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Charter
of European Cities & Towns Towards Sustainability
(as approved by the participants at the European Conference on
Sustainable Cities & Towns in Aalborg, Denmark on 27 May 1994)
Part I: Consensus Declaration: European Cities & Towns Towards
Sustainability
Part II: The European Sustainable Cities & Towns Campaign
Part III: Engaging in Local Agenda 21 Processes: Local Action
Plans Towards Sustainability
Part I
Consensus Declaration: European Cities & Towns Towards
Sustainability
I.1 The Role of European Cities and Towns
We, European cities & towns, signatories of this Charter,
state that in the course of history, our towns have existed within
and outlasted empires, nation states, and regimes and have
survived as centres of social life, carriers of our economies, and
guardians of culture, heritage and tradition. Along with families
and neighbourhoods, towns have been the basic elements of our
societies and states. Towns have been the centres of industry,
craft, trade, education and government.
We understand that our present urban lifestyle, in particular our
patterns of division of labour and functions, land-use, transport,
industrial production, agriculture, consumption, and leisure
activities, and hence our standard of living, make us essentially
responsible for many environmental problems humankind is facing.
This is particularly relevant as 80 percent of Europe's population
live in urban areas.
We have learnt that present levels of resource consumption in the
industrialised countries cannot be achieved by all people
currently living, much less by future generations, without
destroying the natural capital.
We are convinced that sustainable human life on this globe cannot
be achieved without sustainable local communities. Local
government is close to where environmental problems are perceived
and closest to the citizens and shares responsibility with
governments at all levels for the well-being of humankind and
nature. Therefore, cities and towns are key players in the process
of changing lifestyles, production, consumption and spatial
patterns.
I.2 The Notion and Principles of Sustainability
We, cities & towns, understand that the idea of sustainable
development helps us to base our standard of living on the
carrying capacity of nature. We seek to achieve social justice,
sustainable economies, and environmental sustainability. Social
justice will necessarily have to be based on economic
sustainability and equity, which require environmental
sustainability.
Environmental sustainability means maintaining the natural
capital. It demands from us that the rate at which we consume
renewable material, water and energy resources does not exceed the
rate at which the natural systems can replenish them, and that the
rate at which we consume non-renewable resources does not exceed
the rate at which sustainable renewable resources are replaced.
Environmental sustainability also means that the rate of emitted
pollutants does not exceed the capacity of the air, water, and
soil to absorb and process them.
Furthermore, environmental sustainability entails the maintenance
of biodiversity; human health; as well as air, water, and soil
qualities at standards sufficient to sustain human life and
well-being, as well as animal and plant life, for all time.
I.3 Local Strategies Towards Sustainability
We are convinced that the city or town is both the largest unit
capable of initially addressing the many urban architectural,
social, economic, political, natural resource and environmental
imbalances damaging our modern world and the smallest scale at
which problems can be meaningfully resolved in an integrated,
holistic and sustainable fashion. As each city is different, we
have to find our individual ways towards sustainability. We shall
integrate the principles of sustainability in all our policies and
make the respective strengths of our cities and towns the basis of
locally appropriate strategies.
I.4 Sustainability as a Creative, Local, Balance-Seeking Process
We, cities & towns, recognise that sustainability is neither a
vision nor an unchanging state, but a creative, local,
balance-seeking process extending into all areas of local
decision-making. It provides ongoing feedback in the management of
the town or city on which activities are driving the urban
ecosystem towards balance and which are driving it away. By
building the management of a city around the information collected
through such a process, the city is understood to work as an
organic whole and the effects of all significant activities are
made manifest. Through such a process the city and its citizens
may make informed choices. Through a management process rooted in
sustainability, decisions may be made which not only represent the
interests of current stakeholders, but also of future generations.
I.5 Resolving Problems by Negotiating Outwards
We, cities & towns, recognise that a town or city cannot
permit itself to export problems into the larger environment or to
the future. Therefore, any problems or imbalances within the city
are either brought towards balance at their own level or absorbed
by some larger entity at the regional or national level. This is
the principle of resolving problems by negotiating outwards. The
implementation of this principle will give each city or town great
freedom to define the nature of its activities.
I.6 Urban Economy Towards Sustainability
We, cities & towns, understand that the limiting factor for
economic development of our cities and towns has become natural
capital, such as atmosphere, soil, water and forests. We must
therefore invest in this capital. In order of priority this
requires
investments in conserving the remaining natural capital, such as
groundwater stocks, soil, habitats for rare species;
encouraging the growth of natural capital by reducing our level of
current exploitation, such as of non-renewable energy;
investments to relieve pressure on natural capital stocks by
expanding cultivated natural capital, such as parks for inner-city
recreation to relieve pressure on natural forests); and
increasing the end-use efficiency of products, such as
energy-efficient buildings, environmentally friendly urban
transport.
I.7 Social Equity for Urban Sustainability
We, cities and towns, are aware that the poor are worst affected
by environmental problems (such as noise and air pollution from
traffic, lack of amenities, unhealthy housing, lack of open space)
and are least able to solve them. Inequitable distribution of
wealth both causes unsustainable behaviour and makes it harder to
change. We intend to integrate people's basic social needs as well
as healthcare, employment and housing programmes with
environmental protection. We wish to learn from initial
experiences of sustainable lifestyles, so that we can work towards
improving the quality of citizens' lifestyles rather than simply
maximising consumption.
We will try to create jobs which contribute to the sustainability
of the community and thereby reduce unemployment. When seeking to
attract or create jobs we will assess the effects of any business
opportunity in terms of sustainability in order to encourage the
creation of long-term jobs and long-life products in accordance
with the principles of sustainability.
I.8 Sustainable Land-Use Patterns
We, cities & towns, recognise the importance of effective
land-use and development planning policies by our local
authorities which embrace the strategic environmental assessment
of all plans. We should take advantage of the scope for providing
efficient public transport and energy which higher densities offer,
while maintaining the human scale of development. In both
undertaking urban renewal programmes in inner urban areas and in
planning new suburbs we seek a mix of functions so as to reduce
the need for mobility. Notions of equitable regional
interdependency should enable us to balance the flows between city
and countryside and prevent cities from merely exploiting the
resources of surrounding areas.
I.9 Sustainable Urban Mobility Patterns
We, cities & towns, shall strive to improve accessibility and
sustain social welfare and urban lifestyles with less transport.
We know that it is imperative for a sustainable city to reduce
en-forced mobility and stop promoting and supporting the
unnecessary use of motorised vehicles. We shall give priority to
ecologically sound means of transport (in particular walking,
cycling, public transport) and make a combination of these means
the centre of our planning efforts. Motorised individual means of
urban transport ought to have the subsidiary function of
facilitating access to local services and maintaining the economic
activity of the city.
I.10 Responsibility for the Global Climate
We, cities & towns, understand that the significant risks
posed by global warming to the natural and built environments and
to future human generations require a response sufficient to
stabilise and then to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases into
the atmosphere as soon as possible. It is equally important to
protect global biomass resources, such as forests and
phytoplankton, which play an essential role in the earth's carbon
cycle. The abatement of fossil fuel emissions will require
policies and initiatives based on a thorough understanding of the
alternatives and of the urban environment as an energy system. The
only sustainable alternatives are renewable energy sources.
I.11 Prevention of Ecosystems Toxification
We, cities & towns, are aware that more and more toxic and
harmful substances are released into the air, water, soil, food,
and are thereby becoming a growing threat to human health and the
ecosystems. We will undertake every effort to see that further
pollution is stopped and prevented at source.
I.12 Local Self-Governance as a Pre-Condition
We, cities and towns, are confident that we have the strength, the
knowledge and the creative potential to develop sustainable ways
of living and to design and manage our cities towards
sustainability. As democratically elected representatives of our
local communities we are ready to take responsibility for the task
of re- organising our cities and towns for sustainability. The
extent to which cities and towns are able to rise to this
challenge depends upon their being given rights to local
self-governance, according to the principle of subsidiarity. It is
essential that sufficient powers are left at the local level and
that local authorities are given a solid financial base.
I.13 Citizens as Key Actors and the Involvement of the Community
We, cities & towns pledge to meet the mandate given by Agenda
21, the key document approved at the Earth Summit in Rio de
Janeiro, to work with all sectors of our communities - citizens,
businesses, interest groups - when developing our Local Agenda 21
plans. We recognise the call in the European Union's Fifth
Environmental Action Programme "Towards Sustainability"
for the responsibility for the implementation of the programme to
be shared among all sectors of the community. Therefore, we will
base our work on co-operation between all actors involved. We
shall ensure that all citizens and interested groups have access
to information and are able to participate in local
decision-making processes. We will seek opportunities for
education and training for sustainability, not only for the
general population, but for both elected representatives and
officials in local government.
I.14 Instruments and Tools for Urban Management Towards
Sustainability
We, cities & towns, pledge to use the political and technical
instruments and tools available for an ecosystem approach to urban
management. We shall take advantage of a wide range of instruments
including those for collecting and processing environmental data;
environmental planning; regulatory, economic, and communication
instruments such as directives, taxes and fees; and mechanisms for
awareness raising including public participation. We seek to
establish new environmental budgeting systems which allow for the
management of our natural resources as economically as our
artificial resource, 'money'.
We know that we must base our policy-making and controlling
efforts, in particular our environmental monitoring, auditing,
impact assessment, accounting, balancing and reporting systems, on
different types of indicators, including those of urban
environmental quality, urban flows, urban patterns, and, most
importantly, indicators of an urban systems sustainability.
We, cities & towns, recognise that a whole range of policies
and activities yielding positive ecological consequences have
already been successfully applied in many cities through Europe.
However, while these instruments are valuable tools for reducing
the pace and pressure of unsustainability, they do not in and of
themselves reverse society's unsustainable direction. Still, with
this strong existing ecological base, the cities are in an
excellent position to take the threshold step of integrating these
policies and activities into the governance process for managing
local urban economies through a comprehensive sustainability
process. In this process we are called on to develop our own
strategies, try them out in practice and share our experiences.
Part II
The European Sustainable Cities and Towns Campaign
We, European cities & towns, signatories of this charter,
shall move forward together towards sustainability in a process of
learning from experience and successful local examples. We shall
encourage each other to establish long-term local action plans (Local
Agendas 21), thereby strengthening inter-authority co-operation,
and relating this process to the European Union's actions in the
field of the urban environment.
We hereby initiate The European Sustainable Cities & Towns
Campaign to encourage and support cities and towns in working
towards sustainability. The initial phase of this Campaign shall
be for a two-year period, after which progress shall be assessed
at a Second European Conference on Sustainable Cities & Towns
to be held in 1996.
We invite every local authority, whether city, town or county and
any European network of local authorities to join the Campaign by
adopting and signing this Charter.
We request all the major local authority networks in Europe to
undertake the co-ordination of the Campaign. A Co-ordinating
Committee shall be established of representatives of these
networks. Arrangements will be made for those local authorities
which are not members of any network.
We foresee the principal activities of the Campaign to be to:
facilitate mutual support between European cities and towns in the
design, development and implementation of policies towards
sustainability;
collect and disseminate information on good examples at the local
level;
promote the principle of sustainability in other local authorities;
recruit further signatories to the Charter;
organise an annual "Sustainable City Award";
formulate policy recommendations to the European Commission;
provide input to the Sustainable Cities Reports of the Urban
Environment Expert Group;
support local policy-makers in implementing appropriate
recommendations and legislation from the European Union;
edit a Campaign newsletter.
These activities will require the establishment of a Campaign
Co-ordination.
We shall invite other organisations to actively support the
Campaign.
Part III
Engaging in The Local Agenda 21 processes: Local Action Plans
Towards Sustainability
We, European cities & towns, signatories of this Charter,
pledge by signing this Charter and joining the European
Sustainable Cities & Towns Campaign that we will seek to
achieve a consensus within our communities on a Local Agenda 21 by
the end of 1996. This will meet the mandate established by Chapter
28 of Agenda 21 as agreed at the Earth Summit in Rio in June 1992.
By means of our individual local action plans we shall contribute
to the implementation of the European Union's Fifth Environmental
Action Programme "Towards Sustainability". The Local
Agenda 21 processes shall be developed on the basis of Part One of
this Charter.
We propose that the process of preparing a local action plan
should include the following stages:
recognition of the existing planning and financial frameworks as
well as other plans and programmes;
the systematic identification, by means of extensive public
consultation, of problems and their causes;
the prioritisation of tasks to address identified problems;
the creation of a vision for a sustainable community through a
participatory process involving all sectors of the community;
the consideration and assessment of alternative strategic options;
the establishment of a long-term local action plan towards
sustainability which includes measurable targets;
the programming of the implementation of the plan including the
preparation of a timetable and statement of allocation of
responsibilities among the partners;
the establishment of systems and procedures for monitoring and
reporting on the implementation of the plan.
We will need to review whether the internal arrangements of our
local authorities are appropriate and efficient to allow the
development of the Local Agenda 21 processes, including long-term
local action plans towards sustainability. Efforts may be needed
to improve the capacity of the organisation which will include
reviewing the political arrangements, administrative procedures,
corporate and inter-disciplinary working, human resources
available and inter-authority co-operation including associations
and networks.
Signed in Aalborg, Denmark, 27 May 1994
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