Can China House Its Booming Urban Class in an Environmentally Responsible Way?

China has plans for ecofriendly cities that may prove unrealistic. Instead, it could do a lot for the environment simply through sturdier construction














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BOOMTOWN: The construction crane is ubiquitous across China, pictured here in Rizhao, a city striving to be carbon neutral. Image: © David Biello

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In August 2005 the Shanghai Industrial Investment Corp. hired global engineering firm Arup to design a city for the booming commercial capital of China. Dubbed Dongtan—or "East Beach"—the new satellite city would sit on the edge of the alluvial island of Chongming in the mouth of the Yangtze River. The government finished a tunnel and bridge to the island in 2009, paving the way for a development that would produce little waste, rely largely on sea breezes to generate its electricity, and permit only cars that emit no carbon dioxide, such as those powered by hydrogen fuel or electricity.

Originally, the plans for this "eco-demonstrator" city called for opening in time for the Shanghai Expo 2010 with its theme of "Better City, Better Life." Hundreds of pages of plans, maps and charts laid out in great detail the inner workings of the three new villages that would meet to form an eco-city center. In this vision of a new town, energy-efficient buildings clustered together to promote walking from the 50 residents per acre and organic farms arrayed around the new development would feed the local population. Arup envisioned a central combined heat and power plant in the city fueled by rice husks, China's staple crop. Canals and ponds incorporated the surrounding wetlands into the city's design itself, providing natural splendor and a continuing respite for the migrating birds.

Instead, construction has yet to begin—and may never happen.

In essence, Dongtan is a would-be environmental Potemkin village that never was built. Mud flats surround Chongming rather than paved roads for zero-emission cars, and the low-impact residents are not people, but rather birds hidden among the marsh grasses. Nor is it clear whether the project has been completely abandoned, given the opacity of the government forces behind it. "Implementation of our master plan was postponed, and we are not aware of the reasons behind this delay," explains Peter Head, chairman of global planning at Arup. "Urban development is a long-term activity which requires the alignment of central and regional political and economic wills."

Cities needed in a hurry
As a long-term activity, utopian cities such as Dongtan may really be pipe dreams considering the need for speed in booming nations. The majority of the world's population now lives in cities for the first time in recorded history, and the number of urban dwellers has risen from roughly 260 million in 1900 to 3.4 billion today, largely thanks to urbanization in countries like China and India. By mid-century, two thirds of humanity will either squat in slums, squeeze into apartments or sprawl through suburbs.

"In the next 40 years we need to build the same urban capacity that we built in the last 4,000 years, or people will live in slums," says Konrad Otto-Zimmermann, secretary general of the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI), a city government group. "We need to increase [urban] density and make more efficient use of existing infrastructure." Uwe Brandes, vice president of initiatives at the Urban Land Institute, a think tank, echoes that concern: "We have to get cities right. Everything else rides on that."

A key goal for the 21st-century city is to weaken the link between economic growth and natural resource exploitation, and experimental centers like Dongtan and Tianjin Eco-City, a more recently planned effort that is the new mantle-bearer, would have provided crucial data. Instead, China is building hundreds of cities without such detailed sustainability in mind in a bid to house the roughly 10 million people leaving the countryside and flocking to urban areas each year. The country already boasts more than 120 cities with more than one million inhabitants—that's more than the total number of cities the country had in 1950. Its national bird should perhaps be changed to the construction crane.


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  1. 1. geojellyroll 09:57 AM 8/22/11

    Ha! Ha! Ha! The author of this piece has never been to China.

    People lived in squalor the first time I studied in Shandong province in the 1980's. Everything was 'planned'. Returning is 2007, there was a stunning increase in living standards because of the complete 'lack' of any planning.

    The LAST thing China needs is any more 'planning'. Individual inititiative is raising standards.

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  2. 2. dbiello in reply to geojellyroll 10:58 AM 8/22/11

    Actually, I've been to China multiple times. No doubt huge increase in living standards for some and the greatest poverty remediation project ever undertaken. Also no doubt there are some pretty hefty emissions associated with the building boom and some pretty shoddy construction (witness: Sichuan earthquake).

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Can China House Its Booming Urban Class in an Environmentally Responsible Way?

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