed clearly mandatory limits on GHG emissions15. Thus, this study discusses only the policies and practices covering the period of Mayor Michael Bloomberg (2002-Incumbent), who was positioning the city to be a leader and a driving force in addressing climate change and sustainability planning.

1.1 Background: About New York City’s territory and population…

Located in the northeastern United States (U.S.) in the Middle Atlantic Census Division, the U.S. state of New York is bounded west and north by Canada with Lake Erie, Lake Ontario and the St Lawrence River forming the boundary; east by Vermont, Massachusetts and Connecticut, southeast by the Atlantic, south by New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The State covers a land area of 47,126 square miles (122,057 km²) and ranks as the 27th largest state by size.16 Its census population in 2012 was 19.570.261 million, about 7 percent of national population.17 NYC is its largest city. With more than 8 million people18 as of 2012, constituting about 84 percent of the total state population, NYC is one of the most populous cities in the nation; with a population notably greater than the combined totals of Los Angeles and Chicago, and higher than the San Francisco Bay Area’s metropolitan total19. It is referred to as “New York City” or “the City of New York” to distinguish it from the U.S. state of New York, of which it is a part, located at the center of the New York Metropolitan Area. Also, located on one of the world’s largest natural harbors, NYC is the gateway to the North American continent, as well as the preferred exit to the oceans of the globe20.



On the other hand, NYC has an area of 302.64 square miles (783.8 km2), consists of five boroughs21—The Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, and Staten Island—, each of which is a county of the State of New York.22 The Bronx (Bronx County), the NYC’s northernmost borough, is separated from Manhattan (to the south and west) by the narrow Harlem River and is further bordered by Westchester County (north), Hudson River (west), the East River (south), and Long Island Sound (east)23. Brooklyn (Kings County), southeastern New York, is the city’s most populous borough and is known for its cultural diversity, an independent art scene, distinct neighborhoods and unique architectural heritage. It is separated from Manhattan by the East River and is bordered by the Upper and Lower New York bays (west), the Atlantic Ocean (south), and the borough of Queens (north and east).24 Brooklyn on its own would be the 4th largest city in the U.S.25. The other borough is Manhattan (New York County) in southeastern the State of New York. Considered one of the world’s foremost administrative, business, financial, and cultural centers, Manhattan is bounded by the Hudson River (west), Harlem River and Spuyten Duyvil Creek (northeast), East River (east), and Upper New York Bay (south)26. Queens (Queens County) is southeastern New York and lies on Long Island east of Brooklyn and extends across the width of the island from the junction of the East River and Long Island Sound to the Atlantic Ocean27. Staten Island (Richmond County) lies in New York Harbor south of Manhattan and between New Jersey and Brooklyn28. It is the least populated of the five boroughs with 470,728 people in 201229, but is the third borough spreads over 30,734 acres30 in NYC.

    1. Observed trends for temperature, precipitation sea level rise and extreme events in New York City

NYC has a temperate and continental climate, along with hot and humid summers and cold winters. An annual average air temperature from 1971 to 2000 was approximately 55 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the records. Its climate is depicted by substantial precipitation amounts range between approximately 43 and 50 inches in all months of the year.31 However the trends in temperature, precipitation and sea levels have risen overall throughout the century, despite of interannual and decadal variations. Observational records show that spring is arriving sooner, summers are growing hotter, and winters are becoming warmer and less snowy. NYC’s mean annual temperature and precipitation increased, respectively, 4.4 °F and 7.7 inches from 1900 to 2011. Moreover, a long and intense heat wave during the summer of 2006 caused 40 heat stroke deaths, most of them elderly, in NYC, according to a report32. NPCC2’ 2013 report update finds that mean annual temperatures and precipitation are, in turn, projected by global climate models to increase by 2.0 – 3.0°F and 0 – 10 percent by next seven year33. Sea level in a large fraction of NYC and the surrounding region has also risen 1.1 feet due to land subsidence, with the remaining sea level rise driven by climate-related factors since 1900 and infrastructure in these areas is vulnerable to coastal flooding during major storm events from inland flooding and coastal storm surges34. It is not definite due to high natural variability and limited record length35, but this sea level rise occurring over time increased the extent and the magnitude of coastal flooding during storms. Several previous studies36 have also confirmed the claim that sea levels continue to rise globally, along with higher local rates of rise in the Northeast U.S. during this century and therefore, NYC can expect dramatic changes in climate over the course of this century, with significant impacts on the NYC’s economy, environment and quality of life. All observed climate information and trends poses significant risks to NYC’s communities and infrastructure.

Hurricanes and tropical storms are rare in NYC, but they are always possible and do in fact occur with long-term frequency. This is because the history of hurricanes in NYC is a very old and hurricanes have affected NYC since the 17th century. The greatest and deadliest storm, known as the Long Island Express, was the 1938 New England Hurricane, which struck over Long Island and into New England as a Category 3 hurricane, killing nearly 200 people. This storm led to millions of dollars in damage, and its floods knocked out electrical power in all areas above 59th Street in Manhattan and in all of the Bronx, the new IND subway line lost power, and 100 large trees in Central Park were destroyed. The other major storms in the past are 1821 Hurricane which was one of the only hurricanes believed to have passed directly over parts of modern NYC; Hurricane Carol in 1954 which was the destructive hurricane that hit the Northeast coast as a Category 3 hurricane over Long Island, New York and Connecticut on the 31st of August; Hurricane Agnes in June 1972 which was responsible for 122 deaths and  $2.1 billion  in damage in the U.S.; Hurricane Gloria in September 1985 resulted in extensive damage; Hurricane Floyd in September 1999 which caused the majority of the $3 to 6 billion in damage; Hurricane Irene in August 2011 led to the major damage was caused by flooding the City’s upstate water supply system; and Hurricane Sandy in late October 2012.37 By now it is clear that these hurricanes hit NYC very infrequently and high-intensity, mostly between July and October. But NYC is also vulnerable to sea level rise, which may lead to a marked increase in extreme flood levels in the long-term.38 Therefore, especially Hurricane Sandy has taken attention on the effects that such extreme climate events have on NYC, reminding and showing New Yorkers that the city is vulnerable to be a range of uncertain and potentially climate hazards today and in the future. Moreover, a new report which released in July 201339 explains that a coastal flooding resulting from accelerating sea level rise and storm surge is projected to occur 10 times as often by 2100. By 2050, these effects on NYC could be even more severe than previously thought, putting more people at risk from increasingly frequent, intense, and longer heat waves in duration and coastal floods in frequency, extent, and height as a result of increased sea levels due to extreme events40, and approximately 43 miles of NYC’s coastline which stretches a total of 520 miles – 8 percent of the city’s total excluding beaches and wetlands – could be at risk daily or weekly tidal inundation during non-storm conditions41.

1.3 Climate change adaptation as a challenge and opportunity for New York City

New York City’s Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability (OLTPS) formed as part of the Mayor’s Office by the Bloomberg administration in 200642. The Office, as a comprehensive and important step toward climate change adaptation, launched a report titled PlaNYC43 after one year. PlaNYC was a comprehensive and long-term sustainability plan comprised of 127 initiatives in the key areas of land, water, transportation, energy, air and climate change. Since then, the plan was updated in 2011 and has been expanded to 132 initiatives and more than 400 specific milestones to prepare the city for one million more residents, strengthen the economy, combat climate change, and enhance the quality of life for all New Yorkers for December 2013.44 The Office has accepted that the challenges related to climate change are a part of sustainable development goals.

Under the umbrella of NYC’s sustainability plan, PlaNYC, the Bloomberg administration has carried out a wide range of innovative initiatives45, including the Greener Greater Buildings Plan, Clean Heat Program, Climate Resilience Initiatives, Million Trees program, Green Infrastructure Plan, and the others to increase NYC’s resilience to the effects of climate change during the this time, as shown in Appendix Table 1. NYC is becoming more energy efficient with these initiatives. For example, only as more buildings comply with the GGBP and as the code proposals of the NYC Green Codes Task Force are fully enacted, it is expected that these efficiency gains would increase, and could yield more than a 10 percent GHG emissions reduction by 2030. This success has largely based on improvements in the NYC’ energy supply changes. According to 2013 data, NYC’s annual GHG emissions over 2005 emissions have dropped 16 percent - more than halfway to its goal of a 30 percent reduction by 2030. For this, the Bloomberg administration has spent 10 percent of their annual energy budget - approximately $80 million - on funding energy efficiency measures in city government buildings so far.46 A recent proposal from the Bloomberg administration for NYC alone is priced at $20 billion47.

A The Greener, Greater Buildings Plan

NYC’s buildings account for about 75 percent of carbon emissions. They are the largest single source of energy use and emissions48, and this leads to $15 million per year in energy costs. The city has 22,000 buildings, which are mostly concentrated in Manhattan, over 50,000 square feet, according to the records. To reduce energy consumption and make the energy systems of the city cleaner and more reliable, NYC enacted the Greener, Greater Buildings Plan (GGBP) legislative package in December 200949.

GGBP is comprised of four local laws50 supplemented by job training opportunities and financing entity called the New York City Energy Efficiency Corporation (NYCEEC). The regulations consist of Local Law 85 (NYC Energy Conservation Code), Local Law 84 (Energy and Water Benchmarking), Local Law 87 (Energy Audits and Retro-commissioning) and Local Law 88 (Lighting Upgrades and Sub-metering). Based on the New York State Energy Code, Local Law 85 is the City’s local energy code and its provisions apply to all renovations and repairs since its adoption in 2009. Its goal is to ensure that NYC’s building stock provides the benefits of energy efficiency during the natural cycles of building upgrades. Local Law 84 is the annual requirement to benchmark energy and water consumption and requires owners of large buildings to do this. About 3,000 buildings including libraries, police stations, firehouses, schools, courthouses, health, community and family centers, and government offices have been benchmarked by the NYC Department of Citywide Administrative Services, with 28 agencies, since 200951. Local Law 87 requires energy audits and retro-commissioning for large buildings which must be fulfilled for all the base building systems, consisting of HVAC, electrical and lighting, conveying systems, domestic hot water, and building envelope. Local Law 88 requires the lighting in the non-residential space be upgraded to meet code and large commercial tenants be provided with sub-meters by 2025.52

By 2030, this comprehensive plan to improve energy-efficiency in existing buildings is estimated to reduce citywide GHG emissions from new and existing buildings by at least 5.3 percent53, have a net savings of $7 billion, and create roughly 17,800 construction-related jobs over 10 years54. GGBP was developed together with PlaNYC55, and has been implemented successfully. This is because, by August 2011, almost two-thirds of covered buildings had complied in the framework GGBP56. For this, NYC is also applied to use $16 million of the $80 million in Federal stimulus funding allocated to the city under the program of Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant for this direct lending program57. Lastly, the NYC Building Resiliency Task Force released the report which has a wide range of proposals for making NYC buildings and residents safer and better prepared for the next extreme weather event on June 27, 201358.

B NYC Clean Heat Program

NYC Clean Heat Program provides free resources to help buildings with technical assistance59 and financing options convert to the cleanest heating fuels – including natural gas and biodiesel60 – from heavy heating no. 6 and no. 4 oil more quickly, beginning in July 2012. NYC Department of Environmental Protection passed the relevant regulations in April 2011. PlaNYC’s goal is to reduce 2 percent of NYC’s emissions, about 1.3 million metric tons, by the end of 2013 through this Program 61. Achieving this goal will also help to improve air quality and save lives. NYC’s air pollution leads to nearly 6 percent of annual deaths each year62. For this program, NYC launched more than $100 million in financing to encourage buildings to convert to cleaner heating fuel in June 201263.



C Climate Resilience Initiatives

Since 2007, the Bloomberg administration has notably taken actions to increase its resilience due to NYC’s vulnerable structure which is surrounded by 520 miles of coastline, more than Miami, Boston, Los Angeles and San Francisco combined64, against climate events. All these initiatives and preventions for rebuilding and fortifying made NYC better informed and prepared for Hurricane Sandy, but also revealed the extent of its vulnerabilities65, as mentioned previously.

Before taking action, the Bloomberg Administration convened the New York City Panel on Climate Change (NPCC1). The Panel consists of leading climate change scientist, academics, and insurance, risk management and legal experts, with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, in August of 2008. The main purpose of NPCC1 as the technical advisory body is to develop a clear scientific understanding of the risks-based response to climate change and possible impacts to the city’s infrastructure, built environment, and population. Overseen by the Mayor’s Office of Long Term Planning and Sustainability, the panel’s analyses are key part of challenging climate change for the success of new initiatives from policy development to implementation, and provide facts on these issues. The NPCC1 found that NYC could encounter up to 2.5 feet of sea-level rise, almost as many 90 degree days and double to triple the probability of 100-year flood of today66. In February of 2009, the Panel released the most detailed climate risk information for the city at the NPCC1 Report published in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. To ensure long-term sustainability, ad hoc adaptation to extreme climate events are not enough, and both public and private sectors should make investments to minimize these risks mentioned.67 And then, the administration convened over 40 public and private infrastructure operators as part of a climate change adaptation task force, the NYC’s Climate Change Adaptation Task Force (CCATF)68, to develop an inventory of risks to the NYC’s critical systems, which it completed next year, to begin addressing the risks mentioned at the report, and to coordinate between the various regional, state, and federal agencies.69



In September 2012, NYC enacted Local Law 42 that established the NPCC1 as an ongoing body which meets at least twice a year, advises the NYC and the CCATF on the latest scientific developments and updates climate projections at least every three years, starting from March 2013. Following the Hurricane Sandy in October 2012, the administration reconvened secondly the New York City Panel on Climate Change (NPCC2) in January 2013 to provide current and future information and analyses concerning climate risks facing NYC for use in the Special Initiative for Rebuilding and Resiliency (SIRR), and to begin work on a new assessment. The NPCC2 which follows the risk management approach70 developed in NPCC1 released the NPCC Climate Risk Information report update published in June 2013. Using the latest climate models, recent observations about climate trends, and new information about GHG emissions, the NPCC2 now projects that by 2050s, sea level rises of up to 11 to 24 inches are projected.71
Figure 1: Organizational structure for quantify the impacts of climate change


Mayor’s Office of Long Term Planning & Sustainability



Sustainability Advisory Board

Academia

  • NASA/Columbia

  • CISC/CUNY

  • City Tech/CUNY

  • Columbia – Lamont

  • Columbia University

  • NYU

  • Rutgers University

  • SUNY – Stony Brook

  • Wesleyan/UCS

Private Industry

  • AIG

  • Hoguet Newman Regal & Kenney, LLP

  • Oliver Wyman/Accenture

  • Swiss Re

left-right-up arrow 7


Climate Change Adaptation Task Force (CCATF)






The Rockefeller Foundation




Source: Adam Freed, Building Climate Resiliency in New York City, (http://www.ucar.edu/governance/meetings/oct09/followup/freed.pdf), (last visited July 12, 2013)

Figure 2: Organizational structure for quantify the impacts of climate change

Mayor’s Office of Long Term Planning & Sustainability

Sustainability Advisory Board

Climate Change Adaptation Task Force (CCATF)

NYC Panel on Climate Change (NPCC2)
left-right-up arrow 21



City Agencies

  • Department of Buildings

  • Department of City Planning

  • Department of Design and Construction

  • Department of Environmental Protection

  • Department of Health

  • Department of Law

  • Department of Parks & Recreation

  • Department of Sanitation

  • Department of Transportation

  • Economic Development Corporation

  • Office of Emergency Management

  • Office of Management & Budget




State Agencies/Authorities

  • Department of Environmental Conservation

  • Department of State

  • Department of Transportation

  • Governors Island Preservation and

  • Education Corporation

  • Hudson River Park Trust

  • Metropolitan Transportation Authority

  • NY Power Authority

  • NYS Public Service Commission

  • NJ Transit

  • Port Authority of NY/NJ

  • State Emergency Management Office

Private Companies

  • Astoria Energy LLC

  • AT&T

  • Cablevision

  • Con Edison

  • CSX

  • National Grid

  • NRG Energy

  • NY Independent System Operators

  • Sprint Nextel

  • Suez Energy, NA

  • Time Warner Cable

  • T-Mobile

  • TransCanada

  • USPowerGen

  • Verizon

Federal Agencies

  • Amtrak

  • National Park Services


Source: Adam Freed, Building Climate Resiliency in New York City, (http://www.ucar.edu/governance/meetings/oct09/followup/freed.pdf), (last visited July 12, 2013)

Afterwards, the administration launched a number of initiatives to fortify the resilience of built environment, in accordance with the results and analyses. NYC created a $2.4 billion Green Infrastructure Plan72 to better manage rainfall and prevent the impacts of combined sewer overflows. The administration required that all projects undertaking environmental review deal with future sea level rise and coastal risks in their drafts to protect new waterfront development. Another initiative is NYC Cool Roofs Program73 to help cool the city and reduce cooling costs, cut energy usage and lower GHG emissions by reducing the amount of heat absorbed by buildings74. This program encourages building owners to cool their rooftops by applying a reflective white coating.75 In NYC, the total cooled roofs are nearly 3.7 million square feet in size, according to 2012 Annual Report of the NYC Department of Buildings76.

Lastly, the measures were taken before, during and after the Hurricane Sandy. One of them that are the Bloomberg administration in 2010 began working together the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to update NYC’s flood maps – Flood Insurance Rate Maps –, a comprehensive program to retrofit existing buildings in coastal areas. To help communities understand their coastal flood risks and determine whether buildings must obtain flood insurance and meet flood protection standards in the NYC’s Building Code, the maps77 were already in the process of being updated when the hurricane struck. Also, another initiative of the administration is a comprehensive coastal protection study, officially known as the North Atlantic Coast Comprehensive Study, with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). Released on May 28, 2013, the USACE’s this study which was authorized for up to $20 million by Congress, and determines and evaluates how best to reduce flood and storm damage risks for vulnerable coastal people and communities in areas affected by Hurricane Sandy.78

For this, in December 2012, the Bloomberg administration also convened the Special Initiative on Rebuilding and Resiliency (SIRR) as an effort to rebuild communities that were hit hardest by Hurricane Sandy and fortify the resilience of the built environment and critical infrastructure to the effects of changing climate. In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, SIRR announced a report which is the latest report under PlaNYC, recommending how to rebuild communities’ post-Sandy and boost infrastructural resiliency citywide, on June 11, 2013. The plan is estimated to cost nearly $20 billion, includes over 250 specific initiatives for preparing the NYC in the face of climate change and severe storms.79 In general, these initiatives consist of building a huge levee to protect Lower Manhattan, forming wetlands along the East River and installing floodgates along Staten Island.80



D MillionTreesNYC: A plaNYC initiative with NYC parks and New York restoration project

Citywide, NYC’s tree inventory includes over 590,000 publicly managed street trees, which are distributed amongst the five boroughs – Brooklyn, 24 percent, Bronx, 10 percent, Manhattan, 8 percent, Queens, 41 percent, and Staten Island, 17 percent –. But this is not enough; there is a requirement to increase tree planting to maintain the flow of benefits provided by the urban forest currently, as explained clearly in the NYC Municipal Forest Resource Analysis 2007 report. NYC’s street trees intercept 1432 gallons of stormwater annually, and are valued at $61 per tree. Rainfall interception by trees as mini-reservoirs, controlling runoff at the source, reduces the magnitude of floods during large storms.81 Also, these trees affect air quality, are temperature reduction and other microclimatic effects; removal of air pollutants; emission of volatile organic compounds and tree maintenance emissions; and energy conservation in buildings and consequent power plant emissions82. Therefore, under the PlaNYC 2030, MillionTreesNYC is implemented since 2007.

MillionTreesNYC is a public – private initiative to plant one million trees by 2017, legislation requiring the city to formulate a plan to reduce sewage overflow, and an $80 million commitment to energy efficiency programs for city government. According to this, NYC will plant 70 percent of the trees in parks and other public spaces, while the other 30 percent will come from private organizations, homeowners, and community organizations.83 Founded in 1995, New York Restoration Project (NYRP) which is a non-profit organization dedicated to transforming open space in underserved communities to create a greener, more sustainable NYC, is leading this initiative in partnership with the Bloomberg administration. Also the NYC Department of Parks & Recreation (Parks), which is responsible for greening and maintaining the city’s open spaces, is another partner of this project, along with the Home Depot Foundation as a financial supporter. NYC has planted more than 750,000 trees84 across the five boroughs so far.



E Citi Bike initiative

Citi Bike is a privately owned, for-profit public bicycle sharing system which serves NYC’s residents and also, the biggest system in the nation. Initially, this system was selected in September 2011 to develop and operate the system using Bixi Technology85 which is a public bicycle sharing system launched in May 2009 in the city of Montreal, and was comprised of 10,000 bikes and 600 portable, solar-powered docking stations86. But the implementation of this system did not start in July 2012 planned, and was delayed because of first software glitches87 in contractor Alta’s operating system and later Hurricane Sandy, which damaged bicycles in storage at Brooklyn Navy Yard88.

Citi Bike is a part of a $41 million sponsorship deal with Citigroup Inc. for five-years89. It finally began operations in May 2013, with 330 docking stations in Manhattan south of 59th Street90 and in Brooklyn north of Atlantic Avenue and west of Nostrand Avenue91. The system has started with 6,000 bikes at these stations, but its goal is to expand the city’s network of bike lanes to 10,000 bikes and 600 stations92, and to the Bronx, Queens and other parts of the City. Today it has more than 113,000 subscriptions, and it is growing. The system helps reduce injuries by upwards of 40 percent for everyone including pedestrians and motorists and nearly 75 percent in risk, according to Sadik-Khan, Commissioner of NYC Department of Transportation.93 As a means of urban transportation, Citi Bike is important because of its contribution to NYC’s sustainability, with regard to reducing carbon emissions of NYC in particular, despite delays and problems94 with its implementation. Also the pros and cons of Citi Bike will occur over time.



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