Cities

May 07, 2013
Dutch companies are to help Hong Kong deal with its mounting waste problem under an agreement signed by foreign trade minister Lilianne Ploumen and the city’s Secretary for the Environment, K S Wong.
Apple store at Hysan Place
May 06, 2013
Apple's latest store in the shopping metropolis of Hong Kong’s Causeway Bay has come under fire from green activists, who have been pressing hard to fight for tougher control over light pollution. The US tech giant opened its latest Hong Kong store in the new state-of-the-art Hysan Place shopping mall, which has been awarded the prestigious LEED Platinum Green Building Certification. It seems, however, that Apple, which likes to talk about its comprehensive approach to environmental responsibility, is not stepping up to the plate.
May 03, 2013
The World Bank has agreed to loan Vietnam’s Da Nang city USD202.5 million to support its Sustainable City Development Project. The funds will be used to help improve the city's drainage systems and arterial roads, upgrade the public transport system and enhance the city government's urban management capacity. World Bank Country Director for Vietnam Victoria Kwakwa told the Vietnam News that she hopes that the project will create a good model for a "green city" and sustainable urban development to inspire similar development in other cities across Vietnam.
May 03, 2013
Malaysia’s high-tech township of Cyberjaya aims to reduce carbon emissions by 21 percent between now and 2020, according to Free Malaysia Today.
May 02, 2013
The Jakarta city government says it will audit existing high-rise buildings in the Indonesian capital to ensure compliance with a green building code, which comes into effect this month.
May 02, 2013
A clean-up at power plants and tighter controls on vehicle emissions were cited as key factors that saw an improvement in air quality in China’s Pearl River Delta last year, according to the latest regional air quality report. But concerns are mounting about the deterioration of roadside air in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong ivory seizure
April 30, 2013
Hong Kong customs have had some success of late in tackling the underground trade of illegal wildlife products, with large shipments of smuggled wildlife goods been intercepted through its ports. Between October 2012 and January 2013, three shipments of ivory tusks were seized by Hong Kong customs. The biggest consignment included 1,209 ivory tusks seized in two containers, arriving from Tanzania and Kenya, worth an estimated USD3.5 million. The line between legal and illegal wildlife products can be blurred and rather confusing in Hong Kong. Firstly, the sale of animal parts is ubiquitous. Crocodile skin, earthworms, seahorses and countless others, are synonymous with their use in traditional medicine.
April 24, 2013
New research from Greenpeance and Peking University revealed that the Chinese capital’s air contains excessive amount of heavy metals, especially arsenic, which can lead to nerve system damage, cardiovascular disease and cancer.
April 24, 2013
Osaka’s Kansai International Airport is to get the biggest solar installation at an Asian airport following an agreement to develop a 11.6-MW rooftop solar plant.
Transparency with Beijing air pollution
April 22, 2013
Following the news on environmental issues here in China can be a grim business. The first months of 2013 alone brought coverage of January’s “airpocalypse,” when air pollution in Beijing reached historic levels; news of thousands of dead pigs floating in the Huangpu River, a primary source of Shanghai’s drinking water; and a new report indicating that China sees 1.2 million premature deaths each year due to outdoor air pollution – almost 40 percent of the world’s total of such deaths. Amid such bleak headlines, it can be easy to miss any kind of progress.
April 22, 2013
Builders of Tokyo Skytree, the 65 billion yen (USD656 million) broadcast tower which is almost double the height of the Empire State Building, say they aim to make their mark on more than just the Japanese metropolis’s skyline.
April 18, 2013
Beijing city authorities say they will get to grips with the Chinese capital’s large number of unofficial landfills, promising to regulate 75 of them this year and another 100 next year with the aim of bring 250 informal dumps into line by 2015.
Market concentration of non-hydro renewables
April 17, 2013
The rapid expansion of renewable technologies is one of the few bright spots in an otherwise bleak assessment of global progress towards low-carbon energy, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said in an annual report to the Clean Energy Ministerial (CEM). “The drive to clean up the world’s energy system has stalled,” IEA executive director Maria van der Hoeven told the CEM, which brings together ministers representing countries responsible for four-fifths of global greenhouse-gas emissions.
April 11, 2013
Shanghai – China’s domestic financial center – has confirmed it will start its carbon emissions trading exchange in June, becoming the second market to announce commencement of a carbon cap-and-trade scheme, after Shenzhen said last week that it would launch its carbon market on June 17.
HK should learn from Singapore
April 10, 2013
Singapore and Hong Kong are traditional rivals but they also share many similarities. Both are former British colonies, have limited natural resources and are economic powerhouses. Both are also dependent on others for water resources. Singapore sources about 40 percent of its water from Malaysia, while Hong Kong purchases 70-80 percent of its raw water from Guangdong. Despite this similarity, the attitudes of Singapore and Hong Kong towards water security are drastically different.  Singapore is highly pro-active in reducing its water dependency and securing its supply, while Hong Kong appears unbothered that its water security depends on an increasingly threatened source.
April 07, 2013
Shenzhen, the Chinese Special Economic Zone and across the border from Hong Kong, will open carbon emissions trading market on Monday 17 June, according to city’s mayor.
March 27, 2013
Hong Kong International Airport – Asia’s fourth busiest passenger airport and the world’s busiest cargo airport in 2010 – has received an Airport Carbon Accreditation "Optimization" certificate from Airports Council International.
March 25, 2013
China may introduce a consumption tax on products that make heavy use of resources and cause pollution, according to the China Daily.
Hong Kong night skyline
March 20, 2013
Hong Kong is believed to be the world's worst city for light pollution, with levels in the popular tourist shopping area of Tsim Sha Tsui, 1,200 times brighter than a normal dark sky. Unlike other world cities - including London, Frankfurt, Sydney and Shanghai - Hong Kong has no laws to control external lighting. The findings were described as shocking by survey leader Dr Jason Pun Chun-shing, of the Department of Physics at the University of Hong Kong, who said he could find nowhere else on earth as badly affected.
China water conundrum
March 19, 2013
China’s water resources are increasingly being pitted against economic development, and losing. Water is vital to all aspects of the economy, especially for agricultural and power production, making it a strategic resource. However, China’s position as the world’s factory, and its ‘develop-first clean-up later’ mindset, has resulted in much of its water resources being compromised. This is problematic as the country suffers from a lack of potable water. It has to support 20 percent of the world’s population on only 5 percent of the worlds renewable freshwater and the UN has classified China as one of 13 countries suffering from extreme water shortages.