Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Table of Contents 3 Chapter 8: Urban Systems and Other Settlements ......................................................................... 8-1 4 Executive summary ............................................................................................................ 8-4 5 8.1 Introduction ............................................................................................................. 8-8 6 8.1.1 What is new since AR5 .................................................................................... 8-8 7 8.1.2 Preparing for the Special Report on Cities and Climate Change in AR7 ...... 8-10 8 8.1.3 The scope of the chapter: a focus on urban systems ...................................... 8-10 9 8.1.4 The urban century .......................................................................................... 8-11 10 8.1.5 Urbanization in developing countries ............................................................ 8-15 11 8.1.6 Urban carbon footprint ................................................................................... 8-15 12 8.2 Co-Benefits and trade-offs of urban mitigation strategies .................................... 8-18 13 8.2.1 Sustainable development ............................................................................... 8-18 14 8.2.2 Economic development, competitiveness, and equity ................................... 8-23 15 8.2.3 Coupling mitigation and adaptation ............................................................... 8-24 16 Cross-Working Group Box 2: Cities and Climate Change........................................... 8-25 17 8.3 Urban systems and GHG emissions ...................................................................... 8-30 18 8.3.1 Trends in urban land use and the built environment ...................................... 8-30 19 8.3.2 Informal urban settlements ............................................................................ 8-35 20 8.3.3 Trends in urban GHG emissions .................................................................... 8-36 21 8.3.4 Scenarios of future urbanization and GHG emissions ................................... 8-40 22 8.4 Urban mitigation options....................................................................................... 8-51 23 8.4.1 Avoiding carbon lock-in ................................................................................ 8-54 24 8.4.2 Spatial planning, urban form, and infrastructure ........................................... 8-54 25 8.4.3 Electrification and switching to net zero emissions resources....................... 8-58 26 8.4.4 Urban green and blue infrastructure .............................................................. 8-63 27 8.4.5 Socio-behavioural aspects .............................................................................. 8-71 28 8.4.6 Urban-rural linkages ...................................................................................... 8-73 29 8.4.7 Cross-sectoral integration .............................................................................. 8-74 30 8.5 Governance, institutions, and finance ................................................................... 8-76 31 8.5.1 Multi-level governance .................................................................................. 8-76 32 8.5.2 Mitigation potential of urban subnational actors ........................................... 8-78 33 8.5.3 Urban climate networks and transnational governance ................................. 8-79 34 8.5.4 Financing urban mitigation ............................................................................ 8-81 35 8.5.5 Barriers and enablers for implementation ...................................................... 8-83 36 8.6 A roadmap for integrating mitigation strategies for different urbanization typologies 37 8-86 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-2 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 8.6.1 Mitigation opportunities for established cities .............................................. 8-89 2 8.6.2 Mitigation opportunities for rapidly growing cities....................................... 8-90 3 8.6.3 Mitigation opportunities for new and emerging cities ................................... 8-91 4 8.5 Knowledge Gaps ................................................................................................... 8-94 5 8.6.4 COVID-19 and cities ..................................................................................... 8-95 6 8.6.5 Future urban emissions scenarios .................................................................. 8-96 7 8.6.6 Urban emissions data ..................................................................................... 8-96 8 Frequently Asked Questions ............................................................................................ 8-97 9 References ........................................................................................................................ 8-99 10 11 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-3 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Executive summary 2 Although urbanization is a global trend often associated with increased incomes and higher 3 consumption, the growing concentration of people and activities is an opportunity to increase 4 resource efficiency and decarbonize at scale (very high confidence). The same urbanization level can 5 have large variations in per capita urban carbon emissions. For most regions, per capita urban emissions 6 are lower than per capita national emissions. {8.1.4, 8.3.3, 8.4, Box 8.1} 7 8 Most future urban population growth will occur in developing countries, where per capita 9 emissions are currently low but expected to increase with the construction and use of new 10 infrastructure and the built environment, and changes in incomes and lifestyles (very high 11 confidence). The drivers of urban Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions are complex and include an 12 interplay of population size, income, state of urbanization, and how cities are laid out. How new cities 13 and towns are designed, constructed, managed, and powered will lock-in behaviour, lifestyles, and 14 future urban GHG emissions. Low-emission urbanization can improve well-being while minimizing 15 impact on GHG emissions, but there is risk that urbanization can lead to increased global GHG 16 emissions through increased emissions outside the city’s boundaries. {8.1.4, 8.3, Box 8.1, 8.4, 8.6} 17 18 The urban share of global GHG emissions (including CO2 and CH4) is substantive and continues 19 to increase (high confidence). Total urban emissions based on consumption-based accounting were 20 estimated to be 24.5 GtCO2-eq, or 62% of the global total in 2015, excluding aviation, shipping and 21 biogenics, and increased to an estimated 28.5 ± 0.1 GtCO2-eq in 2020, representing about 67-72% of 22 global emissions. About 100 of the highest emitting urban areas account for approximately 18% of the 23 global carbon footprint. {8.1.6, 8.3.3} 24 25 The urban share of regional GHG emissions increased between 2000 and 2015, with much inter- 26 region variation in the magnitude of the increase (high confidence). Globally, the urban share of 27 national emissions increased 6 percentage points, from 56% in 2000 to 62% in 2015. For 2000 to 2015, 28 the urban emissions share across WGIII AR6 regions increased from 28% to 38% in Africa, from 46% 29 to 54% in Asia and Developing Pacific, from 62% to 72% in Developed Countries, from 57% to 62% 30 in Eastern Europe and West-Central Asia, from 55% to 66% in Latin America and Caribbean, and from 31 68% to 69% in the Middle East. {8.1.6, 8.3.3} 32 33 Per capita urban GHG emissions increased between 2000 and 2015, with cities in the Developed 34 Countries region producing nearly seven times more per capita than the lowest emitting region 35 (medium confidence). From 2000 to 2015, the global urban GHG emissions per capita increased from 36 5.5 to 6.2 tCO2-eq/person (an increase of 11.8%); Africa increased from 1.3 to 1.5 tCO2-eq per person 37 (22.6%); Asia and Developing Pacific increased from 3.0 to 5.1 tCO2-eq per person (71.7%); Eastern 38 Europe and West-Central Asia increased from 6.9 to 9.8 tCO2-eq/person (40.9%); Latin America and 39 the Caribbean increased from 2.7 to 3.7 tCO2-eq/person (40.4%); and Middle East increased from 7.4 40 to 9.6 tCO2-eq/person (30.1%). Albeit starting from the highest level, Developed Countries had a 41 decline of 11.4 to 10.7 tCO2-eq/person (-6.5%). {8.3.3} 42 43 The global share of future urban GHG emissions is expected to increase through 2050 with 44 moderate to no mitigation efforts due to growth trends in population, urban land expansion and 45 infrastructure and service demands, but the extent of the increase depends on the scenario and 46 the scale and timing of urban mitigation action (medium confidence). With aggressive and immediate 47 mitigation policies to limit global warming below 1.5°C by the end of the century, including high levels 48 of electrification, energy and material efficiency, renewable energy preferences, and socio-behavioural 49 responses, urban GHG emissions could approach net zero and reach a maximum of 3 GtCO2-eq in 2050. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-4 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Under a scenario with aggressive but not immediate urban mitigation policies to limit global warming 2 to 2°C, urban emissions could reach 17 GtCO2-eq in 2050. With no urban mitigation efforts, urban 3 emissions could more than double from 2020 levels and reach 65 GtCO2-eq in 2050, while being limited 4 to 34 GtCO2-eq in 2050 with only moderate mitigation efforts. {8.3.4} 5 6 Urban land areas could triple between 2015 and 2050, with significant implications for future 7 carbon lock-in. There is a large range in the forecasts of urban land expansion across scenarios and 8 models, which highlights an opportunity to shape future urban development towards low- or net zero 9 GHG emissions and minimize the loss of carbon stocks and sequestration in the AFOLU sector due to 10 urban land conversion (medium confidence). By 2050, urban areas could increase up to 211% over the 11 2015 global urban extent, with the median projected increase ranging from 43% to 106%. While the 12 largest absolute amount of new urban land is forecasted to occur in Asia and Developing Pacific, and 13 in Developed Countries, the highest rate of urban land growth is projected to occur in Africa, Eastern 14 Europe and West-Central Asia, and in the Middle East. The infrastructure that will be constructed 15 concomitant with urban land expansion will lock-in patterns of energy consumption that will persist for 16 decades if not generations. Furthermore, given past trends, the expansion of urban areas is likely to take 17 place on agricultural lands and forests, with implications for the loss of carbon stocks and sequestration. 18 {8.3.1, 8.3.4, 8.4.1, 8.6} 19 20 The construction of new, and upgrading of, existing urban infrastructure through 2030 will result 21 in significant emissions (very high confidence). The construction of new and upgrading of existing 22 urban infrastructure using conventional practices and technologies can result in significant committed 23 CO2 emissions, ranging from 8.5 GtCO2 to 14 GtCO2 annually up to 2030 and more than double annual 24 resource requirements for raw materials to about 90 billion tonnes per year by 2050, up from 40 billion 25 tonnes in 2010 (medium evidence, high agreement).{8.4.1, 8.6} 26 27 Given the dual challenges of rising urban GHG emissions and future projections of more frequent 28 extreme climate events, there is an urgent need to integrate urban mitigation and adaptation 29 strategies for cities to address climate change and withstand its effects (very high confidence). 30 Mitigation strategies can enhance resilience against climate change impacts while contributing to social 31 equity, public health, and human well-being. Urban mitigation actions that facilitate economic 32 decoupling can have positive impacts on employment and local economic competitiveness.{8.2, Cross- 33 Working Group Box 2, 8.4} 34 35 Cities can only achieve net zero or near net zero GHG emissions through deep decarbonisation 36 and systemic transformation (very high confidence). Urban deep decarbonisation entails 37 implementing three broad strategies concurrently: (1) reducing urban energy consumption across all 38 sectors, including through compact and efficient urban forms and supporting infrastructure; (2) 39 electrification and switching to net zero emissions resources; and (3) enhancing carbon uptake and 40 stocks (medium evidence, high agreement). Given the regional and global reach of urban supply chains, 41 a city cannot achieve net zero GHG emissions by only focusing on reducing emissions within its 42 administrative boundaries. {8.1.6, 8.3.4, 8.4, 8.6} 43 44 Packages of mitigation policies that implement multiple urban-scale interventions can have 45 cascading effects across sectors, reduce GHG emissions outside of a city’s administrative 46 boundaries, and reduce more emissions than the net sum of individual interventions, particularly 47 if multiple scales of governance are included (high confidence). Cities have the ability to implement 48 policy packages across sectors using an urban systems approach, especially those that affect key 49 infrastructure based on spatial planning, electrification of the urban energy system, and urban green and 50 blue infrastructure. The institutional capacity of cities to develop, coordinate, and integrate sectoral Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-5 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 mitigation strategies within their jurisdiction varies by context, particularly those related to governance, 2 the regulatory system, and budgetary control. {8.4, 8.5, 8.6} 3 4 Integrated spatial planning to achieve compact and resource-efficient urban growth through co- 5 location of higher residential and job densities, mixed land use, and transit-oriented development 6 could reduce GHG emissions between 23-26% by 2050 compared to the business-as-usual 7 scenario (robust evidence, high agreement, very high confidence). Compact cities with shortened 8 distances between housing and jobs, and interventions that support a modal shift away from private 9 motor vehicles towards walking, cycling, and low-emissions shared and public transportation, passive 10 energy comfort in buildings, and urban green infrastructure can deliver significant public health benefits 11 and have lower GHG emissions. {8.2, 8.3.4, 8.4, 8.6} 12 13 Urban green and blue infrastructure can mitigate climate change through carbon sequestration, 14 avoided emissions, and reduced energy use while offering multiple co-benefits (robust evidence, 15 high agreement). Urban green and blue infrastructure, including urban forests and street trees, 16 permeable surfaces, and green roofs offer potentials to mitigate climate change directly through 17 sequestering and storing carbon, and indirectly by inducing a cooling effect that reduces energy demand 18 and reducing energy use for water treatment. Global urban trees store approximately 7.4 billion tonnes 19 of carbon, and sequester approximately 217 million tonnes of carbon annually, although urban tree 20 carbon storage and sequestration are highly dependent on biome. Among the multiple co-benefits of 21 green and blue infrastructure are reducing the urban heat island (UHI) effect and heat stress, reducing 22 stormwater runoff, improving air quality, and improving mental and physical health of urban dwellers. 23 {8.2, 8.4.4} 24 25 The potentials and sequencing of mitigation strategies to reduce GHG emissions will vary 26 depending on a city’s land use and spatial form and its state of urbanization, whether it is an 27 established city with existing infrastructure, a rapidly growing city with new infrastructure, or 28 an emerging city with infrastructure build-up (medium confidence). The long lifespan of urban 29 infrastructures locks in behaviour and committed emissions. Urban infrastructures and urban form can 30 enable socio-cultural and lifestyle changes that can significantly reduce carbon footprints. Rapidly 31 growing cities can avoid higher future emissions through urban planning to co-locate jobs and housing 32 to achieve compact urban form, and by leapfrogging to low-carbon technologies. Established cities will 33 achieve the largest GHG emissions savings by replacing, repurposing, or retrofitting the building stock, 34 strategic infilling and densifying, as well as through modal shift and the electrification of the urban 35 energy system. New and emerging cities have unparalleled potential to become low or net zero GHG 36 emissions while achieving high quality of life by creating compact, co-located, and walkable urban 37 areas with mixed land use and transit-oriented design, that also preserve existing green and blue assets 38 {8.2, 8.4, 8.6} 39 40 With over 880 million people living in informal settlements, there are opportunities to harness 41 and enable informal practices and institutions in cities related to housing, waste, energy, water, 42 and sanitation to reduce resource use and mitigate climate change (low evidence, medium 43 agreement). The upgrading of informal settlements and inadequate housing to improve resilience and 44 well-being offers a chance to create a low-carbon transition. However, there is limited quantifiable data 45 on these practices and their cumulative impacts on GHG emissions. {8.1.4, 8.2.2, Cross-Working Group 46 Box 2, 8.3.2, 8.4, 8.6, 8.7} 47 48 Achieving transformational changes in cities for climate change mitigation and adaptation will 49 require engaging multiple scales of governance, including governments and non-state actors, and 50 in connection with substantive financing beyond sectoral approaches (very high confidence). Large Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-6 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 and complex infrastructure projects for urban mitigation are often beyond the capacity of local 2 municipality budgets, jurisdictions, and institutions. Partnerships between cities and international 3 institutions, national and region governments, transnational networks, and local stakeholders play a 4 pivotal role in mobilizing global climate finance resources for a range of infrastructure projects with 5 low-carbon emissions and related spatial planning programs across key sectors. {8.4, 8.5} 6 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-7 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 8.1 Introduction 3 8.1.1 What is new since AR5 4 The Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was 5 the first IPCC report that had a standalone chapter on urban mitigation of climate change. The starting 6 point for that chapter was how the spatial organization of urban settlements affects greenhouse gas 7 (GHG) emissions and how urban form and infrastructure could facilitate mitigation of climate change. 8 A main finding in AR5 was that urban form shapes urban energy consumption and GHG emissions. 9 Since AR5, there has been growing scientific literature and policy foci on urban strategies for climate 10 change mitigation. There are three possible reasons for this. First, according to AR5 Working Group III 11 (WGIII) Chapter 12 on Human Settlements, Infrastructure, and Spatial Planning, urban areas generate 12 between 71–76% of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from global final energy use and between 67–76% 13 of global energy (Seto et al. 2014). Thus, focusing on ‘urban systems’ (see Glossary and Figure 8.15) 14 addresses one of the key drivers of emissions. Second, more than half of the world population lives in 15 urban areas, and by mid-century 7 out of 10 people on the planet will live in a town or a city (UN DESA 16 2019). Thus, coming up with mitigation strategies that are relevant to urban settlements is critical for 17 successful mitigation of climate change. Third, beyond climate change, there is growing attention on 18 cities as major catalysts of change and to help achieve the objectives outlined in multiple international 19 frameworks and assessments. 20 Cities are also gaining traction within the work of the IPCC. The IPCC Special Report on Global 21 Warming of 1.5°C (SR1.5 Chapter 4) identified four systems that urgently need to change in 22 fundamental and transformative ways: urban infrastructure, land use and ecosystems, industry, and 23 energy. Urban infrastructure was singled out but urban systems form a pivotal part of the other three 24 systems requiring change (IPCC 2018a) (see ‘infrastructure’ in Glossary). The IPCC Special Report on 25 Climate Change and Land (SRCCL) identified cities not only as spatial units for land-based mitigation 26 options but also places for managing demand for natural resources including food, fibre, and water 27 (IPCC 2019). 28 Other international frameworks are highlighting the importance of cities. For example, the 29 Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) report on 30 nature’s contribution to people is clear: cities straddle the biodiversity sphere in the sense that they 31 present spatial units of ecosystem fragmentation and degradation while at the same time contain spatial 32 units where the concentration of biodiversity compares favourably with some landscapes (IPBES 33 2019a). Cities are also featured as a key element in the transformational governance to tackle both 34 climate change and biodiversity and ecosystem challenges in the first-ever IPCC-IPBES co-sponsored 35 workshop report (Pörtner et al. 2021) (see Section 8.5 and ‘governance’ in Glossary). 36 The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) further underscore the importance of cities in the 37 international arena with the inclusion of SDG 11 on Sustainable Cities and Communities for ‘inclusive, 38 safe, resilient and sustainable’ cities and human settlements (United Nations 2015; Queiroz et al. 2017; 39 United Nations 2019). Additionally, UN-Habitat’s New Urban Agenda (NUA) calls for various 40 measures, including integrated spatial planning at the city-regional scale, to address the systemic 41 challenges included in greening cities, among which is emissions reduction and avoidance (United 42 Nations 2017). 43 Since AR5, there has also been an increase in scientific literature on urban mitigation of climate change, 44 including more diversity of mitigation strategies than were covered during AR5 (Lamb et al. 2018), as 45 well as a growing focus on how strategies at the urban scale can have compounding or additive effects 46 beyond urban areas (e.g., in rural areas, land use planning, and the energy sector). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-8 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 There is also more literature on using a systems approach to understand the interlinkages between 2 mitigation and adaptation, and situating GHG emissions reduction targets within broader social, 3 economic, and human well-being context and goals (Bai et al. 2018; Ürge-Vorsatz et al. 2018; Lin et 4 al. 2021). In particular, the nexus approach, such as the water and energy nexus and the water-energy- 5 food nexus, is increasingly being used to understand potential emissions and energy savings from cross- 6 sectoral linkages that occur in cities (Wang and Chen 2016; Engström et al. 2017; Valek et al. 2017). 7 There is also a growing literature that aims to quantify transboundary urban GHG emissions and carbon 8 footprint beyond urban and national administrative boundaries (Chen et al. 2016; Hu et al. 2016). Such 9 a scope provides a more complete understanding of how local urban emissions or local mitigation 10 strategies can have effects on regions’ carbon footprint or GHG emissions. 11 City Climate Action 12 Moreover, cities around the world are putting increasing focus on tackling climate change. Since AR5: 13 ● Climate leadership at the local scale is growing with commitment from city decision-makers 14 and policymakers to implement local-scale mitigation strategies (GCoM 2018, 2019; ICLEI 15 2019a; C40 Cities 2020a). 16 ● More than 360 cities announced at the Paris Climate Conference that the collective impact of 17 their commitments will lead to reducing up to 3.7 GtCO2-eq (CO2-equivalent) of urban 18 emissions annually by 2030 (Cities for Climate 2015). 19 ● The Global Covenant of Mayors (GCoM), a transnational network comprised of more than 20 10,000 cities, have made commitments to reduce urban GHG emissions up to 1.4–2.3 GtCO2- 21 eq annually by 2030 and 2.8–4.2 GtCO2-eq annually by 2050, compared to business-as-usual 22 (GCoM 2018, 2019). 23 ● More than 800 cities have made commitments to achieve net zero GHG emissions (see 24 Glossary), either economy-wide or in a particular sector (NewClimate Institute and Data- 25 Driven EnviroLab 2020). 26 Although most cities and other subnational actors (see Glossary) are yet to meet their net zero GHG or 27 CO2 emissions commitments, the growing numbers of those commitments, alongside organizations 28 enabled to facilitate reaching those targets, underscore the growing support for climate action by city 29 and other subnational leaders. 30 Historical and future urban emissions 31 One major innovation in this assessment report is the inclusion of historical and future urban GHG 32 emissions. Urban emissions based on consumption-based accounting by regions has been put forth for 33 the timeframe 1990–2100 using multiple datasets with projections given in the framework of the Shared 34 Socioeconomic Pathway (SSP) - Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenarios. This advance 35 has provided a time dimension to urban footprints considering different climate scenarios with 36 implications for urban mitigation, allowing a comparison of the way urban emissions and their reduction 37 can evolve given different scenario contexts (see Glossary for definitions of various ‘pathways’ and 38 ‘scenarios’ in the context of climate change mitigation, including ‘SSPs’ and ‘RCPs’). 39 Sustainable development linkages and feasibility assessment 40 Special emphasis is placed on the co-benefits of urban mitigation options, including an evaluation of 41 linkages with the SDGs based on synergies and/or trade-offs. Urban mitigation options are further 42 evaluated based on multiple dimensions according to the feasibility assessment (see Section 8.5.5, 43 Figure 8.19, and SM 8.2) indicating the enablers and barriers of implementation. These advances 44 provide additional guidance for urban mitigation. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-9 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 8.1.2 Preparing for the Special Report on Cities and Climate Change in AR7 3 At the 43rd Session of the IPCC in 2016, the IPCC approved a Special Report on Climate Change and 4 Cities during the Seventh Assessment Cycle of the IPCC (AR7). To stimulate scientific research 5 knowledge exchange, the IPCC and nine global partners co-sponsored the IPCC Cities and Climate 6 Change Science Conference, which brought together over 700 researchers, policymakers, and 7 practitioners from 80 countries. 8 The conference identified key research priorities including the need for an overarching systems 9 approach to understanding how sectors interact in cities as drivers for GHG emissions and the 10 relationship between climate and other urban processes, as well as achieving transformation towards 11 low-carbon and resilient futures (Bai et al. 2018). The subsequent report on global research and action 12 agenda identifies scale, informality, green and blue infrastructure, governance and transformation, as 13 well as financing climate action, as areas for scientific research during the AR6 cycle and beyond 14 (WCRP 2019). 15 8.1.3 The scope of the chapter: a focus on urban systems 16 This chapter takes an urban systems approach and covers the full range of urban settlements, including 17 towns, cities, and metropolitan areas. By ‘urban system’ (see Figure 8.15), this chapter refers to two 18 related concepts. First, an urban systems approach recognizes that cities do not function in isolation. 19 Rather, cities exhibit strong interdependencies across scales, whether it is within a region, a country, a 20 continent, or worldwide. Cities are embedded in broader ecological, economic, technical, institutional, 21 legal, and governance structures that often constrain their systemic function, which cannot be separated 22 from wider power relations (Bai et al. 2016). 23 The notion of a system of cities has been around for nearly 100 years and recognizes that cities are 24 interdependent, in that significant changes in one city, such as economic activities, income, or 25 population, will affect other cities in the system (Christaller 1933; Berry 1964; Marshall 1989). This 26 perspective of an urban system emphasizes the connections between a city and other cities, as well as 27 between a city and its hinterlands (Hall and Hay 1980; Ramaswami et al. 2017b; Xu et al. 2018c). An 28 important point is that growth in one city affects growth in other cities in the global, national or regional 29 system of cities (Gabaix 1999; Scholvin et al. 2019; Knoll 2021). 30 Moreover, there is a hierarchy of cities (Taylor 1997; Liu et al. 2014), with very large cities at the top 31 of the hierarchy concentrating political power and financial resources, but of which there are very few. 32 Rather, the urban system is dominated by small- and medium-sized cities and towns. With globalization 33 and increased interconnectedness of financial flows, labour, and supply chains, cities across the world 34 today have long-distance relationships on multiple dimensions but are also connected to their 35 hinterlands for resources. 36 The second key component of the urban systems lens identifies the activities and sectors within a city 37 as being inter-connected—that cities are ecosystems (Rees 1997; Grimm et al. 2000; Newman and 38 Jennings 2008; Acuto et al. 2019; Abdullah and Garcia-Chueca 2020; Acuto and Leffel 2021). This 39 urban systems perspective emphasizes linkages and interrelations within cities. The most evident 40 example of this is urban form and infrastructure, which refer to the patterns and spatial arrangements of 41 land use, transportation systems, and urban design. Changes in urban form and infrastructure can 42 simultaneously affect multiple sectors, such as buildings, energy, and transport. 43 This chapter assesses urban systems beyond simply jurisdictional boundaries. Using an urban systems 44 lens has the potential to accelerate mitigation beyond a single sector or purely jurisdictional approach 45 (see Section 8.4). An urban systems perspective presents both challenges and opportunities for urban 46 mitigation strategies. It shows that any mitigation option potentially has positive or negative Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-10 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 consequences in other sectors, other settlements, cities, or other parts of the world, and requires more 2 careful and comprehensive considerations on the broader impacts, including equity and social justice 3 (see Glossary for a comprehensive definition of ‘equity’ in the context of mitigation and adaption). This 4 chapter focuses on cities, city regions, metropolitan regions, megalopitans, mega-urban regions, towns, 5 and other types of urban configurations because they are the primary sources of urban GHG emissions 6 and tend to be where mitigation action can be most impactful. 7 There is no internationally agreed upon definition of urban, urban population, or urban area. Countries 8 develop their own definitions of urban, often based on a combination of population size or density, and 9 other criteria including the percentage of population not employed in agriculture, the availability of 10 electricity, piped water, or other infrastructures, and characteristics of the built environment, such as 11 dwellings and built structures. This chapter assesses urban systems, which includes cities and towns. It 12 uses a similar framework as Chapter 6 of AR6 IPCC WGII, referring to cities and urban settlements as 13 ‘concentrated human habitation centres that exist along a continuum’ (Dodman et al. 2022) (for further 14 definitions of ‘urban,’ ‘cities,’ ‘settlements,’ and related terms, see Glossary, and WGII Chapter 6). 15 16 8.1.4 The urban century 17 The 21st century will be the urban century, defined by a massive increase in global urban populations 18 and a significant building up of new urban infrastructure stock to accommodate the growing urban 19 population. Six trends in urbanization are especially important in the context of climate change 20 mitigation. 21 First, the size and relative proportion of the urban population is unprecedented and continues to increase. 22 As of 2018, approximately 55% of the global population lives in urban areas (about 4.3 billion people) 23 (UN DESA 2019). It is predicted that 68% of the world population will live in urban areas by 2050. 24 This will mean adding 2.5 billion people to urban areas between 2018 and 2050, with 90% of this 25 increase taking place in Africa and Asia. There is a strong correlation between the level of urbanization 26 and the level of national income, with considerable variation and complexity in the relationship between 27 the two (UN DESA 2019). In general, countries with levels of urbanization of 75% or greater all have 28 high national incomes, whereas countries with low levels of urbanization under 35% have low national 29 incomes (UN DESA 2019). In general, there is a clear positive correlation between the level of 30 urbanization and income levels (see Figure 8.1, also Box 8.1). 31 32 33 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-11 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 3 4 Figure 8.11 Relationship between urbanization level and Gross National Income 5 6 There is a positive and strong correlation between the urbanization level and gross national income. High 7 income countries have high levels of urbanization, on average 80%. Low-income countries have low levels 8 of urbanization, on average 30%. 9 10 Source: UN DESA 2019, p. 42 11 12 Second, the geographic concentration of the world’s current urban population is in emerging economies, 13 and the majority of future urban population growth will take place in developing countries and Least- 14 Developed Countries (LDCs). About half of the world’s urban population in 2018 lived in just seven 15 countries, and about half of the increase in urban population through 2050 is projected to be 16 concentrated in eight countries (UN DESA 2019) (see Figure 8.2). Of these eight, seven are emerging 17 economies where there will be a need for significant financing to construct housing, roads, and other 18 urban infrastructure to accommodate the growth of the urban population. How these new cities of 19 tomorrow will be designed and constructed will lock-in patterns of urban energy behaviour for decades 20 if not generations (see Section 8.3.4 and 8.4). Thus, it is essential that urban climate change mitigation 21 strategies include solutions appropriate for cities of varying sizes and typologies (see Section 8.6 and 22 Figure 8.21). FOOTNOTE1 The countries and areas classification in the underlying report for this figure deviates from the standard classification scheme adopted by WGIII as set out in Annex II, section 1. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-12 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Figure 8.2 Urban population size in 2018 and increase in the projected urban population. 3 4 In 2018, about half of the world’s urban population lived in seven countries, and about half of the 5 increase in urban population through 2050 is forecasted to concentrate in eight countries. 6 7 Source: UN DESA 2019, p. 44 8 Third, small and medium-sized cities and towns are a dominant type of urban settlement. In 2018, more 9 than half (58%) of the urban population lived in cities and towns with fewer than 1 million inhabitants 10 and almost half of the world’s urban population (48%) lived in settlements with fewer than 500,000 11 inhabitants (see Figure 8.3). Although megacities receive a lot of attention, only about 13% of the urban 12 population worldwide lived in a megacity—an urban area with at least 10 million inhabitants (UN 13 DESA 2019). Thus, there is a need for a wide range of strategies for urban mitigation of climate change 14 that are appropriate for cities of varying levels of development, sizes, especially smaller cities which 15 often have lower levels of financial capacities than large cities. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-13 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 3 Figure 8.3 Population of the world, by area of residence and size class of urban settlement for 2018 4 5 As of 2018, 4.2 billion people or 55% of the world population reside in urban settlements while 45% 6 reside in rural areas. The coloured stacked bars for the urban population represent the total number of 7 inhabitants for a given size class of urban settlements. Megacities of 10 million or more inhabitants have a 8 total of only 529 million inhabitants that corresponded to 12.5% of the urban population. In contrast, 9 about 1.8 billion inhabitants reside in urban settlements with fewer than 300,000 inhabitants that 10 corresponded to 41.5% of the urban population. The pie chart represents the respective shares for 2018, 11 with 42% of the urban population residing in settlements with more than 1 million inhabitants, and 58% 12 of the urban population residing in settlements with fewer than 1 million inhabitants. Almost half of the 13 world’s urban population (48%) live in settlements with fewer than 500,000 inhabitants. 14 15 Source: adapted from UN DESA 2019, p. 56. 16 17 Fourth, another trend is the rise of megacities and extended metropolitan regions. The largest cities 18 around the world are becoming even larger, and there is a growing divergence in economic power 19 between megacities and other large cities (Kourtit et al. 2015; Hoornweg and Pope 2017; Zhao et al. 20 2017b). Moreover, there is evidence that the largest city in each country has an increasing share of the 21 national population and economy. 22 Fifth, population declines have been observed for cities and towns across the world, including in Poland, 23 Republic of Korea, Japan, United States, Germany, and Ukraine. The majority of cities that have 24 experienced population declines are concentrated in Europe. Multiple factors contribute to the decline 25 in cities, including declining industries and the economy, declining fertility, and outmigration to larger 26 cities. Shrinking urban populations could offer retrofitting opportunities (UNEP 2019) and increasing 27 greenspaces (Jarzebski et al. 2021), but the challenges for these cities differ in scope and magnitude 28 from rapidly expanding cities. 29 Sixth, urbanization in many emerging economies is characterized by informality and an informal 30 economy (Brown and McGranahan 2016). The urban informal economy includes a wide array of 31 activities, including but not limited to street vending, home-based enterprises, unreported income from 32 self-employment, informal commerce, domestic service, waste-picking, and urban agriculture. The 33 urban informal economy is large and growing. Globally, about 44% of the urban economy is informal, 34 although there is much variation between countries and regions (ILO 2018). Emerging and developing 35 economies have the highest percentage of the urban informal economy, with Africa (76%) and the Arab 36 States (64%) with the largest proportion (ILO 2018). Urban informality also extends to planning, Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-14 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 governance and institutions (Roy 2009; EU 2016; Lamson-Hall et al. 2019). Given its prevalence, it is 2 important for urban climate change mitigation strategies to account for informality, especially in 3 emerging and developing countries (see Section 8.3.2). 4 5 8.1.5 Urbanization in developing countries 6 Urbanization in the 21st century will be dominated by population and infrastructure growth in 7 developing countries, and as such it is important to highlight three aspects that are unique and especially 8 relevant for climate change mitigation. First, urbanization will increase in speed and magnitude. Given 9 their significant impact on emissions, mitigation action in Asian cities, especially the large and rapidly 10 growing cities, will have significant implications on global ambitions (see Section 8.3.4). 11 Second, a number of cities in developing countries lack institutional, financial and technical capacities 12 to enable local climate change action (Sharifi et al. 2017; Fuhr et al. 2018). While these capacities differ 13 across contexts (Hickmann et al. 2017), several governance challenges are similar across cities 14 (Gouldson et al. 2015). These factors also influence the ability of cities to innovate and effectively 15 implement mitigation action (Nagendra et al. 2018) (see Chapter 17). 16 Third, there are sizable economic benefits in developing country cities that can provide an opportunity 17 to enhance political momentum and institutions (Colenbrander et al. 2016). The co-benefits approach 18 (see Section 8.2), which frames climate objectives alongside other development benefits, is increasingly 19 seen as an important concept justifying and driving climate change action in developing countries (Sethi 20 and Puppim de Oliveira 2018). 21 Large-scale system transformations are also deeply influenced by factors outside governance and 22 institutions such as private interests and power dynamics (Jaglin 2014; Tyfield 2014). In some cases, 23 these private interests are tied up with international flows of capital. In India, adaptation plans involving 24 networks of private actors and related mitigation actions have resulted in the dominance of private 25 interests. This has led to trade-offs and adverse impacts on the poor (Chu 2016; Mehta et al. 2019). 26 When planning and implementing low-carbon transitions, it is important to consider the socio-economic 27 context. An inclusive approach emphasizes the need to engage non-state actors, including businesses, 28 research organizations, non-profit organizations and citizens (Lee and Painter 2015; Hale et al. 2020). 29 For example, engaging people in defining locally relevant mitigation targets and actions has enabled 30 successful transformations in China (Engels 2018), Africa (Göpfert et al. 2019) and Malaysia (Ho et al. 31 2015). An active research and government collaboration through multiple stakeholder interactions in a 32 large economic corridor in Malaysia led to the development and implementation of a low-carbon 33 blueprint for the region (Ho et al. 2013). Many cities in LDCs and developing countries lack adequate 34 urban infrastructure and housing. An equitable transformation in these cities entails prioritizing energy 35 access and basic services including safe drinking water and sanitation, to meet basic needs of their 36 populations. 37 38 8.1.6 Urban carbon footprint 39 Urban areas concentrate GHG fluxes because of the size of the urban population, the size and nature of 40 the urban economy, the energy and GHGs embodied in the infrastructure (see Glossary for a definition 41 of ‘embodied emissions’), and the goods and services imported and exported to and from cities 42 (USGCRP 2018). 43 8.1.6.1 Urban carbon cycle 44 In cities, carbon cycles through natural (e.g., vegetation and soils) and managed (e.g., reservoirs and 45 anthropogenic—buildings, transportation) pools. The accumulation of carbon in urban pools, such as Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-15 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 buildings or landfills, results from the local or global transfer of carbon-containing energy and raw 2 materials used in the city (Churkina 2008; Pichler et al. 2017; Chen et al. 2020b). Quantitative 3 understanding of these transfers and the resulting emissions and uptake with an urban area is essential 4 for accurate urban carbon accounting (USGCRP 2018). Currently, urban areas are a net source of carbon 5 because they emit more carbon than they uptake. Thus, urban mitigation strategies require a twofold 6 strategy: reducing urban emissions of carbon into the atmosphere, and enhancing uptake of carbon in 7 urban pools (Churkina 2012) (for a broader definition of ‘carbon cycle’ and related terms such as 8 ‘carbon sink,’ carbon stock,’ ‘carbon neutrality,’ ‘GHG neutrality,’ and others, see Glossary). 9 Burning fossil fuels to generate energy for buildings, transportation, industry, and other sectors is a 10 major source of urban GHG emissions (Gurney et al. 2015). At the same time, most cities do not 11 generate within their boundaries all of the resources they use, such as electricity, gasoline, cement, 12 water, and food needed for local homes and businesses to function (Jacobs 1969), requiring 13 consideration of GHG emissions embodied in supply chains serving cities. Furthermore, urban 14 vegetation, soils, and aquatic systems can both emit or remove carbon from the urban atmosphere and 15 are often heavily managed. For example, urban parks, forests, and street trees actively remove carbon 16 from the atmosphere through growing season photosynthesis. They can become a net source of carbon 17 most often during the dormant season or heat waves. Some of the sequestered carbon can be stored in 18 the biomass of urban trees, soils, and aquatic systems. Urban infrastructures containing cement also 19 uptake carbon through the process of carbonation. The uptake of carbon by urban trees is at least two 20 orders of magnitude faster than by cement-containing infrastructures (Churkina 2012) (see Section 21 8.4.4, and Figures 8.17 and 8.18). 22 8.1.6.2 Urban emissions accounting 23 Urban GHG emissions accounting can determine critical conceptual and quantitative aspects of urban 24 GHG emissions. The accounting framework chosen can therefore predetermine the emissions 25 responsibility, the mitigation options available, and the level of effort required to correctly account for 26 emissions (Afionis et al. 2017). 27 Two main urban carbon accounting advances have occurred since AR5. The first includes efforts to 28 better understand and clarify how the different urban GHG accounting frameworks that have emerged 29 over the past 15 years are inter-related, require different methodological tools, and reflect differing 30 perspectives on emissions responsibility and quantification effort. The second main advance lies in a 31 series of methodological innovations facilitating practical implementation, emissions verification, and 32 scaling-up of the different GHG accounting approaches. This section provides an overview of the most 33 used GHG urban accounting frameworks followed by a review of the advances since AR5. 34 Numerous studies have reviewed urban GHG accounting frameworks and methods with somewhat 35 different nomenclatures and categorical divisions (Lin et al. 2015; Lombardi et al. 2017; Chen et al. 36 2019b; Arioli et al. 2020; Heinonen et al. 2020; Hachaichi and Baouni 2021; Ramaswami et al. 2021). 37 Furthermore, accounting frameworks are reflected in multiple protocols used by urban practitioners 38 (BSI 2013; Fong et al. 2014; ICLEI 2019b). Synthesis of these reviews and protocols, as well as the 39 many individual methodological studies available, point to four general frameworks of urban GHG 40 accounting: (1) territorial accounting (TA); (2) communitywide infrastructure supply chain foot- 41 printing (CIF); and (3 and 4) consumption-based carbon footprint accounting (CBCF) (Wiedmann and 42 Minx 2008). The last, CBCF, can be further divided into accounting with a focus on household or 43 personal consumption—(3) the personal carbon footprint (PCF)—and an approach in which one 44 includes final consumption in an area by all consumers—(4) the areal carbon footprint (ACF) (Heinonen 45 et al. 2020). A number of small variations to these general categories are found in the literature (Lin et 46 al. 2015; Chen et al. 2020a), but these four general frameworks capture the important distinctive (i.e., 47 policy-relevant) features of urban GHG accounting. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-16 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 All these approaches are foundationally rooted in the concept of urban metabolism that is, the tracking 2 of material and energy flows into, within, and out of cities (Wolman 1965). These frameworks all aim 3 to quantify urban GHG emissions but reflect different perspectives on where the emission responsibility 4 is allocated in addition to how much and which components of the GHG emissions associated with the 5 import and export of good and services to and from a city (‘transboundary embedded/embodied GHG 6 emissions’) are included in a given urban emissions account. The four frameworks share some common, 7 overlapping GHG emission quantities and their inter-relationships have been defined mathematically 8 (Chavez and Ramaswami 2013). 9 A key advance since AR5 lies in understanding the different GHG accounting frameworks in terms of 10 what they imply for responsibility—shared or otherwise—and what they imply for the depth and 11 breadth of GHG emission reductions. TA focuses on in-city direct emission of GHGs to the atmosphere 12 (e.g., combustion, net ecosystem exchange, methane – CH4 – leakage) within a chosen geographic area 13 (Sovacool and Brown 2010; Gurney et al. 2019). CIF connects essential infrastructure use and demand 14 activities in cities with their production, by combining TA emissions with the transboundary supply 15 chain emissions associated with imported electricity, fuels, food, water, building materials, and waste 16 management services used in cities (Ramaswami et al. 2008; Kennedy et al. 2009; Chavez and 17 Ramaswami 2013). 18 CBCF considers not only the supply-chain-related GHG emissions of key infrastructure, but also 19 emissions associated with all goods and services across a city, often removing emissions associated 20 with goods and services exported from a city (Wiedmann et al. 2016, 2021). The distinction between 21 the PCF and ACF variants of the CBCF are primarily associated with whether the agents responsible 22 for the final demand are confined to only city residents (PCF) or all consumers in a city (ACF), which 23 can include government consumers, capital formation, and other final demand categories (Heinonen et 24 al. 2020). 25 A recent synthesis of these frameworks in the context of a net zero GHG emissions target suggests that 26 the four frameworks contribute to different aspects of decarbonization policy and can work together to 27 inform the overall process of decarbonization (Ramaswami et al. 2021). Furthermore, the relative 28 magnitude of GHG emissions for a given city resulting from the different frameworks is often a 29 reflection of the city’s economic structure as a ‘consumer-’ or producer city’ (Chavez and Ramaswami 30 2013; Sudmant et al. 2018). 31 The TA framework is unique in that it can be independently verified through direct measurement of 32 GHGs in the atmosphere, offering a check on the integrity of emission estimates (Lauvaux et al. 2020; 33 Mueller et al. 2021). It is traditionally simpler to estimate by urban practitioners given the lower data 34 requirements, and it can be relevant to policies aimed specifically at energy consumption and mobility 35 activities within city boundaries. However, it will not reflect electricity imported for use in cities or 36 lifecycle emissions associated with in-city consumption of goods and services. 37 The CIF framework adds to the TA framework by including GHG emissions associated with electricity 38 imports and the lifecycle GHG emissions associated with key infrastructure provisioning activities in 39 cities, serving all homes, businesses, and industries. This widens both the number of emitting categories 40 and the responsibility for those emissions by including infrastructure-related supply chain emissions. 41 The CIF framework enables individual cities to connect communitywide demand for infrastructure 42 and food with their transboundary production, strategically aligning their net zero emissions plans with 43 larger-scale net zero efforts (Ramaswami and Chavez 2013; Ramaswami et al. 2021; Seto et al. 2021). 44 The PCF version of the CBCF shifts the focus of the consumption and associated supply chain emissions 45 to only household consumption of goods and services (Jones and Kammen 2014). This both reduces 46 the TA emissions considered and the supply chain emissions, excluding all emissions associated with 47 government, capital formation, and exports. The ACF, by contrast, widens the perspective considerably, Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-17 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 including the TA and supply chain emissions of all consumers in a city, but often removing emissions 2 associated with exports. 3 An additional distinction is the ability to sum up accounts from individual cities in a region or country, 4 for example, directly to arrive at a regional or national total. This can only be done for the TA and PCF 5 frameworks. The ACF and CIF frameworks would require adjustment to avoid double-counting 6 emissions (Chen et al. 2020a). 7 A second major area of advance since AR5 has been in methods to implement, verify and scale up the 8 different GHG foot-printing approaches. Advances have been made in six key areas: (1) advancing 9 urban metabolism accounts integrating stocks and flows, and considering biogenic and fossil-fuel-based 10 emissions (Chen et al. 2020b); (2) improving fine-scale and near-real-time urban use-activity data 11 through new urban data science (Gately et al. 2017; Gurney et al. 2019; Turner et al. 2020; Yadav et al. 12 2021); (3) using atmospheric monitoring from the ground, aircraft, and satellites combined with inverse 13 modelling to independently quantify TA emissions (Lamb et al. 2016; Lauvaux et al. 2016, 2020; Davis 14 et al. 2017; Mitchell et al. 2018; Sargent et al. 2018; Turnbull et al. 2019; Wu et al. 2020a); (4) 15 improving supply chain and input-output modelling, including the use of physically based input-output 16 models (Wachs and Singh 2018); (5) establishing the global multi-region input-output models (Lenzen 17 et al. 2017; Wiedmann et al. 2021); and (6) generating multi-sector use and supply activity data across 18 all cities in a nation, in a manner where data aggregate consistently across city, province, and national 19 scales (Tong et al. 2021) (see Section 8.3). 20 21 8.2 Co-Benefits and trade-offs of urban mitigation strategies 22 Co-benefits are ‘the positive effects that a policy or measure aimed at one objective might have on other 23 objectives, thereby increasing the total benefits to the society or environment’ (Matthews et al. 2018). 24 AR5 WGIII Chapter 12 reported a range of co-benefits associated with urban climate change mitigation 25 strategies, including public savings, air quality and associated health benefits, and productivity 26 increases in urban centres (Seto et al. 2014). Since AR5, evidence continues to mount on the co-benefits 27 of urban mitigation. Highlighting co-benefits could make a strong case for driving impactful mitigation 28 action (Bain et al. 2016), especially in developing countries, where development benefits can be the 29 argument for faster implementation (Sethi and Puppim de Oliveira 2018). Through co-benefits, urban 30 areas can couple mitigation, adaptation, and sustainable development while closing infrastructure gaps 31 (Thacker et al. 2019; Kamiya et al. 2020). 32 The urgency of coupling mitigation and adaptation is emphasized through a special Cross-Working 33 Group Box on ‘Cities and Climate Change’ (see Section 8.2.3 and Cross-Working Group Box 2). This 34 section further addresses synergies and trade-offs for sustainable development with a focus on linkages 35 with the SDGs and perspectives for economic development, competitiveness, and equity. 36 8.2.1 Sustainable development 37 Sustainable development is a wide concept, encompassing socioeconomic and environmental 38 dimensions, envisaging long-term permanence and improvement. Whilst long-term effects are more 39 related to resilience—and hence carry co-benefits and synergies with the mitigation of GHG 40 emissions—some short-term milestones were defined by the post-2015 UN Sustainable Development 41 Agenda SDGs, including a specific goal on climate change (SDG 13) and one on making cities 42 inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable (SDG 11) (United Nations 2015). The SDGs and related 43 indicators can be an opportunity to improve cities by using science-based decision-making and 44 engaging a diverse set of stakeholders (Simon et al. 2016; Klopp and Petretta 2017; Kutty et al. 2020). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-18 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 There are multiple ways that development pathways can be shifted towards sustainability (see Section 2 4.3.3, Cross-Chapter Box 5 in Chapter 4, Chapter 17, and Figure 17.1). Urban areas can work to redirect 3 development pathways towards sustainability while increasing co-benefits for urban inhabitants. Figure 4 8.4 indicates that mitigation options for urban systems can provide synergistic linkages across a wide 5 range of SDGs, and some cases where linkages can produce both synergies and trade-offs. While 6 linkages are based on context and the scale of implementation, synergies can be most significant when 7 urban areas pursue integrated approaches where one mitigation option supports the other (see also 8 Sections 8.4 and 8.6). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-19 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII Figure 8.4 Co-benefits of urban mitigation actions. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-20 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII The first column lists urban mitigation options. The second column indicates synergies with the SDGs. The third column indicates both synergies and/or trade-offs. The dots represent confidence levels with the number of dots representing levels from low to high. In the last column, confidence levels for synergies and/or trade- offs are provided separately. A plus sign (+) represents synergy and a minus sign (-) represents a trade-off. Supplementary Material SM8.1 provides 64 references and extends the SDG mappings that are provided in Thacker et al. (2019) and Fuso Nerini et al. (2018). Please see Supplementary Material Table 17.1 for details and Annex II for the methodology of the SDG assessment. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-21 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 3 Figure 8.4 summarizes an evaluation of the synergies and/or trade-offs with the SDGs for the mitigation 4 options for urban systems based on Supplementary Material (SM) 8.1 (SM8.1). The evaluations depend 5 on the specific urban context with synergies and/or trade-offs being more significant in certain contexts 6 than others. Urban mitigation with a view of the SDGs can support shifting pathways of urbanization 7 towards greater sustainability. The feasibility of urban mitigation options is also malleable and can 8 increase with more ‘enabling conditions’ (see Glossary), provided, perhaps, though institutional (i.e., 9 financial or governmental) support (see Section 8.5). Strengthened institutional capacity that supports 10 the coordination of mitigation options can increase linkages with the SDGs and their synergies. For 11 example, urban land use and spatial planning for walkable and co-located densities together with 12 electrification of the urban energy system can hold more benefits for the SDGs than any one of the 13 mitigation options alone (see Sections 8.4.2.2, 8.4.3.1, and 8.6). 14 Evidence on the co-benefits of urban mitigation measures for human health has increased significantly 15 since AR5, especially through the use of health impact assessments, where energy savings and cleaner 16 energy supply structures based on measures for urban planning, heating, and transport have reduced 17 CO2, nitrogen oxides (NOx), and coarse particulate matter (PM10) emissions (Diallo et al. 2016). Some 18 measures, especially those related to land-use planning and transportation, have also increased 19 opportunities for physical activity for improved health (Diallo et al. 2016). In developing countries, the 20 co-benefits approach has been effective in justifying climate change mitigation actions at the local level 21 (Puppim de Oliveira and Doll 2016). Mixed-use compact development with sufficient land use diversity 22 can have a positive influence on urban productivity (see Section 8.4.2). Conversely, urban spatial 23 structures that increase walking distances and produce car dependency have negative impacts on urban 24 productivity considering congestion as well as energy costs (Salat et al. 2017). 25 There is increasing evidence that climate mitigation measures can lower health risks that are related to 26 energy poverty, especially among vulnerable groups such as the elderly and in informal settlements 27 (Monforti-Ferrario et al. 2018). Measures such as renewable energy-based electrification of the energy 28 system not only reduce outdoor air pollution, but also enhance indoor air quality by promoting smoke- 29 free heating and cooking in buildings (Kjellstrom and McMichael 2013). The environmental and 30 ecological benefits of electrification of the urban energy system include improved air quality based on 31 a shift to non-polluting energy sources (Jacobson et al. 2018; Ajanovic and Haas 2019; Bagheri et al. 32 2019; Gai et al. 2020). Across 74 metropolitan areas around the world, an estimated 408,270 lives per 33 year are saved due to air quality improvements that stem from a move to 100% renewable energy 34 (Jacobson et al. 2020). Other studies indicate that there is potential to reduce premature mortality by up 35 to 7,000 people in 53 towns and cities, to create 93,000 new jobs, and to lower global climate costs and 36 personal energy costs, through renewable energy transformations (Jacobson et al. 2018). 37 Across 146 signatories of a city climate network, local energy-savings measures led to 6,596 avoided 38 premature deaths and 68,476 years of life saved due to improved air quality (Monforti-Ferrario et al. 39 2018). Better air quality further reinforces the health co-benefits of climate mitigation measures based 40 on walking and bicycling since evidence suggests that increased physical activity in urban outdoor 41 settings with low levels of black carbon improves lung function (Laeremans et al. 2018). Physical 42 activity can also be fostered through urban design measures and policies that promote the development 43 of ample and well-connected parks and open spaces, and can lead to physical and mental health benefits 44 (Kabisch et al. 2016) (see Section 8.4.4 and Figure 8.18). 45 Cities in India, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Thailand show that reducing emissions from major sources 46 (e.g., transport, residential burning, biomass open burning and industry) could bring substantial co- 47 benefits of avoided deaths from reduced PM2.5 (fine inhalable particulates) emissions and radiative Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-22 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 forcing from black carbon (Pathak and Shukla 2016; Dhar et al. 2017; Permadi et al. 2017; Karlsson et 2 al. 2020), reduced noise, and reduced traffic injuries (Kwan and Hashim 2016). Compact city policies 3 and interventions that support a modal shift away from private motor vehicles towards walking, cycling, 4 and low-emission public transport delivers significant public health benefits (Creutzig 2016; Ürge- 5 Vorsatz et al. 2018). Trade-offs associated with compact development include the marginal health costs 6 of transport air pollution (Lohrey and Creutzig 2016) and stress from traffic noise (Gruebner et al. 2017) 7 (Section 8.4.2.2). 8 Urban green and blue infrastructure—a subset of nature-based solutions (NBS)—acts as both climate 9 mitigation and adaptation measures by reducing heat stress (Kim and Coseo 2018; Privitera and La 10 Rosa 2018; Herath et al. 2021) improving air quality, reducing noise (Scholz et al. 2018; De la Sota et 11 al. 2019), improving urban biodiversity (Hall et al. 2017b), and enhancing well-being, including 12 contributions to local development (Lwasa et al. 2015). Health benefits from urban forestry and green 13 infrastructure include reduced cardiovascular morbidity, improved mental health (van den Bosch and 14 Ode Sang 2017; Vujcic et al. 2017; Al-Kindi et al. 2020; Sharifi et al. 2021), raised birth weight 15 (Dzhambov et al. 2014), and increased life expectancy (Jonker et al. 2014). Urban agriculture, including 16 urban orchards, roof-top gardens, and vertical farming contribute to enhancing food security and 17 fostering healthier diets (Cole et al. 2018; Petit-Boix and Apul 2018; De la Sota et al. 2019) (see Section 18 8.4.4, Figure 8.18, and Box 8.2). 19 20 8.2.2 Economic development, competitiveness, and equity 21 Sustainable management of urban ecosystems entails addressing economic growth, equity, and good 22 governance. In total, 102 SDG targets (99 synergies and 51 trade-offs) are identified with published 23 evidence of relationships with urban ecosystems—out of the 169 in the 2030 Agenda (Maes et al. 2019). 24 The targets require action in relation to urban ecosystem management, environmental improvements, 25 equality related to basic services, long-term economic growth, economic savings, stronger governance, 26 and policy development at multiple scales. 27 Mitigation measures related to different sectors can provide co-benefits and reduce social inequities. 28 Transport-related measures, such as transportation demand management, transit-oriented development 29 (TOD), and promotion of active transport modes provide economic co-benefits through, for example, 30 reducing healthcare costs linked with pollution and cardiovascular diseases, improving labour 31 productivity, and decreasing congestion costs (including waste of time and money) (Sharifi et al. 2021). 32 As a case-in-point, data from cities such as Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta, Manila, Beijing, Mexico 33 City, Dakar, and Buenos Aires indicate that economic costs of congestion account for a considerable 34 share of their gross domestic product (GDP) (ranging from 0.7% to 15.0%) (Dulal 2017) (see Section 35 8.4.2). 36 Since policy interventions can result in negative impacts or trade-offs with other objectives, fostering 37 accessibility, equity, and inclusivity for disadvantaged groups is essential (Viguié and Hallegatte 2012; 38 Sharifi 2020; Pörtner et al. 2021). Anti-sprawl policies that aim to increase density or introduction of 39 large green areas in cities could increase property prices, resulting in trade-offs with affordable housing 40 and pushing urban poor further away from cities (Reckien et al. 2017; Alves et al. 2019). Deliberate 41 strategies can improve access of low income populations to jobs, and gender-responsive transport 42 systems that can enhance women’s mobility and financial independence (Viguié and Hallegatte 2012; 43 Lecompte and Juan Pablo 2017; Reckien et al. 2017; Priya Uteng and Turner 2019). 44 Low-carbon urban development that triggers economic decoupling and involves capacity building 45 measures could have a positive impact on employment and local competitiveness (Dodman 2009; 46 Kalmykova et al. 2015; Chen et al. 2018b; García-Gusano et al. 2018; Hu et al. 2018; Shen et al. 2018). 47 Sustainable and low-carbon urban development that integrates issues of equity, inclusivity, and Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-23 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 affordability while safeguarding urban livelihoods, providing access to basic services, lowering energy 2 bills, addressing energy poverty, and improving public health, can also improve the distributional 3 effects of existing and future urbanization (Friend et al. 2016; Claude et al. 2017; Colenbrander et al. 4 2017; Ma et al. 2018; Mrówczyńska et al. 2018; Pukšec et al. 2018; Wiktorowicz et al. 2018; 5 Ramaswami 2020). 6 Depending on the context, green and blue infrastructure can also offer considerable economic co- 7 benefits. For example, green roofs and facades and other urban greening efforts such as urban 8 agriculture and greening streets can improve microclimatic conditions and enhance thermal comfort, 9 thereby reducing utility and healthcare costs. The presence of green and blue infrastructure may also 10 increase the economic values of nearby properties (Votsis 2017; Alves et al. 2019) (see Section 8.4.4 11 and Figure 8.18). 12 Studies in the UK show that beneficiaries are willing to pay (WTP) an additional fee (up to 2% more in 13 monthly rent) for proximity to green and blue infrastructure, with the WTP varying depending on the 14 size and nature of the green space (Mell et al. 2013, 2016). Urban agriculture can not only reduce 15 household food expenditure, but also provide additional sources of revenue for the city (Ayerakwa 16 2017; Alves et al. 2019). Based on the assessed literature, there is high agreement on the economic co- 17 benefits of green and blue infrastructure, but supporting evidence is still limited (see Section 8.7). 18 Implementing waste management and wastewater recycling measures can provide additional sources of 19 income for citizens and local authorities. Wastewater recycling can minimize the costs associated with 20 the renewal of centralized wastewater treatment plants (Bernstad Saraiva Schott and Cánovas 2015; 21 Gharfalkar et al. 2015; Gonzalez-Valencia et al. 2016; Herrero and Vilella 2018; Matsuda et al. 2018; 22 Nisbet et al. 2019). Waste management and wastewater recycling is also a pathway for inclusion of the 23 informal sector into the urban economy with high agreement and medium evidence (Sharifi 2021). 24 Additionally, authorities can sell energy generated from wastewater recycling to compensate for the 25 wastewater management costs (Colenbrander et al. 2017; Gondhalekar and Ramsauer 2017). Another 26 measure that contributes to reducing household costs is the promotion of behavioural measures such as 27 dietary changes that can decrease the demand for costly food sources and reduce healthcare costs 28 through promoting healthy diets (Hoppe et al. 2016) (see Sections 8.4.5 and 8.4.6). 29 In addition to cost savings, various measures such as stormwater management and urban greening can 30 enhance social equity and environmental justice. For example, the thermal comfort benefits provided 31 by green and blue infrastructure and passive design measures can address issues related to energy 32 poverty and unaffordability of expensive air conditioning systems for some social groups (Sharma et 33 al. 2018; He et al. 2019). To achieve such benefits, however, the costs of integrating green and blue 34 infrastructure and passive design measures into building design would need to be minimized. Another 35 example is the flood mitigation benefits of stormwater management measures that can reduce impacts 36 on urban poor who often reside in flood-prone and low-lying areas of cities (Adegun 2017; He et al. 37 2019). Generally, the urban poor are expected to be disproportionately affected by climate change 38 impacts. Carefully designed measures that reduce such disproportionate impacts by involving experts, 39 authorities and citizens would enhance social equity (Pandey et al. 2018; He et al. 2019; Mulligan et al. 40 2020). 41 42 8.2.3 Coupling mitigation and adaptation 43 There are numerous synergies that come from coupling urban adaptation and mitigation. A number of 44 studies have developed methods to assess the synergies between mitigation and adaptation strategies, 45 as well as their co-benefits (Solecki et al. 2015; Buonocore et al. 2016; Chang et al. 2017; Helgenberger 46 and Jänicke 2017). Co-benefits occur when implementing mitigation (or adaptation) measures that have 47 positive effects on adaptation (or mitigation) (Sharifi 2021). In contrast, the trade-offs emerge when Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-24 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 measures aimed at improving mitigation (adaptation) undermine the ability to pursue adaptation 2 (mitigation) targets (Sharifi 2020). The magnitude of such co-benefits and trade-offs may vary 3 depending on various factors. A systematic review of over 50 climate change articles provides evidence 4 that mitigation can contribute to resilience—especially to temperature changes and flooding—with 5 varying magnitudes depending on factors, such as the type of mitigation measure and the scale of 6 implementation (Sharifi 2019). 7 Measures from different sectors that can provide both mitigation and adaptation benefits involve urban 8 planning (see Section 8.4.2), buildings (Sections 8.4.3.2 and 8.4.4), energy (Section 8.4.3), green and 9 blue infrastructure (Section 8.4.4), transportation (Section 8.4.2), socio-behavioural aspects (Section 10 8.4.5), urban governance (Section 8.5), waste (Section 8.4.5.2), and water (Section 8.4.6). In addition 11 to their energy-saving and carbon-sequestration benefits, many measures can also enhance adaptation 12 to climate threats, such as extreme heat, energy shocks, floods, and droughts (Sharifi 2021). Existing 13 evidence is mainly related to urban green infrastructure, urban planning, transportation, and buildings. 14 There has been more emphasis on the potential co-benefits of measures, such as proper levels of density, 15 building energy efficiency, distributed and decentralized energy infrastructure, green roofs and facades, 16 and public/active transport modes. Renewable-based distributed and decentralized energy systems 17 improve resilience to energy shocks and can enhance adaptation to water stress considering the water- 18 energy nexus. By further investment on these measures, planners and decision makers can ensure 19 enhancing achievement of mitigation/adaptation co-benefits at the urban level (Sharifi 2021). 20 As for trade-offs, some mitigation efforts may increase exposure to stressors such as flooding and the 21 urban heat island (UHI) effect (see Glossary), thereby reducing the adaptive capacity of citizens. For 22 instance, in some contexts, high-density areas that lack adequate provision of green and open spaces 23 may intensify the UHI effect (Pierer and Creutzig 2019; Xu et al. 2019). There are also concerns that 24 some mitigation efforts may diminish adaptive capacity of urban poor and marginalized groups through 25 increasing costs of urban services and/or eroding livelihood options. Environmental policies designed 26 to meet mitigation targets through phasing out old vehicles may erode livelihood options of poor 27 households, thereby decreasing their adaptive capacity (Colenbrander et al. 2017). Ambitious mitigation 28 and adaptation plans could benefit private corporate interests resulting in adverse effects on the urban 29 poor (Chu et al. 2018; Mehta et al. 2019). 30 Urban green and blue infrastructure such as urban trees, greenspaces, and urban waterways can 31 sequester carbon and reduce energy demand, and provide adaptation co-benefits by mitigating the UHI 32 effect (Berry et al. 2015; Wamsler and Pauleit 2016; WCRP 2019) (see Section 8.4.4, Figure 8.18, and 33 Box 8.2). 34 35 START CROSS-WORKING GROUP BOX 2 HERE 36 Cross-Working Group Box in Working Group II, Chapter 6 37 Cross-Working Group Box 2: Cities and Climate Change 38 Authors: Xuemei Bai (Australia), Vanesa Castan Broto (United Kingdom/Spain), Winston Chow 39 (Singapore), Felix Creutzig (Germany), David Dodman (Jamaica/United Kingdom), Rafiq Hamdi 40 (Belgium), Bronwyn Hayward (New Zealand), Şiir Kılkış (Turkey), Shuaib Lwasa (Uganda), Timon 41 McPhearson (the United States of America), Minal Pathak (India), Mark Pelling (United Kingdom), 42 Diana Reckien (Germany), Karen Seto (the United States of America), Ayyoob Sharifi (Japan/Iran), 43 Diána Ürge-Vorsatz (Hungary) 44 Introduction 45 This Cross-Working Group Box on Cities and Climate Change responds to the critical role of 46 urbanization as a mega-trend impacting climate adaptation and mitigation. Issues associated with cities Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-25 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 and urbanization are covered in substantial depth within all three Working Groups (including WGI Box 2 TS.14, WGII Chapter 6 ‘Cities, settlements and key infrastructure,’ WGII regional chapters, WGII 3 Cross-Chapter Paper ‘Cities and settlements by the sea’, and WGIII Chapter 8 ‘Urban systems and other 4 settlements’). This Box highlights key findings from WGII and III and substantial gaps in literature 5 where more research is urgently needed relating to policy action in cities. It describes methods of 6 addressing mitigation and adaptation in an integrated way across sectors and cities to advance 7 sustainable development and equity outcomes and assesses the governance and finance solutions 8 required to support climate resilient responses. 9 Urbanization: A megatrend driving global climate risk and potential for low-carbon and resilient 10 futures 11 Severe weather events, exacerbated by anthropogenic emissions, are already having devastating impacts 12 on people who live in urban areas, on the infrastructure that supports these communities, as well as 13 people living in distant places (high confidence) (Cai et al. 2019; Folke et al. 2021). Between 2000 and 14 2015, the global population in locations that were affected by floods grew by 58–86 million (Tellman 15 et al. 2021). The direct economic costs of all extreme events reached USD 210-268 billion in 2020 (Aon 16 2021; Munich RE 2021; WMO 2021) or about USD 0.7 billion per day; this figure does not include 17 knock-on costs in supply chains (Kii 2020) or lost days of work, implying that the actual economic 18 costs could be far higher. Depending on RCP, between half (RCP2.6) and three-quarters (RCP8.5) of 19 the global population could be exposed to periods of life-threatening climatic conditions arising from 20 coupled impacts of extreme heat and humidity by 2100 (Mora et al. 2017; Huang et al. 2019) (see WGII 21 Section 6.2.2.1, WGII Figure 6.3, and WGIII Sections 8.2 and 8.3.4). 22 Urban systems are now global, as evidenced by the interdependencies between infrastructure, services, 23 and networks driven by urban production and consumption; remittance flows and investments reach 24 into rural places shaping natural resource use far from the city and bring risk to the city when these 25 places are impacted by climate change (see WGIII Sections 8.4 and WGIII Figure 8.15). This megatrend 26 (Kourtit et al. 2015) amplifies as well as shapes the potential impacts of climate events and integrates 27 the aims and approaches for delivering mitigation, adaptation, and sustainable development (medium 28 evidence, high agreement) (Dawson et al. 2018; Tsavdaroglou et al. 2018; Zscheischler et al. 2018). For 29 cities facing flood damage, wide-ranging impacts have been recorded on other urban areas near and far 30 (Carter et al. 2021; Simpson et al. 2021) as production and trade is disrupted (Shughrue et al. 2020). In 31 the absence of integrated mitigation and adaptation across and between infrastructure systems and local 32 places, impacts that bring urban economies to a standstill can extend into supply chains and across 33 energy networks causing power outages. 34 Urban settlements contribute to climate change, generating about 70% of global CO2-eq emissions (high 35 confidence) (see WGI Box TS.14, WGII Sections 6.1 and 6.2, and WGIII Section 8.3). This global 36 impact feeds back to cities through the exposure of infrastructure, people, and business to the impacts 37 of climate-related hazards. Particularly in larger cities, this climate feedback is exacerbated by local 38 choices in urban design, land use, building design, and human behaviour (Viguié et al. 2020) that shape 39 local environmental conditions. Both the local and global combine to increase hazardousness. Certain 40 configurations of urban form and their elements can add up to 2°C to warming; concretisation of open 41 space can increase run-off, and building height and orientation influences wind direction and strength 42 (see WGII Section 6.3 and WGIII Section 8.4.2). 43 Designing for resilient and low-carbon cities today is far easier than retrofitting for risk reduction 44 tomorrow. As urbanization unfolds, its legacy continues to be the locking-in of emissions and 45 vulnerabilities (high confidence) (Seto et al. 2016; Ürge-Vorsatz et al. 2018) (see WGIII Section 8.4 46 and Figure 8.15). Retrofitting, disaster reconstruction, and urban regeneration programmes offer scope 47 for strategic direction changes to low-carbon and high-resilience urban form and function, so long as 48 they are inclusive in design and implementation. Rapid urban growth means new investment, new Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-26 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 buildings and infrastructure, new demands for energy and transport and new questions about what a 2 healthy and fulfilling urban life can be. The USD 90 trillion expected to be invested in new urban 3 development by 2030 (NCE 2018) is a global opportunity to place adaptation and mitigation directly 4 into urban infrastructure and planning, as well as to consider social policy including education, 5 healthcare, and environmental management (Ürge-Vorsatz et al. 2018). If this opportunity is missed, 6 and business-as-usual urbanization persists, social and physical vulnerability will become much more 7 challenging to address. 8 The benefits of actions taken to reduce GHG emissions and climate stressors diminish with delayed 9 action, indicating the necessity for rapid responses. Delaying the same actions for increasing the 10 resilience of infrastructure from 2020 to 2030 is estimated to have a median cost of at least USD 1 11 trillion (Hallegatte et al. 2019) while also missing the carbon emissions reductions required in the 12 narrowing window of opportunity to limit global warming to 1.5°C (WGI). In contrast, taking integrated 13 actions towards mitigation, adaptation, and sustainable development will provide multiple benefits for 14 the health and well-being of urban inhabitants and avoid stranded assets (see WGII Section 6.3, WGII 15 Chapter 17, Cross-Chapter Box FEASIBILITY in WGII Chapter 18, WGIII Chapter 5, and WGIII 16 Section 8.2). 17 The policy-action gap: urban low-carbon and climate resilient development 18 Cities are critical places to realize both adaptation and mitigation actions simultaneously with potential 19 co-benefits that extend far beyond cities (medium evidence high agreement) (Göpfert et al. 2019; 20 Grafakos et al. 2020). Given rapid changes in the built environment, transforming the use of materials 21 and the land intensiveness of urban development, including in many parts of the Global South, will be 22 critical in the next decades, as well as mainstreaming low-carbon development principles in new urban 23 development in all regions. Much of this development will be self-built and ‘informal’—and new modes 24 of governance and planning will be required to engage with this. Integrating mitigation and adaptation 25 now rather than later, through reshaping patterns of urban development and associated decision-making 26 processes, is a prerequisite for attaining resilient and zero-carbon cities (see WGIII Sections 8.4 and 27 8.6, and WGIII Figure 8.21). 28 While more cities have developed plans for climate adaptation and mitigation since AR5, many remain 29 to be implemented (limited evidence, high agreement) (Araos et al. 2017; Aguiar et al. 2018; Olazabal 30 and Ruiz De Gopegui 2021). A review of local climate mitigation and adaptation plans across 885 urban 31 areas of the European Union suggests mitigation plans are more common than adaptation plans—and 32 that city size, national legislation, and international networks can influence the development of local 33 climate and adaptation plans with an estimated 80% of those cities with above 500,000 inhabitants 34 having a mitigation and/or an adaptation plan (Reckien et al. 2018). 35 Integrated approaches to tackle common drivers of emissions and cascading risks provide the basis for 36 strengthening synergies across mitigation and adaptation, and help manage possible trade-offs with 37 sustainable development (limited evidence, medium agreement) (Grafakos et al. 2019; Landauer et al. 38 2019; Pierer and Creutzig 2019). An analysis of 315 local authority emission reduction plans reveals 39 that the most common policies cover municipal assets and structures (Palermo et al. 2020a). Estimates 40 of emission reductions by non-state and sub-state actors in ten high-emitting economies projected GHG 41 emissions in 2030 would be 1.2–2.0 GtCO2-eq per year or 3.8–5.5% lower compared to scenario 42 projections for current national policies (31.6–36.8 GtCO2-eq per year) if the policies are fully 43 implemented and do not change the pace of action elsewhere (Kuramochi et al. 2020). The value of 44 integrating mitigation and adaptation is underscored in the opportunities for decarbonizing existing 45 urban areas, and investing in social, ecological, and technological infrastructure resilience (WGII 46 Section 6.4). Integrating mitigation and adaption is challenging (Landauer et al. 2019) but can provide 47 multiple benefits for the health and well-being of urban inhabitants (Sharifi 2021) (See WGIII Section 48 8.2.3). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-27 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Effective climate strategies combine mitigation and adaptation responses, including through linking 2 adaptive urban land use with GHG emission reductions (medium evidence, high agreement) (Xu et al. 3 2019; Patterson 2021). For example, urban green and blue infrastructure can provide co-benefits for 4 mitigation and adaptation (Ürge-Vorsatz et al. 2018) and is an important entry point for integrating 5 adaptation and mitigation at the urban level (Frantzeskaki et al. 2019) (see WGIII Section 8.4.4 and 6 WGIII Figure 8.18). Grey and physical infrastructure, such as sea defences can immediately reduce 7 risk, but also transfer risk and limit future options. Social policy interventions including social safety 8 nets provide financial security for the most at-risk and can manage vulnerability determined by specific 9 hazards or independently. 10 Hazard-independent mechanisms for vulnerability reduction—such as population-wide social 11 security—provide resilience in the face of unanticipated cascading impacts or surprise and novel 12 climate-related hazard exposure. Social interventions can also support or be led by ambitions to reach 13 the SDGs (Archer 2016). Climate-resilient development invites planners to develop interventions and 14 monitor the effectiveness of outcomes beyond individual projects and across wider remits that consider 15 sustainable development. Curbing the emission impacts of urban activities to reach net zero emissions 16 in the next decades, while improving the resilience of urban areas, necessitates an integrated response 17 now. 18 Key gaps in knowledge include: urban-enabling environments; the role of smaller settlements, low- 19 income communities, and informal settlements, as well as those in rental housing spread across the city; 20 and the ways in which actions to reduce supply chain risk can be supported to accelerate equitable and 21 sustainable adaptation in the face of financial and governance constraints (Birkmann et al. 2016; Shi et 22 al. 2016; Rosenzweig et al. 2018; Dulal 2019). 23 Enabling action 24 Innovative governance and finance solutions are required to manage complex and interconnected risks 25 across essential key infrastructures, networks, and services, as well as to meet basic human needs in 26 urban areas (medium confidence) (Colenbrander et al. 2018a; Moser et al. 2019). There are many 27 examples of ‘ready-to-use’ policy tools, technologies, and practical interventions for policymakers 28 seeking to act on adaptation and mitigation (Bisaro and Hinkel 2018; Keenan et al. 2019; Chirambo 29 2021) (see WGIII Section 8.5.4). Tax and fiscal incentives for businesses and individuals can help 30 support city-wide behaviour change towards low-carbon and risk reducing choices. Change can start 31 where governments have most control—often in public sector institutions and investment—but the 32 challenge ahead requires partnership with private sector and community actors acting at scale and with 33 accountability. Urban climate governance and finance needs to address urban inequalities at the 34 forefront if the urban opportunity is to realize the ambition of the SDGs. 35 Increasing the pace of investments will put pressure on governance capability, transparency, and 36 accountability of decision-making (medium confidence) (see WGII Section 6.4.5). Urban climate action 37 that actively includes local actors is more likely to avoid unintended, negative maladaptive impacts and 38 mobilize a wide range of local capacities. In the long run, this is also more likely to carry public support, 39 even if some experiments and investments do not deliver the intended social benefits. Legislation, 40 technical capacity, and governance capability is required to be able to absorb additional finance. 41 In recent years, about USD 384 billion of climate finance has been invested in urban areas per year. 42 This remains at about 10% of the annual climate finance that would be necessary for low-carbon and 43 resilient urban development at a global scale (Negreiros et al. 2021). Rapid deployment of funds to 44 stimulate economies in the recovery from COVID-19 has highlighted the pitfalls of funding expansion 45 ahead of policy innovation and capacity building. The result can be an intensification of existing carbon- 46 intensive urban forms—exactly the kinds of ‘carbon lock-in’ (see WGIII Glossary and WGIII Section Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-28 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 8.4.1) that have contributed to risk creation and its concentration amongst those with little public voice 2 or economic power. 3 Iterative and experimental approaches to climate adaptation and mitigation decision-making grounded 4 in data and co-generated in partnership with communities can advance low-carbon climate resilience 5 (medium evidence, high confidence) (Culwick et al. 2019; Caldarice et al. 2021; van der Heijden and 6 Hong 2021). Conditions of complexity, uncertainty, and constrained resources require innovative 7 solutions that are both adaptive and anticipatory. Complex interactions among multiple agents in times 8 of uncertainty makes decision-making about social, economic, governance, and infrastructure choices 9 challenging and can lead decision-makers to postpone action. This is the case for those balancing 10 household budgets, residential investment portfolios, and city-wide policy responsibilities. Living with 11 climate change requires changes to business-as-usual design-making. Co-design and collaboration with 12 communities through iterative policy experimentation can point the way towards climate resilient 13 development pathways (Ataöv and Peker 2021). Key to successful learning is transparency in 14 policymaking, inclusive policy processes, and robust local modelling, monitoring, and evaluation, 15 which are not yet widely undertaken (Sanchez Rodriguez et al. 2018; Ford et al. 2019). 16 The diversity of cities’ experiences of climate mitigation and adaptation strategies brings an advantage 17 for those city governments and other actors willing to ‘learn together’ (limited evidence, high 18 confidence) (Bellinson and Chu 2019; Haupt and Coppola 2019). While contexts are varied, policy 19 options are often similar enough for the sharing of experiments and policy champions. Sharing expertise 20 can build on existing regional and global networks, many of which have already placed knowledge, 21 learning, and capacity-building at the centre of their agendas. Learning from innovative forms of 22 governance and financial investment, as well as strengthening coproduction of policy through inclusive 23 access to knowledge and resources, can help address mismatches in local capacities and strengthen 24 wider SDGs and COVID-19 recovery agendas (limited evidence, medium agreement). Perceptions of 25 risk can greatly influence the reallocation of capital and shift financial resources (Battiston et al. 2021). 26 Coupling mitigation and adaptation in an integrated approach offers opportunities to enhance efficiency, 27 increases the coherence of urban climate action, generates cost savings, and provides opportunities to 28 reinvest the savings into new climate action projects to make all urban areas and regions more resilient. 29 Local governments play an important role in driving climate action across mitigation and adaptation as 30 managers of assets, regulators, mobilizers, and catalysts of action, but few cities are undertaking 31 transformative climate adaptation or mitigation actions (limited evidence, medium confidence) 32 (Heikkinen et al. 2019). Local actors are providers of infrastructure and services, regulators of zoning, 33 and can be conveners and champions of an integrated approach for mitigation and adaptation at multiple 34 levels (limited evidence high confidence). New opportunities in governance and finance can enable 35 cities to pool resources together and aggregate interventions to innovate ways of mobilizing urban 36 climate finance at scale (Colenbrander et al. 2019; Simpson et al. 2019; White and Wahba 2019). 37 However, research increasingly points towards the difficulties faced during the implementation of 38 climate financing in situ, such as the fragmentation of structures of governance capable of managing 39 large investments effectively (Mohammed et al. 2019) (see WGIII Section 8.5 and WGIII Chapter 13). 40 Scaling up transformative place-based action for both adaptation and mitigation requires enabling 41 conditions, including land-based financing, intermediaries, and local partnerships (medium evidence, 42 high agreement) (Chu et al. 2019; Chaudhuri, 2020) supported by a new generation of big data 43 approaches. Governance structures that combine actors working at different levels with a different mix 44 of tools are effective in addressing challenges related to implementation of integrated action while 45 cross-sectoral coordination is necessary (Singh et al. 2020). Joint institutionalization of mitigation and 46 adaptation in local governance structures can also enable integrated action (Göpfert et al. 2020; 47 Hurlimann et al. 2021). However, the proportion of international finance that reaches local recipients 48 remains low, despite the repeated focus of climate policy on place-based adaptation and mitigation Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-29 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 (Manuamorn et al. 2020). Green financing instruments that enable local climate action without 2 exacerbating current forms of inequality can jointly address mitigation, adaptation, and sustainable 3 development. Climate finance that also reaches beyond larger non-state enterprises (e.g., small and 4 medium-sized enterprises, local communities, non-governmental organizations—NGOs, etc.), and is 5 inclusive in responding to the needs of all urban inhabitants (e.g., disabled individuals, citizens of 6 different races or ethnicities, etc.) is essential for inclusive and resilient urban development 7 (Colenbrander et al. 2019; Gabaldón-Estevan et al. 2019; Frenova 2021). Developing networks that can 8 exert climate action at scale is another priority for climate finance. 9 The urban megatrend is an opportunity to transition global society. Enabling urban governance to avert 10 cascading risk and achieve low-carbon, resilient development will involve the coproduction of policy 11 and planning, rapid implementation and greater cross sector coordination, and monitoring and 12 evaluation (limited evidence, medium agreement) (Di Giulio et al. 2018; Grafakos et al. 2019). New 13 constellations of responsible actors are required to manage hybrid local-city or cross-city risk 14 management and decarbonization initiatives (limited evidence, medium agreement). These may 15 increasingly benefit from linkages across more urban and more rural space as recognition of cascading 16 and systemic risk brings recognition of supply chains, remittance flows, and migration trends as vectors 17 of risk and resilience. Urban governance will be better prepared in planning, prioritizing, and financing 18 the kind of measures that can reduce GHG emissions and improve resilience at scale when they consider 19 a view of cascading risks and carbon lock-ins globally, while also acting locally to address local 20 limitations and capacities, including the needs and priorities of urban citizens (Colenbrander et al. 21 2018a; Rodrigues 2019). 22 END CROSS-WORKING GROUP BOX 2 HERE 23 8.3 Urban systems and GHG emissions 24 This section assesses trends in urban land use, the built environment, and urban GHG emissions, as well 25 as forecasts for urban land use and emissions under certain scenarios to 2050 or 2100. These trends and 26 scenarios hold implications for optimizing the approaches to urban climate change mitigation discussed 27 in Section 8.4 and 8.6. 28 8.3.1 Trends in urban land use and the built environment 29 Urban land use is one of the most intensive human impacts on the planet (Pouyat et al. 2007; Grimm et 30 al. 2008). Urban land expansion to accommodate a growing urban population has resulted in the 31 conversion of agricultural land (Pandey et al. 2018; Liu et al. 2019), deforestation (van Vliet 2019), 32 habitat fragmentation (Liu et al. 2016b), biodiversity loss (McDonald et al. 2018, 2020), and the 33 modification of urban temperatures and regional precipitation patterns (Li et al. 2017; Krayenhoff et al. 34 2018; Liu and Niyogi 2019; Zhang et al. 2019). 35 Urban land use and the associated built environment and infrastructure shape urban GHG emissions 36 through the demand for materials and the ensuing energy-consuming behaviours. In particular, the 37 structure of the built environment (i.e., its density, form, and extent) have long-lasting influence on 38 urban GHG emissions, especially those from transport and building energy use, as well as the embodied 39 emissions of the urban infrastructure (Butler et al. 2014; Salat et al. 2014; Ramaswami et al. 2016; Seto 40 et al. 2016; d’Amour et al. 2017). Thus, understanding trends in urban land use is essential for assessing 41 energy behaviour in cities as well as long-term mitigation potential (see Sections 8.4 and 8.6, and Figure 42 8.21). 43 This section draws on the literature to discuss three key trends in urban land expansion, and how those 44 relate to GHG emissions. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-30 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 First, urban land areas are growing rapidly all around the world. From 1975 to 2015, urban settlements 2 expanded in size approximately 2.5 times, accounting for 7.6% of the global land area (Pesaresi et al. 3 2016). Nearly 70% of the total urban expansion between 1992 and 2015 occurred in Asia and North 4 America (Liu et al. 2020a). By 2015, the extent of urban and built-up lands was between 0.5–0.6% of 5 the total 130 Mkm2 global ice-free land use, taking up other uses such as fertile cropland and natural 6 ecosystems. 7 Second, as Figure 8.5 shows, urban population densities are declining, with significant implications for 8 GHG emissions. From 1970 to 2010, while the global urban settlement extent doubled in size (Pesaresi 9 et al. 2016), most regions (grouped by the WGIII AR6 10-region aggregation) exhibited a trend of 10 decreasing urban population densities suggesting expansive urban growth patterns. Urban population 11 densities have consistently declined in the Asia-Pacific Developed, Europe, North America, and 12 Southern Asia regions, across all city sizes. North America consistently had the lowest urban population 13 densities. Notably, the Middle East region appears to be the only region exhibiting an overall increasing 14 trend across all city-size groups, while Latin America and Caribbean appears to be relatively stable for 15 all city sizes. While the larger cities in Africa and South-East Asia and Developing Pacific exhibit 16 slightly stable urban population densities, the small- and medium-sized cities in those regions trend 17 toward lower urban population densities. In large urban centres of Eastern Asia and North America, 18 rapid decreases in earlier decades seem to have tapered. Compared to larger cities, small-medium urban 19 areas with populations of less than 2 million have more declines in urban population densities and 20 higher rates of urban land expansion (Güneralp et al. 2020). 21 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-31 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Figure 8.5 Urban population density by decade (1970-2010) grouped by the WGIII AR6 10-region 3 aggregation. 4 5 The first panel (a) displays the results from all case study locations with a population >300,000. Panels (b) 6 and (c) show results grouped by city size: (b) cities with a population >2 million (large urban centres), and 7 (c) those with a population >300,000 but <2 million (small and medium urban centres). Box plots show the 8 median, first and third quartiles, and lower and upper mild outlier thresholds of bootstrapped average 9 urban population densities at the turn of each decade. The estimates are shown on a logarithmic scale. 10 The data shows an overall trend of declining urban population densities among all but one region in the 11 last four decades, at varying rates—although the Latin America and Caribbean region indicates 12 relatively constant urban population density over time. The Middle East region is the only region to 13 present with an increase in urban population density across all city sizes. 14 15 Source: Adapted from Güneralp et al. (2020, p. 7) 16 17 This decline in urban densities is paralleled by an increase in ‘sprawl’, or ‘outward’ urban 18 development. Urban expansion occurs in either one of three dimensions: (1) outward in a horizontal 19 manner; (2) upward, by way of vertical growth; or (3) infill development, where unused, abandoned, Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-32 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 or underutilized lands within existing urban areas are developed or rehabilitated (see, also, Figure 2 8.20). Outward expansion results in more urban land area and occurs at the expense of other land uses 3 (i.e., the conversion and loss of cropland, forests, etc.). Vertical expansion results in more multi-story 4 buildings and taller buildings, more floor space per area, and an increase in urban built-up density. 5 Every city has some combination of outward and upward growth in varying degrees (Mahtta et al. 6 2019) (see Figure 8.6). That each city is comprised of different and multiple urban growth typologies 7 suggests the need for differentiated mitigation strategies for different parts of a single city (see Section 8 8.6 and Figure 8.21). Recent research shows that the relative combination of outward versus upward 9 growth is a reflection of its economic and urban development (Lall et al. 2021). That is, how a city 10 grows—whether upward or outward—is a function of its economic development level. Upward 11 growth, or more tall buildings, is a reflection of higher land prices (Ahlfeldt and McMillen 2018; 12 Ahlfeldt and Barr 2020). 13 An analysis of 478 cities with populations of more than 1 million people found that the predominant 14 urban growth pattern worldwide is outward expansion, suggesting that cities are becoming more 15 expansive than dense (Mahtta et al. 2019) (see Figure 8.6). The study also found that cities within a 16 geographic region exhibit remarkably similar patterns of urban growth. Some studies have found a mix 17 of urban forms emerging around the world; an analysis of 194 cities identified an overall trend (from 18 1990 to 2015) toward urban forms that are a mixture of fragmented and compact (Lemoine-Rodriguez 19 et al. 2020). The exception to this trend is a group of large cities in Australia, New Zealand, and the 20 United States that are still predominantly fragmented. The same study also identified small- to medium- 21 sized cities as the most dynamic in terms of their expansion and change in their forms. 22 23 a) 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-33 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 b) 2 3 Figure 8.6 (a) Distribution of growth typologies across 10 cities, and (b) sample of 64 cities by region with 4 different patterns of urban growth 5 6 The empirical data is based on the Global Human Settlement Layer and backscatter power ratio for 7 different patterns of urban growth across the sample of cities. In (b), the blue arrows indicate outward 8 urban growth. Other urban patterns indicate stabilized (orange), mature upward (light blue), budding 9 outward (green), and upward and outward (red). Note that with few exceptions, each city is comprised of 10 multiple typologies of urban growth. 11 12 Source: Mahtta et al., 2019 13 14 A third trend in is urban land growth taking place on agricultural land, carbon stocks, and other land 15 uses (see ‘carbon stocks’ and ‘AFOLU’—agriculture, forestry, and other land uses—in Glossary). As 16 Figure 8.7 shows, over 60% of the reported urban expansion (nearly 40,000 km2) from 1970 to 2010 17 was formerly agricultural land (Güneralp et al. 2020). This percentage increased to about 70% for global 18 urban expansion that occurred between 1992 and 2015, followed by grasslands (about 12%) and forests 19 (about 9%) (Liu et al. 2020a). In terms of percent of total urban land expansion, the largest conversion 20 of agricultural lands to urban land uses from 1970 to 2010 took place in the Eastern Asia, and South- 21 East Asia and Developing Pacific regions; the largest proportional losses of natural land cover were 22 reported for the North America and Asia-Pacific Developed regions (Güneralp et al. 2020). At a sub- 23 regional level, agricultural land constituted the largest proportion of land converted to urban areas in 24 China, India, Europe, Southeast Asian countries and the central United States between 1995 and 2015; 25 in the eastern United States, most of new urban land was converted from forests (Liu et al. 2020a). 26 Urban expansion through 2040 may lead to the loss of almost 65 Mtonnes of crop production—a Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-34 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 scenario that underscores the ongoing relationship between urbanization and AFOLU (van Vliet et al. 2 2017) (see, also, Chapter 7). 3 4 5 Figure 8.7 Percent of total urban land expansion from other land covers, sorted by the WGIII AR6 10- 6 region aggregation (1970–2010) 7 8 As urban land has expanded outward, other forms of land cover, including agriculture, ‘nature’ (e.g., 9 forest, grassland, shrubland, water, and bare soil, all of which are disaggregated to the bottom half of the 10 plot), and other land covers, have been displaced. Globally, agriculture comprises the majority (about 11 60%) of the land displaced by urban expansion since 1970. Forests and shrubland vegetation—important 12 carbon stocks—also make up a significant proportion of displacement. The loss of carbon-sequestering 13 land like forests and shrubland independently impacts climate change by reducing global carbon stocks. 14 Eurasia is omitted because there are no case studies from that region that report land conversion data. 15 16 Source: Adapted from Güneralp et al. (2020, p. 9) 17 18 8.3.2 Informal urban settlements 19 About 880 million people currently live in informal settlements—defined as unplanned areas operating 20 outside of legal and regulatory systems, where residents have no legal claim over their property and 21 have inadequate basic services and infrastructure (United Nations 2018). Furthermore, upgrading 22 informal settlements and inadequate housing is essential for improving resilience to climate change and 23 well-being. Given the ubiquity of informal settlements in developing countries and LDCs, there is 24 potential to harness informality to accelerate transitions to low-carbon urban development. There are 25 several key reasons for their potential to mitigate GHG emissions. First, informal urban areas may not 26 require large investments in retrofitting as they have developed with minimal investment in large-scale 27 infrastructure. Second, these areas exhibit flexibility of development and can potentially be transformed Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-35 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 into an urban form that supports low- or carbon-neutral infrastructure for transportation, energy use in 2 residential buildings, and other sectors (Baurzhan and Jenkins 2016; Henneman et al. 2016; Byrne et 3 al. 2017; Oyewo et al. 2019). 4 Informal urban areas can avoid the conventional trajectory of urban development by utilizing large- 5 scale strategies, such as micro-scale technologies, modal shifts towards compact, walkable urban form, 6 as well as decentralized or meso-scale utilities of water, sanitation, and service centres,—thereby 7 mitigating emissions associated with transport and treating wastes (Tongwane et al. 2015; Yang et al. 8 2018). Some specific mitigation options include spatial adjustments for walkability of neighbourhoods, 9 low-energy-intensive mobility, low-energy-intensive residential areas, low-carbon energy sources at 10 city-scale, off-grid utilities, and electrification and enhancement of the urban ecology—all of which 11 have multiple potential benefits (Colenbrander et al. 2017; Fang et al. 2017; Laramee et al. 2018; van 12 der Zwaan et al. 2018; Wu et al. 2018; Silveti and Andersson 2019). Some of the co-benefits of the 13 various mitigation options include more job opportunities and business start-ups, increased incomes, 14 air quality improvement, and enhanced health and well-being (Gebreegziabher et al. 2014; Dagnachew 15 et al. 2018; Keramidas et al. 2018; Adams et al. 2019; Ambole et al. 2019; Boltz et al. 2019; Moncada 16 et al. 2019; Weimann and Oni 2019; Manga et al. 2020) (see Section 8.2). 17 Non-networked and non-centralized urban services and infrastructure in informal settlements, including 18 sanitation, waste, water, and electricity, serve over 60% of the urban population in developing country 19 cities (Lawhon et al. 2018). The alternatives of disruptive, hybrid, largely non-networked multiplicity 20 of technologies applicable at micro- to meso-scales have potential for low-emissions development in 21 urban areas of developing countries (Narayana 2009; Dávila and Daste 2012; Radomes Jr and Arango 22 2015; Potdar et al. 2016; Grové et al. 2018). These technologies can be applied in the short-term as 23 responses with long-term influence on emissions reduction. The cumulative impact of the disruptive 24 technologies can reduce emissions by 15–25% through enhanced emissions sinks in small- and medium- 25 sized cities (Tongwane et al. 2015; du Toit et al. 2018; Nero et al. 2018, 2019; Frantzeskaki et al. 2019; 26 Mantey and Sakyi 2019; Singh and G. 2019). 27 28 8.3.3 Trends in urban GHG emissions 29 One major innovation presented in AR6—particularly in this chapter—is the inclusion of trend data on 30 urban GHG emissions. Using multiple datasets in conjunction with the SSP and RCP scenarios, this 31 chapter provides an estimate of urban GHG emissions from 1990 through 2100, based on a 32 consumption-based approach. This innovation provides, for the first time, a temporal dimension to 33 urban footprints considering different climate scenarios with implications for urban mitigation. The new 34 analysis presents a comparison of ways urban emissions can evolve given different scenario contexts 35 (see Section 8.3.4.2). Additionally, new research has quantified trends in urban CO2 emissions and their 36 key drivers across 91 global cities from 2000 to 2018 (Luqman et al. 2021). 37 Figures 8.8 and 8.9 present key urban emission metrics and trends for six regions (based on the WGIII 38 AR6 regional breakdown)—the first for the year 2015, and the latter for both 2000 and 2015. 39 The key trends are as follows. First, the urban share of global GHG emissions (including CO2 and CH4) 40 is substantive and continues to increase (see Figure 8.9). Total urban CO2-eq emissions based on 41 consumption-based accounting were estimated to be 24.5 GtCO2-eq, or 62% of the global total in 2015, 42 and increased to an estimated 28.5 ± 0.1 GtCO2-eq in 2020, representing about 67-72% of global 43 emissions, excluding aviation, shipping, and biogenic sources. About 100 of the highest-emitting urban 44 areas account for approximately 18% of the global carbon footprint (Moran et al. 2018). Globally, the 45 urban share of national CO2-eq emissions increased 6 percentage points, from 56% in 2000 to 62% in 46 2015. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-36 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Figure 8.8 2015 average urban GHG emissions per capita considering CO2 and CH4 emissions from a 3 consumption based perspective, alongside urban population, for regions represented in the WGIII AR6 6- 4 region aggregation. 5 6 The average urban per capita emissions are given by the height of the bars while the width represents the 7 urban population for a given region, based on 2015 values for both axes. Provided within the bars are the 8 percentage shares of the urban population by region as a share of the total urban population. 9 10 Source: Adapted from UN DESA (2019) and Gurney et al. (2021a) 11 12 Second, while urban CO2 emissions were increasing in all urban areas, the dominant drivers were 13 dependent upon development level. Emissions growth in urban areas other than in Developed 14 Countries was driven by increases in area and per capita emissions. Across all cities, higher 15 population densities are correlated with lower per capita GHG emissions (Luqman et al. 2021). 16 Third, the urban share of regional GHG emissions increased between 2000 and 2015, with much inter- 17 region variation in the magnitude of the increase (high confidence) (see Figure 8.9). Between 2000 to 18 2015, the urban emissions share across WGIII AR6 regions (6-region aggregation) increased from 28% 19 to 38% in Africa, from 46% to 54% in Asia and Developing Pacific, from 62% to 72% in Developed 20 Countries, from 57% to 62% in Eastern Europe and West-Central Asia, from 55% to 66% in Latin 21 America and Caribbean, and from 68% to 69% in the Middle East. 22 Between 2000 and 2015, urban population, urban CO2-eq emissions, and national CO2-eq emissions 23 increased as a share of the global total in the Asia and Developing Pacific region while the share 24 declined for Developed Countries. The urban share of total regional CO2-eq emissions decreased in 25 Developed Countries from 58.2% (2000) to 40.0% (2015). Urban per capita CO 2-eq and national per 26 capita CO2-eq also increased in all regions except for the urban per capita CO2-eq value in the 27 Developed Countries region which declined slightly. 28 Fourth, the global average per capita urban GHG emissions increased between 2000 and 2015, with 29 cities in the Developed Countries region producing nearly seven times more per capita than the lowest 30 emitting region (medium confidence). From 2000 to 2015, the global urban GHG emissions per capita 31 increased from 5.5 to 6.2 tCO2-eq per person (an increase of 11.8%), with increases across five of the 32 six regions: Africa increased from 1.3 to 1.5 tCO2-eq per person (22.6%); Asia and Developing Pacific 33 increased from 3.0 to 5.1 tCO2-eq per person (71.7%); Eastern Europe and West-Central Asia increased 34 from 6.9 to 9.8 tCO2-eq per person (40.9%); Latin America and the Caribbean increased from 2.7 to 3.7 35 tCO2-eq per person (40.4%); and the Middle East increased from 7.4 to 9.6 tCO2-eq per person (30.1%). 36 Albeit starting from the highest level, Developed Countries had a decline of 11.4 to 10.7 tCO 2-eq per 37 person (-6.5%). 38 In 2015, regional urban per capita consumption-based CO2-eq emissions were lower than regional 39 consumption-based national per capita CO2-eq emissions in five of the six regions. These regions in 40 order of the difference are Developed Countries (lower by 1.0 tCO2-eq per capita), Latin America and Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-37 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Caribbean (lower by 0.8 tCO2-eq per capita), Eastern Europe and West-Central Asia (lower by 0.7 tCO2- 2 eq per capita), Middle East (lower by 0.4 tCO2-eq per capita), and Africa (lower by 0.2 tCO2-eq per 3 capita), while higher only in the Asia and Developing Pacific region (higher by 0.9 tCO2-eq per capita). 4 All regions show convergence of the urban and national per capita CO2-eq, as the urban share of national 5 emissions increases and dominates the regional total. 6 7 8 Figure 8.9 Changes in six metrics associated with urban and national-scale CO2 and CH4 emissions 9 represented in the WGIII AR6 6-region aggregation, with (a) 2000 and (b) 2015 10 11 The trends in Luqman et al. (2021) were combined with the work of Moran et al. (2018) to estimate the 12 regional urban CO2-eq share of global urban emissions, the urban share of national CO 2-eq emissions, 13 and the urban per capita CO2-eq emissions by region. The total values exclude aviation, shipping, and 14 biogenic sources. The dashed grey line represents the global average urban per capita CO 2-eq emissions. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-38 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 The regional urban population share, regional CO2-eq share in total emissions, and national per capita 2 CO2-eq emissions by region are given for comparison. 3 4 Source: Adapted from Gurney et al. (2021) 5 6 START BOX 8.1 HERE 7 8 Box 8.1 Does urbanization drive emissions? 9 10 Urbanization can drive emissions if the process is accompanied by an income increase and higher levels 11 of consumption (Sudmant et al. 2018). This is typically observed in countries with a large urban-rural 12 disparity in income and basic services, and where urbanization is accompanied by economic growth 13 that is coupled to emissions. In addition, the outward expansion of urban land areas often results in the 14 conversion and loss of agricultural land (Pandey et al. 2018; Liu et al. 2019), forests (Austin et al. 2019), 15 and other vegetated areas, thereby reducing carbon uptake and storage (Quesada et al. 2018) (see 16 Section 8.3.1). Furthermore, the build-up and use of urban infrastructure (e.g., buildings, power, 17 sanitation) requires large amounts of embodied energy and carbon (see Figures 8.17 and 8.22). Building 18 new and upgrading existing urban infrastructure could produce a cumulative emissions of 226 GtCO2 19 by 2050 (Bai et al. 2018). 20 However, for the same level of consumption and basic services, an average urban dweller often requires 21 less energy than their rural counterparts, due to higher population densities that enable sharing of 22 infrastructure and services, and economies of scale. Whether and to what extent such emission reduction 23 potentials can be realized depends on how cities are designed and laid out (i.e., urban form – see Section 24 8.4.2) as well as how urban infrastructure is built and powered, such as the energy intensity of the city’s 25 transportation system, type and level of urban services, the share of renewable energy, as well as the 26 broader national and international economic and energy structure that supports the function of the cities 27 (see Sections 8.4.3 and 8.6). 28 Although population-dense cities can be more efficient than rural areas in terms of per capita energy 29 use, and cities contribute less GHG emissions per person than low-density suburbs (Jones and Kammen 30 2014), there is some, albeit limited, evidence that larger cities are not more efficient than smaller ones 31 (Fragkias et al. 2013; Ribeiro et al. 2019). A number of studies comparing urban and rural residents in 32 the same country have shown that urban residents have higher per capita energy consumption and CO2 33 emissions (Chen et al. 2019a; Hachaichi and Baouni 2021). There is some evidence that the benefits of 34 higher urban densities on reducing per capita urban GHG emissions may be offset by higher incomes, 35 smaller household sizes, and, most importantly, higher consumption levels, thus creating a counter- 36 effect that could increase GHG emissions with urbanization (Gill and Moeller 2018). 37 Many studies have shown that the relationship between urbanization and GHG emissions is dependent 38 on the level and stage of urban development, and follows an inverted U-shaped relationship of the 39 environmental Kuznets curve (Wang et al. 2016, 2022; Zhang et al. 2017; Xu et al. 2018a; Zhou et al. 40 2019) (see Sections 8.3.1 and 8.6, and Figure 8.20). Considering existing trends, earlier phases of 41 urbanization accompanied by rapid industrialization, development of secondary industries, and high 42 levels of economic growth, are correlated with higher levels of energy consumption and GHG 43 emissions. However, more mature phases of urbanization, with higher levels of economic development 44 and establishment of the service sector, are correlated with lower levels of energy consumption and 45 GHG emissions (Khan and Su 2021). 46 END BOX 8.1 HERE 47 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-39 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 8.3.4 Scenarios of future urbanization and GHG emissions 2 This section assesses scenarios of future urban land expansion and urban GHG emissions. These 3 scenarios have implications for the urban climate change mitigation strategies discussed in Sections 8.4 4 and 8.6—in particular, in the context of the potential mitigation and development pathways for urban 5 areas under certain scenarios. 6 8.3.4.1 Urban land expansion and GHG emissions 7 The uncertainties across urban land expansion forecasts, and associated SSPs, highlight an opportunity 8 to pursue compact, low- or net zero GHG emissions development that minimizes land-use competition, 9 avoids carbon lock-in, and preserves carbon-sequestering areas like forests and grasslands (see Sections 10 8.4. and 8.6, and Figure 8.21). Among the forecasts available are six global-scale spatially explicit 11 studies of urban land expansion that have been published since AR5; four of the six, which present 12 forecasts for each of the five SSPs, are considered in Table 8.1 and Figure 8.10 (Huang et al. 2019; Li 13 et al. 2019b; Chen et al. 2020a; Gao and O’Neill 2020). All four have forecasts to 2050 but only three 14 to 2100. One of the two not included here (van Vliet et al. 2017) also forecasts land displacement due 15 to urban land expansion. 16 Four overarching findings can be gleaned from these studies. 17 First, urban land areas will expand significantly by 2050—by as much as 211% (see SSP5 forecast in 18 Huang et al. 2019), but likely within a large potential range of about 43–106% over the 2015 extent by 19 2050—to accommodate the growing urban population (see Table 8.1). Globally, there are large 20 uncertainties and variations among the studies—and between the SSPs—about the rates and extent of 21 future urban expansion, owing to uncertainties about economic development and population growth 22 (ranges of estimates are provided in Table 8.1). Overall, the largest urban extents are forecasted under 23 SSP5 (fossil fuel-intensive development) for both 2050 and 2100, whereas the smallest forecasted urban 24 extents are under SSP3 (‘regional rivalry’). Forecasted global urban extents could reach between 1 and 25 2.2 million km2 (median of 1.4 million km2, a 106% increase) in 2050 under SSP5, and between 0.85 26 and 1.5 million km2 (median of 1 million km2, a 43% increase) in 2050 under SSP3. Under SSP1, which 27 is characterized by a focus on sustainability with more compact, low-emissions development, urban 28 extents could reach 1 million km2 (range of 0.9 to 2 million km2), a 49% increase, in 2050. By 2100, 29 the forecasted urban extents reach between 1.4 and 3.6 million km2 (median 2.5 million km2) under 30 SSP5 and between 1 and 1.5 million km2 (median 1.3 million km2) under SSP3. Across the studies, 31 substantially larger amounts of urban land expansion are expected after 2050 under SSP5 compared to 32 other SSPs. 33 Second, there is a wide variation in estimates of urban land expansion across regions (using the WGIII 34 AR6 6-region aggregation). Across all four sets of forecasts, current urban land (circa 2015) is the 35 largest in Developed Countries and in the Asia and Developing Pacific region, with approximately two- 36 thirds of the current urban extent occurring in those two regions (see Table 8.1 and Figure 8.10). The 37 largest increases in urban land by 2050 are expected in the Asia and Developing Pacific and Developed 38 Countries regions, across all the SSPs. However, the rate of increase in urban land in Eastern Europe 39 and West-Central Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Middle East is significant and urban 40 land could more than double by 2050. One-third of the studies conclude that the United States, China, 41 and India will experience continued urban land expansion at least until 2050 (Huang et al. 2019; Li et 42 al. 2019b). However, Li et al. (2019) report that, after 2050, China could experience a decrease in the 43 rate of urban land expansion, while growth will continue for India. This is not surprising since India’s 44 urban demographic transition will only get underway after the middle of the century, when the urban 45 population is expected to exceed the rural population. In contrast, China’s urban demographic transition 46 could be nearly complete by 2050. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-40 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Third, in spite of these general trends, there are differences in forecasted urban expansion in each region 2 across the SSPs and studies, with Huang et al. (2019) forecasting the most future urban land expansion 3 between 2015 and 2050. The range across studies is significant. Under SSP1, urban land areas could 4 increase by between 69,000 and 459,000 km2 in Developed Countries, 77,000–417,000 km2 in Asia and 5 Developing Pacific, and 28,000–216,000 km2 in Africa. Under SSP3, where urban land expansion is 6 forecasted to be the lowest, urban land areas could increase by between 23,000 and 291,000 km 2 in 7 Developed Countries, 57,000–168,000 km2 in Asia and Developing Pacific, and 16,000–149,000 km2 8 in Africa. Under SSP5, where urban land expansion is forecasted to be the highest, urban land area 9 could increase by 129,000 to 573,000 km2 in Developed Countries, 83,000–472,000 km2 in Asia and 10 Developing Pacific, and 40,000–222,000 km2 in Africa (Huang et al. 2019; Li et al. 2019b; Chen et al. 11 2020a; Gao and O’Neill 2020). By 2100, however, the Developed Countries region is expected to have 12 the most urban expansion only in SSP5. In SSP2 and SSP4, the Developed Countries and Asia and 13 Developing Pacific regions have about equal amounts of new urban land; in SSP3, Asia and Developing 14 Pacific has more new urban land forecasted. 15 Fourth, both the range of estimates and their implications on land-use competition and urban life point 16 to an opportunity for urban areas to consider their urban form when developing. Under the current 17 urbanization trajectory, 50–63% of newly expanded urban areas are expected to occur on current 18 croplands (Chen et al. 2020a). However, there is significant regional variation; between 2000 and 2040, 19 12.5% of cropland in China and 7.5% of cropland in the Middle East and North Africa could be 20 displaced due to urban expansion, compared to the world average of 3.7% (van Vliet et al. 2017). As 21 urban clusters increase in size and green space is converted, future urban land expansion is expected to 22 intensify UHIs and exacerbate night-time extreme temperatures. An urban footprint increase of 78– 23 171% by 2050 over the urban footprint in 2015 is expected to result in average summer daytime and 24 night-time warming in air temperature of 0.5°C–0.7°C, even up to about 3°C in certain locations (Huang 25 et al. 2019). Furthermore, this urban expansion-induced warming is on average about half—and in 26 certain locations nearly twice—as strong as warming that will be caused by GHG emissions based on 27 the multi-model ensemble average forecasts in RCP4.5. In short, future urban expansion will amplify 28 the background warming caused by GHG emissions, with extreme warming most pronounced during 29 night-time (very high confidence) (Huang et al. 2019). These findings corroborate those in the Technical 30 Summary of AR6 WGI (Arias et al. 2021). 31 The forecasted amounts and patterns of urban expansion presented here bear significant uncertainty due 32 to underlying factors beyond mere methodological differences between the studies. These factors 33 include potential changes in the social, economic, and institutional dynamics that drive urban land 34 development across the world (Güneralp and Seto 2013). Some of these changes may come in the form 35 of sudden shocks such as another global economic crisis or pandemic. The forecasts presented here do 36 not take such factors into account. 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-41 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Table 8.1. Forecasts of total urban land per WGIII AR6 region (6-region aggregation) in 2050 for each 2 SSP, with the median and range of estimates from four studies: Huang et al. 2019, Li et al. 2019, Chen et 3 al. 2020, and Gao and O’Neill 2020. Median estimates for the 2015 urban extent are based on the 4 mean/median of estimates in Huang et al. 2019 and Chen et al. 2020. Median and range of estimates for 5 each SSP in 2050 are based on values derived from the four studies: Huang et al. 2019; Li et al. 2019; 6 Chen et al. 2020; and Gao and O’Neill 2020. While each study and SSP forecast increases in urban land 7 in each region, the range and magnitude vary. 8 Source: Data compiled from Huang et al. 2019, Li et al. 2019, Chen et al. 2020, and Gao and O’Neill 2020. 2015 SSP1 SSP2 SSP3 SSP4 SSP5 Median Median Median Median Median Median (range) (range) (range) (range) (range) (range) Africa 64,423 97,718 116,486 96,571 119,971 138,604 (41,472–87,373) (67,488–303,457) (59,638–274,683) (56,071–235,922) (54,633–344,645) (79,612–309,532) Asia and 241,430 293,647 355,445 296,431 329,485 419,781 Developing (167,548–315,312) (244,575–732,303) (236,677–624,659) (224,520–483,335) (240,639–632,678) (250,670–787,257) Pacific Developed 260,167 459,624 506,301 414,661 496,526 616,847 Countries (188,660–331,674) (407,483–648,023) (431,592–614,592) (362,063–479,584) (411,320–586,058) (510,468–761,275) Eastern 35,970 63,625 65,251 59,779 64,434 76,994 Europe and (27,121–44,819) (42,990–91,612) (52,397–91,108) (44,129–90,794) (50,806–86,546) (54,039–93,008) West-Central Asia Latin America 62,613 86,236 88,793 93,804 85,369 102,343 and Caribbean (60,511–64,716) (63,507–163,329) (86,411–162,526) (65,286–162,669) (82,148–144,940) (82,961–167,102) Middle East 21,192 51,351 51,221 48,032 49,331 55,032 (19,017–23,366) (187,68–69,266) (25,486–69,716) (19,412–63,236) (25,415–71,720) (33,033–75,757) World 685,795 1,023,220 1,174,742 980,719 1,123,900 1,412,390 (669,246–702,343) (919,185– (927,820– (850,681– (922,539– (1,018,321– 1,991,579) 1,819,174) 1,493,454) 1,851,438) 2,180,816) 9 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-42 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Figure 8.10 Forecasts of urban land expansion in 2050 and 2100 according to each SSP and WGIII AR6 3 6-region aggregation, by study, where A: Gao and O’Neill (2020), B: Chen et al. (2020a), C: Li et al. 4 (2019), D: Huang et al. (2019), E: Mean across studies, and F: Median across all studies. 5 Three studies (Li et al. 2019b; Chen et al. 2020a; Gao and O’Neill 2020) report forecasts of urban land 6 expansion to both 2050 and 2100. One study (Huang et al. 2019) reports the forecast only to 2050. Global 7 current urban extents and the respective initial years vary slightly among the four studies. Years for 8 values of current urban extent range from 2010 to 2020. See Table 8.1 for the range of data across the 9 four studies and across SSPs. 10 11 Source: Data compiled form Huang et al. 2019, Li et al. 2019, Chen et al. 2020, and Gao and O’Neill 2020. 12 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-43 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 8.3.4.2 Scenarios of future urban GHG emissions 2 There remains little globally comprehensive literature on projections of future baseline GHG emissions 3 from urban areas or scenarios deploying urban mitigation actions on the part of city or regional 4 governments. This dearth of research rests on limited urban emissions data that are consistent and 5 comparable across the globe, making review and synthesis challenging (Creutzig et al. 2016b). Some 6 research has presented urban emissions forecasts and related projections, including estimated urban 7 energy use in 2050 (Creutzig et al. 2015), energy savings for low-carbon development (Creutzig et al. 8 2016b), emission savings from existing and new infrastructure (Creutzig et al. 2016a) (see Figure 8.12), 9 and urban emissions from buildings, transport, industry, and agriculture (IEA 2016a). 10 In its study of about 700 urban areas with a population of at least 750,000, the Coalition for Urban 11 Transitions (2019), attempts to quantify the urban portion of global GHG emissions, including the 12 residential and commercial building, transport, waste, and material production (focusing on cement, 13 aluminium, and steel) sectors, along with mitigation wedges aimed at staying below a 2°C level of 14 atmospheric warming (Figure 8.11). Starting in 2015 with a global urban emissions total of almost 14 15 GtCO2-eq, the study projects an increase to 17.3 GtCO2-eq by 2050—but this reduces to 1.8 GtCO2-eq 16 by 2050 with the inclusion of mitigation wedges: 58% from buildings, 21% from transport, 15% 17 materials efficiency, and 5% waste, with decarbonization of electricity supply as a cross-cutting strategy 18 across the wedges. 19 Similar analysis by the urban networks C40 and GCoM examine current and future GHG emissions on 20 smaller subsets of global cities, offering further insight on the potential emissions impacts of urban 21 mitigation options. However, this analysis is limited to just a sample of the global urban landscape and 22 primarily focused on cities in the Global North (GCoM 2018, 2019; C40 Cities et al. 2019) with methods 23 to project avoided emissions in development (Kovac et al. 2020). Different scopes of analysis between 24 sectors, as well as limited knowledge of the impact of existing and new urban infrastructure, limit the 25 possibility of direct comparisons in emissions. Still, the shares of urban mitigation potential ranges 26 between 77.7% and 78.9% for combined strategies that involve decarbonized buildings and transport 27 in urban infrastructure, and the wedges approach the remaining emissions reductions also considering 28 construction materials and waste. This data supports urban areas pursuing a package of multiple, 29 integrated mitigation strategies in planning for decarbonization (see Sections 8.4 and 8.6, and Figure 30 8.21). 31 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-44 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Figure 8.11 Reference scenario and mitigation potential for global urban areas in the residential and 3 commercial building, transport, waste, and material production sectors 4 5 The top red line indicates the reference scenario where no further emissions reduction efforts are taken, 6 while the bottom dark line indicates the combined potential of reducing emissions across the sectors 7 displayed. Wedges are provided for potential emissions savings associated with decarbonizing residential 8 buildings, commercial buildings, transport, waste, and materials as indicated in the legend. The shaded 9 areas that take place among the wedges with lines indicate contributions from decarbonization of 10 electricity supply. 11 12 Source: Coalition for Urban Transitions (2019, p. 13) 13 14 Figure 8.12 Urban infrastructure-based CO2-eq emission mitigation wedges 15 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-45 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Urban infrastructure-based CO2-eq emission mitigation wedges across categories of existing 2 (yellow/green), new (blue), and construction (grey) of urban infrastructure. The wedges include low- 3 carbon energy systems and infrastructure, modal shift, tolls/tax, or behavioural change, and reductions 4 from construction materials. 5 6 Source: Creutzig et al. (2016a, p. 1056) 7 8 The most comprehensive approach to-date for quantifying urban emissions within the global context 9 (Gurney et al. 2021a) combines the per capita carbon footprint estimates for 13,000 cities from Moran 10 et al. (2018) with projections of the share of urban population (Jiang and O’Neill 2017) within the 11 IPCCs SSP-RCP framework (van Vuuren et al. 2014, 2017a; Riahi et al. 2017). Urban emissions in 12 seven SSP-RCP scenarios are shown in Figure 8.13 along with an estimate of the global total CO2-eq 13 for context. 14 In 2020, total urban emissions (including CO2 and CH4) derived from consumption-based accounting 15 were estimated to be 28.5 ± 0.1 GtCO2-eq, representing between 67% and 72% of global CO2 and CH4 16 emissions, excluding aviation, shipping, and biogenic sources of emissions. By 2050, with no or 17 moderate urban mitigation efforts, urban emissions are projected to rise to 34–65 GtCO2-eq—driven by 18 growing urban population, infrastructure, and service demands. However, scenarios that involve rapid 19 urbanization can have different outcomes as seen in SSP1-RCP1.9 based on green growth, versus SSP5- 20 RCP8.5 with the strongest carbon lock-in lacking any decarbonization. Other scenarios involve mixed 21 and/or low urbanization, along with other differences, including the implementation of electrification, 22 energy, and material efficiency, technology development and innovation, renewable energy 23 preferences, and behavioural, lifestyle, and dietary responses (see Table 8.2). With aggressive and 24 immediate mitigation policies to limit global warming below 1.5°C by the end of the century, urban 25 GHG emissions could approach net zero and reach a maximum of 3.3 GtCO2-eq in 2050, compared to 26 28.6 GtCO2-eq in 2020 (SSP1-RCP1.9). Under aggressive but not immediate urban mitigation policies 27 to limit global warming to 2°C, urban emissions could reach 17.2 GtCO2-eq in 2050 (SSP1-RCP2.6). 28 When 2020 levels are compared to the values for the year 2030, urban areas that utilize multiple 29 opportunities towards resource-efficient and walkable urbanization are estimated to represent a savings 30 potential of 9.8 GtCO2-eq of urban emissions, under SSP1-RCP1.9 scenario conditions, on the path 31 towards net zero CO2 and CH4 emissions. In contrast, urban emissions would increase by 3.4 GtCO2- 32 eq from 2020 levels in 2030 under SSP2-RCP4.5 scenario conditions with moderate changes lacking 33 ambitious mitigation action (see Figure 8.14). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-46 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Figure 8.13 CO2-eq emissions from global urban areas in seven SSP-RCP variations spanning the 1990 to 3 2100 time period 4 Urban areas are aggregated to six regional domains based on the WGIII AR6 6-region aggregation. 5 Global total CO2-eq emissions (CO2 and CH4) are also shown as marked by the dashed line. Future urban 6 emissions in the context of SSP-RCP-SPA variations correspond to (a) SSP1-RCP1.9-SPA1, (b) SSP1- 7 RCP2.6-SPA1, (c) SSP4-RCP3.4-SPA4, (d) SSP2-RCP4.5-SPA2, (e) SSP4-RCP6.0-SPA4, (f) SSP3- 8 RCP7.0-SPA0 and (g) SSP5-RCP8.5 based on the marker scenario implementations. The first three 9 scenarios (a-c) with more stringent reduction pathways represent contexts where urban per capita 10 emissions decline rapidly against various increases in urban population and are oriented to reach net zero 11 emissions within this century at different radiative forcing levels. SSP1 scenarios (a-b) represent contexts 12 where urbanization takes place rapidly while providing resource efficiency based on compact urban form 13 (Jiang and O’Neill 2017), with high levels of electrification (van Vuuren et al. 2017b; Rogelj et al. 2018). 14 The scenario context of SSP1-RCP1.9 represents a pathway in which there can be a transformative shift 15 towards sustainability. Note that the scale of the panels (f) and (g) are different from the other panels. 2 16 See Table 8.2 detailing the SSP-RCPs. 17 18 Source: Adapted from Gurney et al. (2021) 19 20 2 FOOTNOTE: The SSP1-RCP1.9 scenario is aligned with the same SSP-RCP context as the Illustrative Mitigation Pathways (IMP) for IMP-LD, IMP-Ren and IMP-SP. Implications are provided in Table 8.3. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-47 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Figure 8.14 Comparison of urban emissions under different urbanization scenarios (GtCO 2-eq yr-1) for 3 the WGIII AR6 6-region aggregation 4 The panels represent the estimated urban emissions change in two different scenarios for the time period 5 2020-2030. Panel (a) represents resource efficient and compact urbanization while panel (b) represents 6 urbanization with moderate progress. The two scenarios are consistent with estimated urban emissions 7 under the SSP1-RCP1.9-SPA1 and SSP2-RCP4.5-SPA2 scenarios, respectively (see Figure 8.13). In both 8 panels, urban emissions estimates for the year 2020 are marked by the lines for each region. In the 9 resource efficient and compact scenario, various reductions in urban emissions that take place by 2030 10 are represented by the dashed areas within the bars. The remaining solid shaded areas represent the 11 remaining urban emissions in 2030 for each region on the path towards net zero emissions. The total 12 reductions in urban emissions worldwide that are given by the last dashed grey bar in panel (a) is 13 estimated to be 9.8 GtCO2-eq yr-1 between 2020 and 2030 in this scenario. In the scenario with moderate 14 progress, there are no regions with reductions in urban emissions. Above the white lines that represent 15 urban emissions in 2020, the grey shaded areas are the estimated increases for each region so that the 16 total urban emissions would increase by 3.4 GtCO2-eq yr-1 from 2020 levels in 2030 under this scenario. 17 The values are based on urban scenario analyses as given in Gurney et al. (2021). 18 Source: Adapted from Gurney et al. (2021) 19 20 Table 8.2 Synthesis of the urbanization and scenario contexts of the urban emissions scenarios. 21 Descriptions for urbanization are adapted based on Jiang and O’Neill (2017) while high-, medium-, low-, 22 or mixed-levels in the scenario context are drawn from the marker model implementations of SSP1-SSP5 23 for IMAGE (van Vuuren et al. 2017b; Rogelj et al. 2018), MESSAGE-GLOBIOM (Fricko et al. 2017), 24 AIM/CGE (Fujimori et al. 2017), GCAM (Calvin et al. 2017), and REMIND-MAgPIE (Kriegler et al. 25 2017). The letters in parentheses refer to the panels in Figure 8.13. Energy and material efficiency relate 26 to energy efficiency improvement and decrease in the intermediate input of materials, including steel, and 27 cement. Dietary responses include less meat-intensive diets. Implications for urban areas relate to the 28 mitigation options in Section 8.4. 29 Source: Adapted from Gurney et al. (2021). Scenario Context SSP/RCP Urbanization Behavioural, Energy Technology Renewable Afforestation Frame-work Context lifestyle Electrification and material development/ energy and re- and dietary efficiency innovation preferences forestation responses Resource High High High High High High efficient, Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-48 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII walkable and Implications for urban climate mitigation include: sustainable → Electrification across the urban energy system while supporting flexibility in end-use SSP1 rapid → Resource efficiency from a consumption-based perspective with cross-sector integration RCP1.9 (a) urbanization → Knowledge and financial resources to promote urban experimentation and innovation RCP2.6 (b) → Empowerment of urban inhabitants for reinforcing positive lock-in for decarbonisation → Integration of sectors, strategies and innovations across different typologies and regions SSP2 Moderate Medium Medium Medium Medium Medium Medium RCP4.5 (d) progress Slow urbanization, SSP3 inadequate Medium Low Low Medium Low Low RCP7.0 (f) urban planning Pace of SSP4 urbanization RCP 3.4 (c) Mixed Mixed Mixed Mixed Mixed Mixed differs with RCP6.0 (e) inequalities Rapid SSP5 urbanization High Low High Low Low - RCP8.5 (g) with carbon lock-in 1 2 3 Among the 500 urban areas with the highest consumption-based urban emissions footprint in 2015 4 (Moran et al. 2018), urban level emission scenarios under SSP1 conditions are constructed for 420 urban 5 areas located across all regions of the world (Kılkış 2021a). These scenarios are based on urban level 6 population projections by SSP (Kii 2021), trends in relevant CMIP6 scenarios (Gidden et al. 2019), and 7 a 100% renewable energy scenario (Bogdanov et al. 2021). In the year 2020, the 420 urban areas are 8 responsible for about 10.7 ± 0.32 GtCO2-eq, or 27% of the global total CO2 and CH4 emissions of about 9 40 GtCO2-eq, excluding aviation, shipping, and biogenic sources. Under three SSP1-based scenarios, 10 the urban emissions of the 420 urban areas in 2030 is projected to be about 7.0 GtCO2-eq in SSP1- 11 RCP1.9, 10.5 GtCO2-eq in SSP1-RCP2.6, and 5.2 GtCO2-eq in the SSP1 renewable energy scenario. 12 The Illustrative Mitigation Pathways (IMPs) represent different strategies for maintaining temperature 13 goals that are compliant with the Paris Agreement, as well as their comparison with the continuation of 14 current policies (see Table 8.3 and Sections 1.5 and 3.2.5). The key characteristics that define the IMPs 15 involve aspects of energy, land use, lifestyle, policy, and innovation. Urban areas provide cross-cutting 16 contexts where each of these key characteristics can be enabled and have a particularly important role 17 in the transformation pathways for renewable energy (IMP-Ren), low demand (IMP-LD), and shifting 18 to sustainability (IMP-SP). Pathways that are compliant with the Paris Agreement include such urban 19 implications as a reversal of decreasing land-use efficiency in urban areas to lower energy demand 20 based on spatial planning for compact urban form (see Section 8.4.2), changes in urban infrastructure 21 for supporting demand flexibility to handle variable energy supply (see Section 8.4.3), as well as 22 policies and governance that are conducive to innovation in urban areas (see Section 8.5). Spatial 23 planning for compact urban form can enable reduced energy demand and changes in service 24 provisioning, including through walkable neighbourhoods and mixed land use, providing venues for 25 socio-behavioural change towards active transport (see Section 8.4.5). Electrification and sector 26 coupling in urban infrastructure can, for instance, be an important enabler of supporting higher 27 penetrations of renewable energy in the energy system. 28 29 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-49 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Table 8.3 Cross-cutting implications of the reference scenarios and Illustrative Mitigation Pathways (IMPs) for urban areas. The IMPs illustrate key themes of 2 mitigation strategies throughout the WGIII report (Section 3.2.5). The implications of the key themes of the 6 IMPs (in addition to 2 Pathways illustrative of higher 3 emissions) for mitigation in urban areas are represented based on the main storyline elements that involve energy, land use, food biodiversity and lifestyle, as well 4 as policy and innovation. The cross-cutting implications of these elements for urban areas where multiple elements interact are summarized for each reference 5 scenario and the IMPs. IMP-Ren, IMP-LD and IMP-SP represent pathways in the context of SSP1-1.9. 6 Source: Adapted from the key themes of the IMPs for urban areas. Reference Scenarios and Cross-Cutting Implications for Urban Areas IMPs Current Policies → Urban mitigation is challenged by overcoming lock-in to fossil fuel consumption also with car-based and low-density urban growth prevailing (CurPol scenario) → Consumption patterns has land impacts, supply chains remain the same, urban inhabitants have limited participation in mitigation options → Progress in low-carbon urban development takes place at a relatively slower pace and there is limited policy learning within climate networks Moderate Action → Renewable energy continues to increase its share that is supported by urban areas to a more limited extent with ongoing lock-in effects (ModAct scenarios) → Changes in land use, consumption patterns, and lifestyles mostly continue as before with negligible changes taking place—if any → The fragmented policy landscape also prevails at the urban level with different levels of ambitions and without integration across the urban system Gradual → Urban areas depend upon energy supply from distant power plants or those in rural areas without rapid progress in urban electrification Strengthening → Afforestation/reforestation is supported with some delay while lower incentives for limiting growth in urban extent provide inconsistencies (IMP-GS) → The mobilization of urban actors for GHG emission reductions is strengthened more gradually with stronger coordination taking place after 2030 Net Negative → Urban areas depend upon energy supply from distant power plants or those in rural areas with more limited electrification in urban energy systems Emissions (IMP- → Afforestation/reforestation is supported to a certain extent while lower incentives for limiting growth in urban extent provide inconsistencies Neg) → Urban areas are less prominent in policy and innovation given emphasis on CCS options. Rural areas are more prominent considering BECCS Renewable → Urban areas support renewable energy penetration with electrification of urban infrastructure and sector coupling for increasing system flexibility Electricity (IMP- → Consumption patterns and urban planning are able to reduce pressures on land use, demand response is increased to support renewables Ren) → Urban climate governance is enabling rapid deployment of renewable energy while fostering innovation for sustainable urban planning Low Demand → Walkable urban form is increased, active and public transport modes are encouraged, low energy buildings and green-blue infrastructure is integrated (IMP-LD) → Changes in consumption patterns and urban planning reduce pressures on land use to lower levels while service provisioning is improved → Urban policy making is used to accelerate solutions that foster innovation and increased efficiencies across all sectors, including material use Shifting Pathways → Urban areas are transformed to be resource efficient, low demand, and renewable energy supportive with an integrated approach in urban planning (IMP-SP) → Reinforcing measures enable GHG emission reductions from consumption patterns while also avoiding resource impacts across systems → Urban climate mitigation is best aligned with the SDGs to accelerate GHG emission reductions, increasing both scalability and acceptance 7 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-50 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 8.4 Urban mitigation options 2 Urban mitigation options can be categorized into three broad strategies: (1) reducing urban energy 3 consumption across all sectors, including through spatial planning and infrastructure; (2) electrification 4 and switching to net zero emissions resources; and (3) enhancing carbon stocks and uptake through 5 urban green and blue infrastructure, which can also offer multiple co-benefits. A fourth, socio- 6 behavioural aspects, can shift energy demand and emerge as the result of implementing the strategies. 7 Urban mitigation options covered in this section are organized around these three strategies and can 8 facilitate deep decarbonization through systemic transformation (see Section 8.6 and Figure 8.21 for 9 prioritizing mitigation options based on urban form and urban growth typologies). 10 Urban areas are systems where multiple mitigation options—especially when integrated—have 11 cascading effects across transport, energy, buildings, land use, and behaviour. These cascading effects 12 take place both within and across urban systems (see Figure 8.15). Mitigation actions also occur at 13 multiple urban scales, from households and blocks to districts and city regions, and can be implemented 14 as standalone sectoral strategies, such as increasing energy efficiency for appliances, and also as system- 15 wide actions. In reducing emissions locally, urban areas can help lower emissions outside of their 16 administrative boundaries through their use of materials and resources, and by increasing the efficiency 17 of infrastructure and energy use beyond what is possible with individual sectoral strategies. Urban 18 mitigation policies that implement multiple integrated interventions will provide more emissions 19 savings than the sum of individual interventions (Sethi et al. 2020). 20 Integrated action also has a key role in providing benefits for human well-being. Urban mitigation 21 options and strategies that are effective, efficient, and fair can also support broader sustainability goals 22 (Güneralp et al. 2017; Kona et al. 2018; Pasimeni et al. 2019). Due to the complex and intensive 23 interactions in urban systems and the interlinked nature among the SDGs, cities can be important 24 intervention points to harness synergies and co-benefits for achieving emissions reductions along with 25 other SDGs (Nilsson et al. 2016; Corbett and Mellouli 2017) (see Section 8.2 and Figure 8.4). 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-51 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Panel a) 3 4 5 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-52 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Panel b) 3 4 5 Figure 8.15 Urban systems, lock-in, and cascading effects of mitigation strategies. 6 7 Cities are systems of inter-connected sectors, activities, and governance structures. Urban-scale 8 mitigation action can have cascading effects across multiple sectors, as shown in panel (a), as well as 9 regional, national, and global impacts through supply chains, resource flows, and institutions, as show in 10 panel (b). Mitigation efforts implemented at larger scales of governance or in sectors that transcend 11 urban boundaries, like energy and transportation, can also facilitate and amplify mitigation at the urban 12 scale, as shown by the arrows extending in both directions across layers (a). Because urban areas are 13 connected locally and globally, urban mitigation efforts can also impact other cities and surrounding 14 areas (AFOLU). Cities are prone to carbon lock-in due to the numerous reinforcing interactions among 15 urban infrastructures and technologies, institutions, and individual and collective behaviours; see the side 16 arrows extending across the layers in panel (a): the yellow arrow represents the infrastructure and 17 technological lock-in involving user technologies and supporting infrastructure, the blue arrow indicates 18 lock-in of local to international institutions, and the pink arrow represents behavioural lock-in for 19 individuals and society. Urban carbon lock-is strongly determined by urban form, in particular the layout 20 of streets and land-use mix. The different coloured spatial patterns represent varying levels of co-location 21 of housing and jobs, and mobility options (also see Figure 8.16). Efforts to break urban carbon lock-in 22 require meta-transformations to break inertia in and among infrastructures, institutions, and behaviours. 23 24 Source: Adapted in part from Seto et al. (2016) 25 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-53 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 8.4.1 Avoiding carbon lock-in 2 Carbon lock-in occurs as the result of interactions between different geographic and administrative 3 scales (institutional lock-in) and across sectors (infrastructural and technological lock-in), which create 4 the conditions for behavioural lock-in covering both individual and social structural behaviours (Seto 5 et al. 2016) (see Glossary for a broader definition of ‘lock-in’). The way that urban areas are designed, 6 laid out, and built affects and is affected by the interactions across the different forms of carbon lock- 7 in (see Figures 8.15 and 8.16). Cities are especially prone to carbon lock-in because of the multiple 8 interactions of technological, institutional, and behavioural systems, which create inertia and path 9 dependency that are difficult to break. For example, the lock-in of gasoline cars is reinforced by 10 highway and energy infrastructures that are further locked-in by social and cultural preferences for 11 individual mobility options. The dominance of cars and their supporting infrastructures in auto-centric 12 urban forms is further reinforced by zoning and urban development patterns, such as dispersed and low- 13 density housing distantly located from jobs, that create obstacles to create alternative mobility options 14 (Seto et al. 2016) (see Figure 8.16 on urban form). (Linton et al. 2021) 15 Urban infrastructures and the built environment are long-lived assets, embodying triple carbon lock-ins 16 in terms of their construction, operations, and demolition (Creutzig et al. 2016b; Seto et al. 2016; Ürge- 17 Vorsatz et al. 2018). There is much focus in the climate change literature on the operational lifetimes 18 of the energy sector, especially power plants and the electricity grid, which are between 30 and 60 years 19 (Rode et al. 2017). Yet, in reality, the lifespans of urban infrastructures, especially the basic layout of 20 roadways, are often much longer (Reyna and Chester 2015). A number of detailed case studies on the 21 evolution of urban road networks for cities around the world reveal that the current layout of streets 22 grew out of street networks that were established hundreds of years ago (Strano et al. 2012; Masucci et 23 al. 2013; Mohajeri and Gudmundsson 2014). Furthermore, there is evidence that urban street layout, 24 population growth, urban development, and automobile ownership co-evolve (Li et al. 2019a). 25 For cities to break out of mutually reinforcing carbon lock-in, it will require systematic transformation 26 and systems-based planning that integrates mitigation strategies across sectors and geo-political scales. 27 Urban energy demand patterns are locked-in whenever incremental urban design and planning 28 decisions, coupled with investments in long-lasting infrastructure, such as roads and buildings, take 29 place (Seto et al. 2016). The fundamental building blocks of cities are based on the layout of the street 30 network, the size of city blocks, and the density of street intersections. If not significantly altered, these 31 three factors will continue to shape and lock-in energy demand for decades after their initial 32 construction, influencing the mitigation potential of urban areas (see Section 8.4.2 and Figure 8.22). 33 Avoiding carbon lock-in inherently involves decisions that extend beyond the administrative boundaries 34 of cities. This includes pricing of low-emissions technology or materials, such as electric battery or 35 hydrogen vehicles and buses, although cities can support their development and deployment (see Cross- 36 Chapter Box 12 in Chapter 16 on Transition Dynamics). In contrast, urban governments in most parts 37 of the world do have powers to set building codes that regulate materials and construction standards for 38 buildings, including heating and cooling technologies, and major appliances. Other examples include 39 zoning that determines the location of buildings, land uses, standards for densities, and the inclusion of 40 energy planning in their building standards and public works, including streets, parks, and open spaces 41 (Blanco et al. 2011; Raven et al. 2018). 42 43 8.4.2 Spatial planning, urban form, and infrastructure 44 Urban form is the resultant pattern and spatial layout of land use, transportation networks, and urban 45 design elements, including the physical urban extent, configuration of streets and building orientation, 46 and the spatial figuration within and throughout cities and towns (Lynch 1981; Handy 1996). 47 Infrastructure describes the physical structures, social and ecological systems, and corresponding Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-54 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 institutional arrangements that provide services and enable urban activity (Dawson et al. 2018; Chester 2 2019) and comprises services and built-up structures that support urban functioning, including 3 transportation infrastructure, water and wastewater systems, solid waste systems, telecommunications, 4 and power generation and distribution (Seto et al. 2014). 5 Urban Form 6 AR5 concluded that infrastructure and four dimensions of urban form are especially important for 7 driving urban energy use: density, land use mix, connectivity, and accessibility. Specifically, low- 8 carbon cities have the following characteristics: (1) co-located medium to high densities of housing, 9 jobs, and commerce; (2) high mix of land uses; (3) high connectivity of streets; and (4) high levels of 10 accessibility, distinguished by relatively low travel distances and travel times that are enabled by 11 multiple modes of transportation. Urban areas with these features tend to have smaller dwelling units, 12 smaller parcel sizes, walking opportunities, high density of intersections, and are highly accessible to 13 shopping. For brevity, we will refer to these characteristics collectively as ‘compact and walkable urban 14 form’ (see Figure 8.16). Compact and walkable urban form has many co-benefits, including mental and 15 physical health, lower resource demand, and saving land for AFOLU. In contrast, dispersed and auto- 16 centric urban form is correlated with higher GHG emissions, and characterized by separated land uses, 17 low population and job densities, large block size, and low intersection density. 18 19 Figure 8.16 Urban form and implications for GHG emissions 20 Compact and walkable urban form is strongly correlated with low GHG emissions and characterized by 21 co-located medium to high densities of housing and jobs, high street density, small block size, and mixed 22 land use (Seto et al. 2014). Higher population densities at places of origin (e. g., home) and destination (e. 23 g., employment, shopping) concentrate demand and are necessary for achieving the ASI approach for 24 sustainable mobility (see Chapters 5 and 10). Dispersed and auto-centric urban form is strongly 25 correlated with high GHG emissions, and characterized by separated land uses, especially of housing and 26 jobs, low street density, large block sizes, and low urban densities. Separated and low densities of 27 employment, retail, and housing increase average travel distances for both work and leisure, and make 28 active transport and modal shift a challenge. Since cities are systems, urban form has interacting 29 implications across energy, buildings, transport, land use, and individual behaviour. Compact and 30 walkable urban form enables effective mitigation while dispersed and auto-centric urban form locks-in 31 higher levels of energy use. The colours represent different land uses and indicate varying levels of co- 32 location and mobility options. 33 Since AR5, a range of studies have been published on the relationships between urban spatial structures, 34 urban form, and GHG emissions. Multiple lines of evidence reaffirm the key findings from AR5, Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-55 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 especially regarding the mitigation benefits associated with reducing vehicle miles or kilometres 2 travelled (VMT/VKT) through spatial planning. There are important cascading effects not only for 3 transport but also other key sectors and consumption patterns, such as in buildings, households, and 4 energy. However, these benefits can be attained only when the existing spatial structure of an urban 5 area does not limit locational and mobility options, thereby avoiding carbon lock-in through the 6 interaction of infrastructure and the resulting socio-behavioural aspects. 7 Modifying the layout of emerging urbanization to be more compact, walkable, and co-located can 8 reduce future urban energy use by 20–25% in 2050 while providing a corresponding mitigation potential 9 of 23–26% (Creutzig et al. 2015, 2016b; Sethi et al. 2020), forming the basis for other urban mitigation 10 options. Cross-Chapter Box 7 in Chapter 10 provides perspectives on simultaneously reducing urban 11 transport emissions, avoiding infrastructure lock-in, and providing accessible services (see Chapter 10). 12 The systemic nature of compact urban form and integrated spatial planning influences ‘Avoid-Shift- 13 Improve’ (ASI, see Glossary) options across several sectors simultaneously, including for mobility and 14 shelter (for an in-depth discussion on the integration of service provision solutions within the ASI 15 framework, see Section 5.3). 16 8.4.2.1 Co-located housing and jobs, mixed land use, and high street connectivity 17 Integrated spatial planning, co-location of higher residential and job densities, and systemic approaches 18 are widely identified with development that is characterized by the 5Ds of TOD based on density, 19 diversity (mixed land uses), design (street connectivity), destination accessibility, and distance to 20 transit. Spatial strategies that integrate the 5Ds are shown to reduce VMT/VKT, and thereby transport- 21 related GHG emissions through energy savings. The effect of urban form and built environment 22 strategies on VMT per capita varies by a number of factors (Ewing and Cervero 2010; Stevens 2017; 23 Blanco and Wikstrom 2018). Density and destination accessibility have the highest elasticities, followed 24 by design (Stevens 2017). Population-weighted densities for 121 metropolitan areas have further found 25 that the concentration of population and jobs along mass transit corridors decreases VMT/VKT 26 significantly when compared to more dispersed metropolitan areas. In this sample, elasticity rates were 27 twice as high for dense metropolitan areas located along mass transit lines (Lee and Lee 2020). 28 Meta-analyses of the reduction in VMT and the resulting GHG emissions consider the existing and still 29 dominant use of emitting transportation technology, transportation fleets, and urban form 30 characteristics. Varied historical legacies of transportation and the built environment, which can be 31 utilized to develop more sustainable cities (Newman et al. 2016, 2017), are often not taken into account 32 directly. Metropolitan policies and spatial planning, as evident in Copenhagen’s Finger Plan, as well as 33 strategic spatial planning in Stockholm and Seoul, have been major tools to restructure urban regions 34 and energy patterns (Sung and Choi 2017). Road prices and congestion charges can provide the 35 conditions for urban inhabitants to shift mobility demands and reduce vehicle use (see Section 5.6.2). 36 Surprisingly, even cities with higher population densities and a greater range of land uses can show 37 declines in these important attributes, which can lead to emissions increases, such as found in a study 38 of 323 East and South East Asian cities (Chen et al. 2020c). Conversely, the annual CO2 emissions 39 reduction of passenger cars in compact versus dispersed urban form scenarios can include at least a 40 10% reduction by 2030 (Matsuhashi and Ariga 2016). When combined with advances in transport 41 technology, this share increases to 64–70% in 2050 based on compact urban form scenarios for 1,727 42 municipalities (Kii 2020). 43 As a reaffirmation of AR5, population density reduces emissions per capita in the transport, building, 44 and energy sectors (Baur et al. 2015; Gudipudi et al. 2016; Wang et al. 2017; Yi et al. 2017) (see also 45 Sections 8.3.1 and 8.3.4 on past trends and forecasts of urban population density and land expansion). 46 Urban compactness tends to reduce emissions per capita in the transport sector, especially for 47 commuting (Matsuhashi and Ariga 2016; Lee and Lim 2018; Lee and Lee 2020). The relative 48 accessibility of neighbourhoods to the rest of the region, in addition to the density of individual Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-56 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 neighbourhoods, is important (Ewing et al. 2018). Creating higher residential and employment 2 densities, developing smaller block sizes, and increasing housing opportunities in an employment area 3 can significantly reduce household car ownership and car driving, and increase the share of transit, 4 walk, and bicycle commuting (Ding et al. 2018). In addition to population density, land-use mix, rail 5 transit accessibility, and street design reduce emissions from transport (Dou et al. 2016; Cao and Yang 6 2017; Choi 2018). The impact of population density and urban compactness on emissions per capita in 7 the household or energy sector is also associated with socioeconomic characteristics or lifestyle 8 preferences (Baiocchi et al. 2015; Miao 2017). Changes in the attributes of urban form and spatial 9 structure have influences on overall energy demand across spatial scales, particularly street, block, 10 neighbourhood, and city scales, as well as across the building (housing) and transport (mobility) sectors 11 (Silva et al. 2017). Understanding the existing trade-offs (or synergetic links) between urban form 12 variables across major emissions source sectors, and how they impact the size of energy flows within 13 the urban system, is key to prioritizing action for energy-efficient spatial planning strategies, which are 14 likely to vary across urban areas. 15 16 8.4.2.2 Urban form, growth, and sustainable development 17 Spatial planning for compact urban form is a system-wide intervention (Sethi et al. 2020) and has 18 potential to be combined with sustainable development objectives while pursuing climate mitigation 19 for urban systems (Große et al. 2016; Cheshmehzangi and Butters 2017; Facchini et al. 2017; Lwasa 20 2017; Stokes and Seto 2019). Compact urban form can enable positive impacts on employment and 21 green growth given that the local economy is decoupled from GHG emissions and related parameters 22 while the concentration of people and activity can increase productivity based on both proximity and 23 efficiency (Lee and Erickson 2017; Salat et al. 2017; Gao and Newman 2018; Han et al. 2018; Li and 24 Liu 2018; Lall et al. 2021) 25 Public acceptance can have a positive impact on integrated spatial planning especially when there is a 26 process of co-design (Grandin et al. 2018; Webb et al. 2018). The quality of spatial planning can also 27 increase co-benefits for health and well-being, including decisions to balance urban green areas with 28 density (Li et al. 2016; Sorkin 2018; Pierer and Creutzig 2019). The distributional effects of spatial 29 planning can depend on the policy tools that shape the influence of urban densification on affordable 30 housing while evidence for transit-induced gentrification is found to be partial and inconclusive (Chava 31 and Newman 2016; Jagarnath and Thambiran 2018; Padeiro et al. 2019; Debrunner and Hartmann 2020) 32 (see Sections 8.2 and 8.4.4). 33 Reducing GHG emissions across different urban growth typologies (see Figure 8.20) depends in part 34 on the ability to integrate opportunities for climate mitigation with co-benefits for health and well-being 35 (Grandin et al. 2018). At the same time, requirements for institutional capacity and governance for 36 cross-sector coordination for integrated urban planning is high given the complex relations between 37 urban mobility, buildings, energy systems, water systems, ecosystem services, other urban sectors, and 38 climate adaptation (Große et al. 2016; Castán Broto 2017a; Endo et al. 2017; Geneletti et al. 2017). The 39 capacity for implementing land-use zoning and regulations in a way that is consistent with supporting 40 spatial planning for compact urban form is not equal across urban areas and depends on different 41 contexts as well as institutional capacities (Bakır et al. 2018; Deng et al. 2018; Shen et al. 2019). 42 Currently, integrating spatial planning, urban form, and infrastructure in urban mitigation strategies 43 remains limited in mainstream practices, including in urban areas targeting an emissions reduction of 44 36–80% in the next decades (Asarpota and Nadin 2020). Capacity building for integrated spatial 45 planning for urban mitigation includes increasing collaboration among city departments and with civil 46 society to develop robust mitigation strategies, bringing together civil engineers, architects, urban Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-57 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 designers, public policy and spatial planners, and enhancing the education of urban professionals 2 (Asarpota and Nadin 2020) (see Section 8.5). 3 Spatial planning for compact urban form is a prerequisite for efficient urban infrastructure, including 4 district heating and/or cooling networks (Swilling et al. 2018; Möller et al. 2019; Persson et al. 2019; 5 UNEP and IRP 2020). District heating and cooling networks benefit from urban design parameters, 6 including density, block area, and elongation that represent the influence of urban density on energy 7 density (Fonseca and Schlueter 2015; Shi et al. 2020). Heat-demand density is a function of both 8 population density and heat demand per capita and can be equally present in urban areas with high 9 population density or high heat demand per capita (Möller et al. 2019; Persson et al. 2019). Low- 10 temperature networks that utilize waste heat or renewable energy can provide an option to avoid carbon 11 lock-in to fossil fuels while layout and eco-design principles can further optimize such networks (Gang 12 et al. 2016; Buffa et al. 2019; Dominković and Krajačić 2019). Replacing gas-based heating and cooling 13 with electrified district heating and cooling networks, for instance, provide 65% emissions reductions 14 also involving carbon-aware scheduling for grid power (De Chalendar et al. 2019). The environmental 15 and ecological benefits increase through the interaction of urban energy and spatial planning (Tuomisto 16 et al. 2015; Bartolozzi et al. 2017; Dénarié et al. 2018; Zhai et al. 2020). These interactions include 17 support for demand-side flexibility, spatial planning using geographic information systems, and access 18 to renewable and urban waste heat sources (Möller et al. 2018; REN21 2020; Sorknæs et al. 2020; 19 Dorotić et al. 2019) (see Table SM8.2 for other references). 20 21 8.4.3 Electrification and switching to net zero emissions resources 22 Pursuing the electrification mobility, heating, and cooling systems, while decarbonizing electricity and 23 energy carriers, and switching to net zero materials and supply chains, represent important strategies 24 for urban mitigation. Electrification of energy end uses in cities and efficient energy demand for heating, 25 transport, and cooking through multiple options and urban infrastructure, has an estimated mitigation 26 potential of at least 6.9 GtCO2-eq by 2030 and 15.3 GtCO2-eq by 2050 (Coalition for Urban Transitions 27 2019). Energy efficiency measures in urban areas can be enabled by urban form, building codes, 28 retrofitting and renovation, modal shifts, and other options. Decarbonizing electricity supply raises the 29 mitigation potential of efficient buildings and transport in urban areas to about 75% of the total estimate 30 (Coalition for Urban Transitions 2019). In addition, relatively higher-density urban areas enable more 31 cost-effective infrastructure investments, including electric public transport and large-scale heat pumps 32 in districts that support electrification. Urban policymakers can play a key role in supporting carbon- 33 neutral energy systems by acting as target setters and planners, demand aggregators, regulators, 34 operators, conveners, and facilitators for coordinated planning and implementation across sectors, urban 35 form, and demand (IEA 2021a; IRENA 2021). 36 37 8.4.3.1 Electrification and decarbonization of the urban energy system 38 Urban energy infrastructures often operate as part of larger energy systems that can be electrified, 39 decarbonized, and become enablers of urban system flexibility through demand-side options. With 40 multiple end-use sectors (e.g., transport, buildings) and their interactions with land use drawing on the 41 same urban energy system(s), increasing electrification is essential for rapid decarbonization, renewable 42 energy penetration, and demand flexibility (Kammen and Sunter 2016) (see IMPs in Sections 3.2.5 and 43 8.3.4). The mitigation potential of electrification is ultimately dependent on the carbon intensity of the 44 electricity grid (Kennedy 2015; Hofmann et al. 2016; Peng et al. 2018; Zhang and Fujimori 2020) and 45 starts providing lifecycle emission savings for carbon intensities below a threshold of 600 tCO 2-eq 46 GWh-1 (Kennedy et al. 2019). Integrated systems of roof-top photovoltaics (PVs) and all-electric 47 vehicles (EVs) alone could supply affordable carbon-free electricity to cities and reduce CO2 emissions Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-58 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 by 54%–95% (Brenna et al. 2014; Kobashi et al. 2021). Furthermore, electrification and 2 decarbonization of the urban energy system holds widespread importance for climate change mitigation 3 across different urban growth typologies and urban form (see Section 8.6 and Figure 8.21) and leads to 4 a multitude of public health co-benefits (see Section 8.2). 5 Strategies that can bring together electrification with reduced energy demand based on walkable and 6 compact urban form can accelerate and amplify decarbonization. Taking these considerations—across 7 the energy system, sectors, and land use—contributes to avoiding, or breaking out of, carbon lock-in 8 and allows continued emission savings as the energy supply is decarbonized (Kennedy et al. 2018; 9 Teske et al. 2018; Seto et al. 2021). Indeed, electrification is already transforming urban areas and 10 settlements and has the potential to continue transforming urban areas into net-negative electric cities 11 that may sequester more carbon than emitted (Kennedy et al. 2018; Seto et al. 2021). 12 In its simplest form, electrification involves the process of replacing fossil fuel-based technologies with 13 electrified innovations such as electric vehicles, buses, streetcars, and trains (see Sections 10.4.1 and 14 10.4.2), heat pumps, PVs (see Section 6.4.2.1), electric cook-stoves (see Section 9.8.2.1), and other 15 technologies (Stewart et al. 2018). Cost-effective decarbonisation of energy use can be supported by 16 electrification in urban areas if there is also demand-side flexibility for power, heat, mobility, and water 17 with sector coupling (Guelpa et al. 2019; Pfeifer et al. 2021). Overall, demand-side flexibility across 18 sectors in urban areas is supported by smart charging, electric mobility, electrified urban rail, power- 19 to-heat, demand side response, and water desalination (Lund et al. 2015; Calvillo et al. 2016; Salpakari 20 et al. 2016; Newman 2017; Meschede 2019). 21 As an enabler, electrification supports integrating net zero energy sources in urban infrastructure across 22 sectors, especially when there is more flexible energy demand in mobility, heating, and cooling to 23 absorb greater shares of variable renewable energy. In the transport sector, smart charging can reduce 24 electric vehicle impacts on peak demand by 60% (IEA 2021a). Urban areas that connect efficient 25 building clusters with the operation of smart thermal grids in district heating and cooling networks with 26 large-scale heat pumps can support higher penetrations of variable renewable energy in smart energy 27 systems (Lund et al. 2014, 2017). Higher urban densities provide the advantage of increasing the 28 penetration of renewable power for deep decarbonization, including mixed-use neighbourhoods for grid 29 balancing and electric public transport (Hsieh et al. 2017; Tong et al. 2017; Fichera et al. 2018; Kobashi 30 et al. 2020). Based on these opportunities, urban areas that provide low-cost options to energy storage 31 for integrating the power sector with multiple demands reduce investment needs in grid electricity 32 storage capacities (Mathiesen et al. 2015; Lund et al. 2018). 33 Electrification at the urban scale encompasses strategies to aggregate energy loads for demand response 34 in the urban built environment to reduce the curtailment of variable renewable energy and shifting time- 35 of-use based on smart charging for redistributing energy demands (O’Dwyer et al. 2019). Peak shaving 36 or shifting takes place among frequent interventions at the urban level (Sethi et al. 2020). Business 37 models and utility participation, including municipal level demonstrations, can allow for upscaling 38 (Gjorgievski et al. 2020; Meha et al. 2020). The urban system can support increasing demand-side 39 flexibility in energy systems, including in contexts of 100% renewable energy systems (Drysdale et al. 40 2019; Thellufsen et al. 2020). 41 Smart grids in the urban system 42 Smart electricity grids enable peak demand reductions, energy conservation, and renewable energy 43 penetration, and are a subset of smart energy systems. GHG emission reductions from smart grids range 44 from 10 to 180 gCO2 kWh-1 (grams of CO2 per kilowatt-hour) with a median value of 89 gCO2 kWh-1, 45 depending on the electricity mix, penetration of renewable energy, and the system boundary (Moretti 46 et al. 2017). Smart electricity grids are characterized by bi-directional flows of electricity and 47 information between generators and consumers, although some actors can be both as ‘prosumer’ (see Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-59 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Glossary). Two-way power flows can be used to establish peer-to-peer trading (P2P) (Hansen et al. 2 2020). Business models based on local citizen utilities (Green and Newman 2017; Green et al. 2020; 3 Syed et al. 2020) and community batteries (Mey and Hicks 2019; Green et al. 2020) can support the 4 realization of distributed energy and solar energy cities (Galloway and Newman 2014; Byrne and 5 Taminiau 2016; Stewart et al. 2018; Allan 2020). 6 Currently, despite power outages that are costly to local economies, the adoption of smart electricity 7 grids or smart energy systems have been slow in many developing regions, including in Sub-Saharan 8 Africa (Westphal et al. 2017; Kennedy et al. 2019). This is due to a number of different factors, such as 9 unreliable existing infrastructure, fractured fiscal authority, lack of electricity access in urban areas, 10 upfront cost, financial barriers, inefficient pricing of electricity, and low consumer education and 11 engagement (Venkatachary et al. 2018; Acakpovi et al. 2019; Cirolia 2020). 12 Pathways and trade-offs of electrification in urban systems 13 Urbanization and population density are one of the key drivers for enabling access to electricity across 14 the world with benefits for sustainable development (Aklin et al. 2018). Grid-connected PV systems for 15 urban locations that currently lack electricity access can allow urban areas to leapfrog based on green 16 electrification (Abid et al. 2021). In the Global South, the conversion of public transport to electric 17 transport, especially municipal buses (e.g., Bengaluru, India; Jakarta, Indonesia; Medellín, Colombia; 18 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Quito, Ecuador) and micro-mobility (e.g., e-trikes in Manila, Philippines) have 19 been quantified based on reductions in GHG and PM2.5 emissions, avoided premature deaths, and 20 increases in life expectancies (IEA 2014; C40 Cities 2018, 2020b,c,d,e). In 22 Latin American cities, 21 converting 100% of buses and taxis in 2030 to electric were estimated to result in a reduction of 300 22 MtCO2-eq compared to 2017 (ONU Medio Ambiente 2017). Yet the scaling up of electric vehicles in 23 cities can be examined within a larger set of possible social objectives, such as reducing congestion and 24 the prioritization of other forms of mobility. 25 Electrification requires a layering of policies at the national, state, and local levels. Cities have roles as 26 policy architects, including transit planning (e.g., EV targets and low-emissions zones, restrictions on 27 the types of energy use in new buildings, etc.), implementers (e.g., building codes and compliance 28 checking, financial incentives to encourage consumer uptake of EV’s and heat pumps, etc.), and 29 complementary partners to national and state policymaking (e.g., permitting or installation of charging 30 infrastructure) (Broekhoff et al. 2015). The number of cities that have instituted e-mobility targets that 31 aim for a certain percentage of EV’s sold, in circulation or registered, is increasing (REN21 2021). 32 Realizing the mitigation potential of electrification will require fiscal and regulatory policies and public 33 investment (Hall et al. 2017a; Deason and Borgeson 2019; Wappelhorst et al. 2020) (see Section 8.5). 34 EVs are most rapidly deployed when there has been a suite of policies, including deployment targets, 35 regulations and use incentives (e.g., zero-emission zone mandates, fuel economy standards, building 36 codes), financial incentives (e.g., vehicles, chargers), industrial policies (e.g., subsidies), and fleet 37 procurement (IEA 2016b, 2017, 2018, 2020a; Cazzola et al. 2019). The policy mix has included 38 mandates for bus deployment, purchase subsidies, or split ownership of buses and chargers (IEA 2021b) 39 (see Chapter 10). Subsidies are often critical to address the often-higher upfront costs of electric devices. 40 In other instances, the uptake of electric induction stoves was increased through government credit and 41 allotment of free electricity (Martínez et al. 2017; Gould et al. 2018). 42 Bringing multiple stakeholders together in local decision-making for smart energy systems requires 43 effort beyond usual levels while multi-actor settings can be increased to enable institutional conditions 44 (Lammers and Hoppe 2019). Public participation and community involvement in the planning, design 45 and operation of urban energy projects can be an enabler of decarbonizing local energy demands 46 (Corsini et al. 2019). Cooperation across institutions is important for municipalities that are engaged in 47 strategic energy planning and implementation for smart energy systems (Krog 2019) (see Section 8.5). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-60 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Electrification technologies can present potential trade-offs that can be minimized through governance 2 strategies, smart grid technologies, circular economy practices, and international cooperation. One 3 consideration is the increase in electricity demand (see 5.3.1.1). Across 23 megacities in the world 4 (population greater than 10 million people), electrification of the entire gasoline vehicle fleet could 5 increase electricity demand on average by 18% (Kennedy et al. 2018). How grid capacity will be 6 impacted is dependent on the match between daily electricity loads and supply (Tarroja et al. 2018). 7 Materials recycling of electrification technologies are also key to minimising potential environmental 8 and social costs (Church and Crawford 2018; Gaustad et al. 2018; Sovacool et al. 2020) and can ensure 9 electrification reaches its complete mitigation potential. Circular economy strategies are particularly 10 valuable to this goal by creating closed-loop supply chains through recycling, material recovery, repair, 11 and reuse. For instance, the PV Cycle program in Europe prevented more than 30,000 metric tonnes of 12 renewable technology from reaching the waste stream (Sovacool et al. 2020) (see Box 10.7 as well as 13 ‘circular economy’ in Glossary). 14 8.4.3.2 Switching to net zero emissions materials and supply chains 15 For the carbon embodied in supply chains to become net zero, all key infrastructure and provisioning 16 systems will need to be decarbonized, including electricity, mobility, food, water supply, and 17 construction (Seto et al. 2021). The growth of global urban populations that is anticipated over the next 18 several decades will create significant demand for buildings and infrastructure. As cities expand in size 19 and density, there is an increase in the production of mineral-based structural materials and enclosure 20 systems that are conventionally associated with mid- and high-rise urban construction morphologies, 21 including concrete, steel, aluminium, and glass. This will create a significant spike in GHG emissions 22 and discharge of CO2 at the beginning of each building lifecycle, necessitating alternatives (Churkina 23 et al. 2020). 24 The initial carbon debt incurred in the production stage, even in sustainable buildings, can take decades 25 to offset through operational stage energy efficiencies alone. Increased reduction in the energy demands 26 and GHG emissions associated with the manufacture of mineral-based construction materials will be 27 challenging, as these industries have already optimized their production processes. Among the category 28 of primary structural materials, it is estimated that final energy demand for steel production can be 29 reduced by nearly 30% compared to 2010 levels, with 12% efficiency improvement for cement 30 (Lechtenböhmer et al. 2016). Even when industries are decarbonized, residual CO2 emissions will 31 remain from associated chemical reactions that take place in calcination and use of coke from coking 32 coal to reduce iron oxide (Davis et al. 2018). Additionally, carbon sequestration by cement occurs over 33 the course of the building lifecycle in quantities that would offset only a fraction of their production 34 stage carbon spike (Xi et al. 2016; Davis et al. 2018). Moreover, there are collateral effects on the carbon 35 cycle related to modern construction and associated resource extraction. The production of cement, 36 asphalt, and glass requires large amounts of sand extracted from beaches, rivers, and seafloors, 37 disturbing aquatic ecosystems and reducing their capacity to absorb atmospheric carbon. The mining of 38 ore can lead to extensive local deforestation and soil degradation (Sonter et al. 2017). Deforestation 39 significantly weakens the converted land as a carbon sink and in severe cases may even create a net 40 emissions source. 41 A broad-based substitution of monolithic engineered timber systems for steel and concrete in mid-rise 42 urban buildings offers the opportunity to transform cityscapes from their current status as net sources 43 of GHG emissions into large-scale, human-made carbon sinks. The storage of photosynthetic forest 44 carbon through the substitution of biomass-based structural materials for emissions-intensive steel and 45 concrete is an opportunity for urban infrastructure. The construction of timber buildings for 2.3 billion 46 new urban dwellers from 2020 to 2050 could store between 0.01 and 0.68 GtCO2 per year depending 47 on the scenario and the average floor area per capita. Over thirty years, wood-based construction can Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-61 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 accumulate between 0.25 and 20 GtCO2 and reduce cumulative emissions from 4 GtCO2 (range of 7– 2 20 GtCO2) to 2 GtCO2 (range of 0.3–10 GtCO2) (high confidence) (Churkina et al. 2020). 3 Figure 8.17 indicates that new and emerging structural assemblies in engineered timber rival the 4 structural capacity of steel and reinforced concrete while offering the benefit of storing significant 5 quantities of atmospheric carbon (see also Figure 8.22). Mass timber refers to engineered wood products 6 that are laminated from smaller boards or lamella into larger structural components such as glue- 7 laminated (glulam) beams or cross-laminated timber (CLT) panels. Methods of mass-timber production 8 that include finger-jointing, longitudinal and transverse lamination with both liquid adhesive and 9 mechanical fasteners have allowed for the re-formulation of large structural timbers. The parallel-to- 10 grain strength of mass (engineered) timber is similar to that of reinforced concrete (Ramage et al. 2017). 11 As much as half the weight of a given volume of wood is carbon, sequestered during forest growth as a 12 by-product of photosynthesis (Martin et al. 2018). Mass timber is inflammable, but in large sections 13 forms a self-protective charring layer when exposed to fire that will protect the remaining ‘cold wood’ 14 core. This property, formed as massive structural sections, is recognized in the fire safety regulations 15 of building codes in several countries, which allow mid- and high-rise buildings in timber. Ongoing 16 studies have addressed associated concerns about the vulnerability of wood to decay and the capacity 17 of structural timber systems to withstand seismic and storm related stresses. 18 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-62 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Figure 8.17 Relative volume of a given weight, its carbon emissions, and carbon storage capacity of 2 primary structural materials comparing one tonne of concrete, steel, and timber 3 4 Concrete and steel have substantial embodied carbon emissions with minimal carbon storage capacities, 5 while timber stores a considerable quantity of carbon with a relatively small ratio of carbon emissions-to- 6 material volume. The displayed carbon storage of concrete is the theoretical maximum value, which may 7 be achieved after hundreds of years. Cement ratios of 10%, 15%, and 20% are assumed to estimate 8 minimum, mean, and maximum carbon storage in concrete. Carbon storage of steel is not displayed as it 9 is negligible (0.004 tonne C per tonne of steel). The middle-stacked bars represent the mean carbon 10 emission or mean carbon storage values displayed in bold font and underlined. The darker and lighter 11 coloured stacked bars depict the minimum and maximum values. Grey tones represent carbon emissions 12 and green tones are given for storage capacity values. Construction materials have radically different 13 volume-to-weight ratios, as well as material intensity (see representation by a structural column in the 14 upper panel. These differences should be accounted for in the estimations of their carbon storage and 15 emissions (see also Figure 8.22). 16 17 Source: Adapted from Churkina et al. (2020) 18 19 Transitioning to biomass-based building materials, implemented through the adoption of engineered 20 structural timber products and assemblies, will succeed as a mitigation strategy only if working forests 21 are managed and harvested sustainably (Churkina et al. 2020). Since future urban growth and the 22 construction of timber cities may lead to increased timber demand in regions with low forest cover, it 23 is necessary to systematically analyse timber demand, supply, trade, and potential competition for 24 agricultural land in different regions (Pomponi et al. 2020). The widespread adoption of biomass-based 25 urban construction materials and techniques will demand more robust forest and urban land governance 26 and management policies, as well as internationally standardized carbon accounting methods to 27 properly value and incentivize forest restoration, afforestation, and sustainable silviculture. 28 29 Expansion of agroforestry practices may help to reduce land-use conflicts between forestry and 30 agriculture. Harvesting pressures on forests can be reduced through the reuse and recycling of wooden 31 components from dismantled timber buildings. Potential synergies between the carbon sequestration 32 capacity of forests and the associated carbon storage capacity of dense mid-rise cities built from 33 engineered timber offer the opportunity to construct carbon sinks deployed at the scale of landscapes, 34 sinks that are at least as durable as other buildings (Churkina et al. 2020). Policies and practices 35 promoting design for disassembly and material reuse will increase their durability. 36 37 8.4.4 Urban green and blue infrastructure 38 The findings of AR6 WGI and WGII have underscored the importance of urban green and blue 39 infrastructure for reducing the total warming in urban areas due to its local cooling effect on temperature 40 and its benefits for climate adaptation (IPCC 2021; Cross-Working Group Box 2 in this chapter). Urban 41 green and blue infrastructure in the context of NBS involves the protection, sustainable management, 42 and restoration of natural or modified ecosystems while simultaneously providing benefits for human 43 well-being and biodiversity (IUCN 2021) (see Glossary for additional definitions). As an umbrella 44 concept, urban NBS integrates established ecosystem-based approaches that provide multiple 45 ecosystem services and are important in the context of societal challenges related to urbanization, 46 climate change, and reducing GHG emissions through the conservation and expansion of carbon sinks 47 (Naumann et al. 2014; Raymond et al. 2017) (see Section 8.1.6.1). 48 Urban green and blue infrastructure includes a wide variety of options, from street trees, parks, and 49 sustainable urban drainage systems (Davis and Naumann 2017), to building-related green roofs or green 50 facades, including green walls and vertical forests (Enzi et al. 2017). Figure 8.18 synthesizes urban 51 green and blue infrastructure based on urban forests, street trees, green roofs, green walls, blue spaces, Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-63 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 greenways, and urban agriculture. Key mitigation benefits, adaptation co-benefits, and SDG linkages 2 are represented by types of green and blue infrastructure. Local implementations of urban green and 3 blue infrastructure can pursue these linkages while progressing toward inclusive sustainable urban 4 planning (SDG 11.3) and the provision of safe, inclusive and accessible green and public spaces for all 5 (SDG 11.7) (Butcher-Gollach 2018; Pathak and Mahadevia 2018; Rigolon et al. 2018; Anguelovski et 6 al. 2019; Buyana et al. 2019; Azunre et al. 2021) (see Section 8.2). 7 8 Panel a Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-64 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Panel b 3 Figure 8.18 Key mitigation benefits, adaptation co-benefits, and SDG linkages of urban green and blue 4 infrastructure 5 Panel (a) illustrates the potential integration of various green and blue infrastructure strategies within an 6 urban system. Panel (b) evaluates those strategies in the context of their mitigation benefits, adaptation 7 co-benefits, and linkages to the SDGs. Urban forests and street trees provide the greatest mitigation 8 benefit because of their ability to sequester and store carbon while simultaneously reducing building Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-65 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 energy demand. Moreover, they provide multiple adaptation co-benefits and synergies based on the 2 linkages to the SDGs (see Figure 8.4). The assessments of mitigation benefits are dependent on context, 3 scale, and spatial arrangement of each green and blue infrastructure type and their proximity to 4 buildings. Mitigation benefits due to reducing municipal water use are based on reducing wastewater 5 loads that reduce energy use in wastewater treatment plants. The sizes in the bars are illustrative and 6 their relative size is based on the authors' best understanding and assessment of the literature. 7 8 8.4.4.1 The mitigation potential of urban trees and associated co-benefits 9 Due to their potential to store relatively high amounts of carbon compared to other types of urban 10 vegetation, as well as their ability to provide many climate mitigation co-benefits (medium agreement, 11 limited evidence), natural area protection and natural forest management in urban areas is an important 12 priority for cities looking to mitigate climate change. Globally, urban tree cover averages 26.5%, but 13 varies from an average of 12% in deserts to 30.4% in forested regions (Nowak and Greenfield 2020). 14 Global urban tree carbon storage is approximately 7.4 billion tonnes (GtC) given 363 million hectares 15 of urban land, 26.5% tree cover, and an average carbon storage density of urban tree cover of 7.69 16 kgC/m2 (kilograms carbon per square metre) (Nowak et al. 2013; World Bank et al. 2013). Estimated 17 global annual carbon sequestration by urban trees is approximately 217 million tonnes (MtC) given an 18 average carbon sequestration density per unit urban tree cover of 0.226 kgC/m 2 (Nowak et al. 2013). 19 With an average plantable (non-tree and non-impervious) space of 48% globally (Nowak and 20 Greenfield 2020), the carbon storage value could nearly triple if all this space is converted to tree cover. 21 In Europe alone, if 35% of the urban surfaces (26450 km 2) were transformed into green surfaces, the 22 mitigation potential based on carbon sequestration would be an estimated 25.9 MtCO2 year−1 with the 23 total mitigation benefit being 55.8 MtCO2 year−1, including an energy saving of about 92 TWh year−1 24 (Quaranta et al. 2021). Other co-benefits include reducing urban runoff by about 17.5% and reducing 25 summer temperatures by 2.5°C–6°C (Quaranta et al. 2021). 26 Urban tree carbon storage is highly dependent on biome. For example, carbon sequestered by vegetation 27 in Amazonian forests is two- to five-times higher compared to boreal and temperate forests (Blais et al. 28 2005). At the regional level, the estimated carbon storage density rates of tree cover include a range of 29 3.14–14.1 kgC/m2 in the United States, 3.85–5.58 kgC/m2 in South Korea, 1.53–9.67 kgC/m2 in 30 Barcelona, 28.1–28.9 kgC/m2 in Leicester, England, and an estimated 6.82 kgC/m2 in Leipzig, Germany 31 and 4.28 kgC/m2 in Hangzhou, China (Nowak et al. 2013). At the local scale, above- and below-ground 32 tree carbon densities can vary substantially, as with carbon in soils and dead woody materials. The 33 conservation of natural mangroves have been shown to provide urban mitigation benefits through 34 carbon sequestration, as demonstrated in the Philippines (Abino et al. 2014). Research on urban carbon 35 densities from the Southern hemisphere will contribute to better estimates. 36 On a per-tree basis, urban trees offer the most potential to mitigate climate change through both carbon 37 sequestration and GHG emissions reduction from reduced energy use in buildings (Nowak et al. 2017). 38 Maximum possible street tree planting among 245 world cities could reduce residential electricity use 39 by about 0.9–4.8% annually (McDonald et al. 2016). Urban forests in the United States reduce building 40 energy use by 7.2%, equating to an emissions reduction of 43.8 MtCO2 annually (Nowak et al. 2017). 41 Urban trees can also mitigate some of the impacts of climate change by reducing the UHI effect and 42 heat stress, reducing stormwater runoff, improving air quality, and supporting health and well-being in 43 areas where the majority of the world’s population resides (Nowak and Dwyer 2007). Urban forest 44 planning and management can maximize these benefits for present and future generations by sustaining 45 optimal tree cover and health (also see SDG linkages in Figure 8.4). Urban and peri-urban (see 46 Glossary) agriculture can also have economic benefits from fruit, ornamental, and medicinal trees 47 (Gopal and Nagendra 2014; Lwasa 2017; Lwasa et al. 2018). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-66 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 START BOX 8.2 HERE 3 4 Box 8.2 Urban carbon storage: An example from New York City 5 The structure, composition, extent, and growing conditions of vegetation in cities has an influence on 6 their potential for mitigating climate change (Pregitzer et al. 2021). Urban natural areas, particularly 7 forested natural areas, grow in patches and contain many of the same components as non-urban forests, 8 such as high tree density, down woody material, and regenerating trees (see Figure 1). 9 Urban forested natural areas have unique benefits as they can provide habitat for native plants and 10 animals, protecting local biodiversity in a fragmented landscape (Di Giulio et al. 2009). Forests can 11 have a greater cooling effect on cities than designed greenspaces, and the bigger the forest the greater 12 the effect (Jaganmohan et al. 2016). In New York City, urban forested natural areas have been found to 13 account for the majority of trees estimated in the city (69%), but are a minority of the total tree canopy 14 (25%, or 5.5% of the total city land area) (Pregitzer et al. 2019a). In New York City, natural areas are 15 estimated to store a mean of 263.5 Mg C ha-1 (megagram carbon per hectare), adding up to 1.86 TgC 16 (teragram carbon) across the city, with the majority of carbon (86%) being stored in the trees and soils 17 (Pregitzer et al. 2021). These estimates are similar to per-hectare estimates of carbon storage across 18 different pools in non-urban forest types (see Table 1), and 1.5-times greater than estimates for carbon 19 stored in just trees across the entire city (Pregitzer et al. 2021). 20 Within urban natural areas, the amount of carbon stored varies widely based on vegetation type, tree 21 density, and the species composition (see Figure 1). The oak-hardwood forest type is one of the most 22 abundant in New York City’s natural areas and is characterized by large and long-lived native hardwood 23 tree species, with relatively dense wood. These forests store an estimated 311.5 Mg C ha -1. However, 24 non-native exotic invasive species can be prevalent in the understory vegetation layer (<1m height), 25 and account for about 50% of cover in New York City (Pregitzer et al. 2019b). 26 This could lead to a trajectory where exotic understory species, which are often herbaceous, out- 27 compete regenerating trees in the understory layer, alter the soil (Ward et al. 2020), and alter the forest 28 canopy (Matthews et al. 2016). A change in New York City’s vegetation structure and composition to 29 a more open vegetation type could reduce the carbon storage by over half (open grassland 120.1 Mg C 30 ha-1). 31 When compared to estimates of carbon storage presented in other studies, the components (pools) of 32 the natural area forests in New York City store carbon in similar proportions to other non-urban forests 33 (see Table 1). This might suggest that in other geographies, similar adjacent non-urban forest types may 34 store similar carbon stocks per unit area (medium confidence). However, despite similarities to non- 35 urban forests, the urban context can lead to altered forest function and carbon cycling that should be 36 considered. For example, trees growing in urban areas have been observed to grow at much higher rates 37 due to higher access to light, nutrients, and increased temperatures (Gregg et al. 2003; Reinmann et al. 38 2020). 39 Higher growth rates coupled with the UHI effect have also been suggested to yield greater evaporative 40 cooling by urban canopies relative to rural forests (Winbourne et al. 2020). Based on estimates in New 41 York City, it is likely that the majority of tree biomass, and carbon in trees in cities, could be found in 42 urban natural area forest patches (medium agreement, limited evidence). More research is needed to 43 map urban natural areas, assess vegetation, and differentiate tree canopy types (natural vs. non-natural) 44 at fine scales within many cities and geographies. Accurate maps, as well as greater understanding of 45 definitions of urban canopies and vegetation, could lead to better accounts for carbon stocks and the 46 many other unique benefits they provide (Raciti et al. 2012; Pregitzer et al. 2019a). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-67 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Despite this potential, natural areas are inherently a minority land use type in cities and should be 2 viewed along with other types of urban tree canopy that occur in more designed environments that 3 might out-perform natural areas in other ecosystem services. The mosaic of vegetation characteristics 4 and growing conditions will yield different ecosystem services across cities (Pataki et al. 2011) and 5 should be an important consideration in planning, management, and policy in the future. 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Box 8.2, Figure 1 Estimates for carbon storage in natural area forests in New York City 21 22 (a) Mean estimated carbon stock per hectare in natural area forests (Pregitzer et al. 2019a, 2021); (b) 23 estimates for carbon stocks vary based on vegetation types; and (c) estimates of the amount of carbon 24 stock in different forest pools per hectare. The proportion of the total estimated carbon stock per pool is 25 out of the total estimated for the entire city (1.86 TgC). 26 27 Source: Figure from Pregitzer et al. (2021) Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-68 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Box 8.2, Table 1 A selection of benchmark reference estimates of different carbon pools sampled and the related urban considerations to contextualize the results from New York 2 City (NYC), United States (US) natural area carbon stocks. The benchmark estimates are intended to provide a point of reference to help contextualize the calculations for carbon 3 pools in NYC’s forests. Forest carbon is highly variable and dependent on microclimatic conditions such as moisture, microbial communities, and nutrient availability, all of which 4 can be impacted by human activity in urban or altered environments. Standard errors and 95% confidence intervals can be found in Pregitzer et al. (2021). DBH: diameter at breast 5 height; DWM: down woody material; and FWM: fine woody material. 6 Source: Pregitzer et al. (2021). Pool considered in NYC NYC Estimated Carbon Published Estimates of Carbon Stock (Mg C ha-1) Urban Considerations Natural Area Stock (Mg C ha-1) Lower ozone levels, higher CO2, warmer temperatures, and higher nutrient deposition could lead to increase growth rates and annual Live Trees: All trees carbon sequestration. However, pollutants in soil (e.g., heavy 87.1 - North-eastern US (Smith et al. 2013) (>2 cm DBH) including 135.4 metals), increased pests, and GHGs in the atmosphere (e.g., NOX 73.3 - NYC assuming 100% cover (Nowak et al. 2013) above and below ground and SO2) could decrease annual tree growth and carbon sequestration (Gregg et al. 2003) Anthropogenic disturbance creates canopy gaps that accelerate Groundcover: All herbaceous growth; invasive vines are prevalent in urban forests vegetation growing 1.8 - North-eastern US (Smith et al. 2013) 5.5 that can alter tree survival and growth and soils (Matthews et al. <1 m height 2016; Ward et al. 2020) 5.1 - North-eastern US (Smith et al. 2013) Removal may occur due to safety considerations Standing Dead Trees 5.8 2.59 - Massachusetts (Liu et al. 2006) 9.18 - Coarse woody material – New York state Removal may occur due to safety considerations 2.52 - Coarse woody material- Massachusetts (Liu et al. 2006) DWM: Coarse (>10 cm) 15.25 (added together 6.37 - Fine woody material- New York (Woodall et al. and FWM (>0.1 cm) DWM and FWM) 2013) 3.67 - Fine woody material Northern hardwood; 0 to 227.94 - Northern US (Domke et al. 2016) Decomposition increases with temperature (Hanson et al. 2003); 12 - NYC (Pouyat et al. 2002) Litter and Duff: decreased ozone levels facilitate litter decay (Carreiro et al. 2009) 9.36 - Northern hardwood; 10.95 Depth measured 0.04 to 86.1, Northern US (Domke et al. 2016) UHI and pollution alter the litter chemistry, decomposer organisms, conditions, and resources, which all influence Mineral Soil 104 - to 30 cm depth, NYC (Cambou et al. 2018) 105.11(30 cm) respiration rates (Carreiro et al. 2009); earthworms, prevalent in (Organic 30 cm) 50 - to 10 cm depth, NYC (Pouyat et al. 2002) and 77.78 (10 cm) urban areas, accelerate decay, but some carbon is sequestered in passive pools (Pouyat et al. 2002). Soil could be compacted. 7 8 END BOX 8.2 HERE Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-69 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 8.4.4.2 Benefits of green roofs, green walls, and greenways 3 Green roofs and green walls have potential to mitigate air and surface temperature, improve thermal 4 comfort, and mitigate UHI effects (Jamei et al. 2021; Wong et al. 2021), while lowering the energy 5 demand of buildings (Susca 2019) (see Figure 8.18). Green roofs have the highest median cooling effect 6 in dry climates (3°C) and the lowest cooling effect in hot, humid climates (1°C) (Jamei et al. 2021). 7 These mitigation potentials depend on numerous factors and the scale of implementation. The 8 temperature reduction potential for green roofs when compared to conventional roofs can be about 4°C 9 in winter and about 12°C during summer conditions (Bevilacqua et al. 2016). Green roofs can reduce 10 building heating demands by about 10–30% compared to conventional roofs (Besir and Cuce 2018), 11 60–70% compared to black roofs, and 45–60% compared to white roofs (Silva et al. 2016). Green walls 12 or facades can provide a temperature difference between air temperature outside and behind a green 13 wall of up to 10°C, with an average difference of 5°C in Mediterranean contexts in Europe (Perini et 14 al. 2017). The potential of saving energy for air conditioning by green facades can be around 26% in 15 summer months. Considerations of the spatial context are essential given their dependence on climatic 16 conditions (Susca 2019). Cities are diverse and emissions savings potentials depend on several factors, 17 while the implementation of green roofs or facades may be prevented in heritage structures. 18 Green roofs have been shown to have beneficial effects in stormwater reduction (Andrés-Doménech et 19 al. 2018). A global meta-analysis of 75 international studies on the potential of green roofs to mitigate 20 runoff indicate that the runoff retention rate was on average 62% but with a wide range (0–100%) 21 depending on a number of interdependent factors (Zheng et al. 2021). These factors relate to the 22 characteristics of the rainfall event (e.g., intensity) and characteristics of the green roof (e.g., substrate, 23 vegetation type, and size), and of the climate and season type. A hydrologic modelling approach applied 24 to an Italian case demonstrated that implementing green roofs may reduce peak runoff rates and water 25 volumes by up to 35% in a 100% green roof conversion scenario (Masseroni and Cislaghi 2016). 26 Greenways support stormwater management to mitigate water runoff and urban floods by reducing the 27 water volume (e.g., through infiltration) and by an attenuation or temporal shift of water discharge (Fiori 28 and Volpi 2020; Pour et al. 2020). Using green infrastructure delays the time to runoff and reduces 29 water volume but depends on the magnitude of floods (Qin et al. 2013). Measures are most effective 30 for flood mitigation at a local scale; however, as the size of the catchment increases, the effectiveness 31 of reducing peak discharge decreases (Fiori and Volpi 2020). Reduction of water volume through 32 infiltration can be more effective with rainfall events on a lower return rate. Overall, the required 33 capacity for piped engineered systems for water runoff attenuation and mitigation can be reduced while 34 lowering flow rates, controlling pollution transport, and increasing the capacity to store stormwater 35 (Srishantha and Rathnayake 2017). Benefits for flood mitigation require a careful consideration of the 36 spatial context of the urban area, the heterogeneity of the rainfall events, and characteristics of 37 implementation (Qiu et al. 2021). Maintenance costs and stakeholder coordination are other aspects 38 requiring attention (Mguni et al. 2016). 39 Providing a connected system of greenspace throughout the urban area may promote active 40 transportation (Nieuwenhuijsen and Khreis 2016), thereby reducing GHG emissions. Soft solutions for 41 improving green infrastructure connectivity for cycling is an urban NBS mitigation measure, although 42 there is low evidence for emissions reductions. In the city of Lisbon, Portugal, improvements in cycling 43 infrastructure and bike-sharing system resulted in 3.5-times more cyclists within two years (Félix et al. 44 2020). In Copenhagen, the cost of cycling (Euro 0.08/km) is declining and is about six times lower than 45 car driving (Euro 0.50/km) (Vedel et al. 2017). In addition, participants were willing to cycle 1.84 km 46 longer if the route has a designated cycle track and 0.8 km more if there are also green surroundings. 47 Changes in urban landscapes, including through the integration of green infrastructure in sustainable Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-70 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 urban and transport planning, can support the transition from private motorized transportation to public 2 and physically active transportation in carbon-neutral, more liveable and healthier cities 3 (Nieuwenhuijsen and Khreis 2016; Nieuwenhuijsen 2020). Car infrastructure can be also transferred 4 into public open and green space, such as in the Superblock model in Barcelona’s neighbourhoods 5 (Rueda 2019). Health impact assessment models estimated that 681 premature deaths may be prevented 6 annually with this implementation (Mueller et al. 2020) and the creation of greenways in Maanshan, 7 China has stimulated interests in walking or cycling (Zhang et al. 2020). 8 9 8.4.5 Socio-behavioural aspects 10 Urban systems shape the behaviour and social structures of their residents through urban form, energy 11 systems, and infrastructure—all of which provide a range of options for consumers to make choices 12 about residential location, mobility, energy sources, and the consumption of materials, food, and other 13 resources. The relative availability of options across these sectors has implications on urban emissions 14 through individual behaviour. In turn, urban GHG emissions, as well as emissions from the supply 15 chains of cities, are driven by the behaviour and consumption patterns of residents, with households 16 accounting for over 60% of carbon emissions globally (Ivanova et al. 2016). The exclusion of 17 consumption-based emissions and emissions that occur outside of city boundaries as a result of urban 18 activities will lead to significant undercounting to the effect of undercounting 41% of territorial 19 emissions and 4% of global emissions annually, respectively (Wiedmann et al. 2021). 20 Changes in behaviour across all areas (e.g., transport, buildings, food, etc.) could reduce an individual’s 21 emissions by 5.6–16.2% relative to the accumulated GHG emissions from 2011 to 2050 in a baseline 22 scenario modelled with the Global Change Assessment Model (van de Ven et al. 2018). In other models, 23 behaviour change in transport and residential energy use could reduce emissions by 2 GtCO2-eq in 2030 24 compared to 2019 (IEA 2020b) (see Chapter 5). Voluntary behaviour change can support emissions 25 reduction, but behaviours that are not convenient to change are unlikely to shift without changes to 26 policy (Sköld et al. 2018). Cities can increase the capability of citizens to make sustainable choices by 27 making these choices less onerous, through avenues such as changing urban form to increase locational 28 and mobility options and providing feedback mechanisms to support socio-behavioural change. 29 Transport emissions can be reduced by options including telecommuting (0.3%), taking closer holidays 30 (0.5%), avoiding short flights (0.5%), using public transit (0.7%), cycling (0.6%), car sharing (1.1%), 31 and carpool commuting (1.2%); all reduction estimates reflect cumulative per capita emission savings 32 relative to baseline emissions for the period 2011–2050, and assume immediate adoption of behavioural 33 changes (van de Ven et al. 2018). Cities can support voluntary shift to walking, cycling, and transit 34 instead of car use through changes to urban form, such as TOD (Kamruzzaman et al. 2015), increased 35 density of form with co-location of activities (Ma et al. 2015; Ding et al. 2017; Duranton and Turner 36 2018; Masoumi 2019), and greater intersection density and street integration (Koohsari et al. 2016). 37 Mechanisms such as providing financial incentives or disincentives for car use can also be effective in 38 reducing emissions (Wynes et al. 2018) (see Section 8.4.2). 39 Adopting energy efficient practices in buildings could decrease global building energy demand in 2050 40 by 33–44% compared to a business-as-usual scenario (Levesque et al. 2019). Reductions in home 41 energy use can be achieved by reducing floor area (0.5–3.0%), utilising more efficient appliances and 42 lighting (2.7–5.0%), optimising thermostat settings (8.3–11%), using efficient heating and cooling 43 technologies (6.7–10%), improving building insulation (2.9–4.0%), optimising clothes washing (5.0– 44 5.7%), and optimising dishwashing (1–1.1%) (Levesque et al. 2019). Building standards and mandates 45 could work towards making these options required or more readily available and accessible. Residential 46 appliance use, water heating, and thermostat settings can be influenced by feedback on energy use, 47 particularly when paired with real-time feedback and/or instructions on how to reduce energy use Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-71 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 (Kastner and Stern 2015; Stern et al. 2016; Wynes et al. 2018; Tiefenbeck et al. 2019). The energy- 2 saving potentials of changing occupant behaviour can range between 10% and 25% for residential 3 buildings, and between 5% and 30% for commercial buildings (Zhang et al. 2018). Households are 4 more likely to invest in energy-related home technologies if they believe it financially benefits (rather 5 than disadvantages) them, increases comfort, or will benefit the natural environment (Kastner and Stern 6 2015). Social influences and availability of funding for household energy measures also support 7 behaviour change (Kastner and Stern 2015). 8 9 8.4.5.1 Increasing locational and mobility options 10 Spatial planning, urban form, and infrastructure can be utilized to deliberately increase both locational 11 and mobility options for socio-behavioural change in support of urban mitigation. The mitigation 12 impacts of active travel can include a reduction of mobility-related lifecycle CO2 emissions by about 13 0.5 tonnes over a year when an average person cycles one trip per day more, and drives one trip per day 14 less, for 200 days a year (Brand et al. 2021). Urban areas that develop and implement effective 15/20- 15 minute city programs are very likely to reduce urban energy use and multiply emission reductions, 16 representing an important cascading effect. 17 Accessibility as a criterion widens the focus beyond work trips and VMTs, paying attention to a broader 18 set of destinations beyond workplaces, as well as walking and biking trips or active travel. It holds 19 promise for targeting and obtaining greater reductions in GHG emissions in household travel by 20 providing access through walking, biking, and public transit. Accessibility as a criterion for urban form 21 has been embedded in neighbourhood form models since at least the last century and in more recent 22 decades in the urban village concept of the New Urbanism (Duany and Plater-Zyberck 1991) and TODs 23 (Calthorpe 1993). However, accessibility did not gain much traction in urban planning and 24 transportation until the last decade. The experience of cities and metropolitan areas with the COVID- 25 19 pandemic has led to a further resurgence in interest and importance (Handy 2020; Hu et al. 2020), 26 and is becoming a criterion at the core of the concept of the 15/20-minute city (Moreno et al. 2021; 27 Pozoukidou and Chatziyiannaki 2021). Initially, neighbourhoods have been designed to provide quality, 28 reliable services within 15 or 20 minutes of active transport (i.e., walking or cycling), as well as a variety 29 of housing options and open space (Portland Bureau of Planning and Sustainability 2012; Pozoukidou 30 and Chatziyiannaki 2021; State Government of Victoria 2021). Community life circles strategy for 31 urban areas have also emphasized walking access and health (Weng et al. 2019; Wu et al. 2021). The 32 growing popularity of the 15/20-minute city movement has significant potential for reducing 33 VMT/VKT and associated GHG emissions. 34 35 8.4.5.2 Avoiding, minimizing, and recycling waste 36 The waste sector is a significant source of GHG emissions, particularly CH4 (Gonzalez-Valencia et al. 37 2016; Nisbet et al. 2019). Currently, the sector remains the largest contributor to urban emissions after 38 the energy sector, even in low-carbon cities (Lu and Li 2019). Since waste management systems are 39 usually under the control of municipal authorities, they are a prime target for city-level mitigation efforts 40 with co-benefits (EC 2015, 2020; Gharfalkar et al. 2015; Herrero and Vilella 2018; Zaman and Ahsan 41 2019). Despite general agreement on mitigation impacts, quantification remains challenging due to 42 differing assumptions for system boundaries and challenges related to measuring avoided waste (Zaman 43 and Lehmann 2013; Bernstad Saraiva Schott and Cánovas 2015; Matsuda et al. 2018). 44 The implementation of the waste hierarchy from waste prevention onward, as well as the effectiveness 45 of waste separation at source, involves socio-behavioural options in the context of urban infrastructure 46 (Sun et al. 2018a; Hunter et al. 2019). Managing and treating waste as close to the point of generation 47 as possible, including distributed waste treatment facilities, can minimize transport-related emissions, Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-72 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 congestion, and air pollution. Home composting and compact urban form can also reduce waste 2 transport emissions (Oliveira et al. 2017). Decentralized waste management can reinforce source- 3 separation behaviour since the resulting benefits can be more visible (Eisted et al. 2009; Hoornweg and 4 Bhada-Tata 2012; Linzner and Lange 2013). Public acceptance for waste management is greatest when 5 system costs for citizens are reduced, there is greater awareness of primary waste separation at source, 6 and there are positive behavioural spill-over across environmental policies (Milutinović et al. 2016; 7 Boyer and Ramaswami 2017; Díaz-Villavicencio et al. 2017; Slorach et al. 2020). In addition to the 8 choice of technology, the costs of waste management options depends on the awareness of system users 9 that can represent time-dependent costs (Khan et al. 2016; Chifari et al. 2017; Ranieri et al. 2018; Tomić 10 and Schneider 2020). Waste management systems and the inclusion of materials from multiple urban 11 sectors for alternative by-products can increase scalability (Eriksson et al. 2015; Boyer and Ramaswami 12 2017; D’Adamo et al. 2021). As a broader concept, circular economy approaches can contribute to 13 managing waste (see Box 12.2) with varying emissions impacts (see Section 5.3.4). 14 The generation and composition of waste varies considerably from region to region and city to city. So 15 do the levels of institutional management, infrastructure, and (informal) work in waste disposal 16 activities. Depending on context, policy priorities are directed towards reducing waste generation and 17 transforming waste to energy or other products in a circular economy (Diaz 2017; Ezeudu and Ezeudu 18 2019; Joshi et al. 2019; Calderón Márquez and Rutkowski 2020; Fatimah et al. 2020). Similarly, waste 19 generation, waste collection coverage, recycling, and composting rates, as well as the means of waste 20 disposal and treatment, differ widely, including the logistics of urban waste management systems. 21 Multiple factors influence waste generation, and regions with similar urbanization rates can generate 22 different levels of waste per capita (Kaza et al. 2018). 23 Under conventional practices, municipal solid waste is projected to increase by about 1.4 Gt between 24 2016 and 2050, reaching 3.4 Gt in 2050 (Kaza et al. 2018). Integrated policymaking can increase the 25 energy, material, and emissions benefits in the waste management sector (Hjalmarsson 2015; Fang et 26 al. 2017; Jiang et al. 2017). Organisational structure and program administration poses demands for 27 institutional capacity, governance, and cross-sectoral coordination for obtaining the maximum benefit 28 (Hjalmarsson 2015; Kalmykova et al. 2016; Conke 2018; Marino et al. 2018; Yang et al. 2018). 29 The informal sector plays a critical role in waste management, particularly but not exclusively in 30 developing countries (Linzner and Lange 2013; Dias 2016). Sharing of costs and benefits, and 31 transforming informality of waste recycling activities into programs, can support distributional effects 32 (Conke 2018; Grové et al. 2018). Balancing centralized and decentralized waste management options 33 along low-carbon objectives can address potential challenges in transforming informality (de Bercegol 34 and Gowda 2019). Overall, the positive impacts of waste management on employment and economic 35 growth can be increased when informality is transformed to stimulate employment opportunities for 36 value-added products with an estimated 45 million jobs in the waste management sector by 2030 37 (Alzate-Arias et al. 2018; Coalition for Urban Transitions 2020; Soukiazis and Proença 2020). 38 39 8.4.6 Urban-rural linkages 40 Urban-rural linkages, especially through waste, food, and water, are prominent elements of the urban 41 system, given that cities are open systems that depend on their hinterlands for imports and exports 42 (Pichler et al. 2017), and include resources, products for industrial production or final use (see Section 43 8.1.6). As supply chains are becoming increasingly global in nature, so are the resource flows with the 44 hinterlands of cities. In addition to measures within the jurisdictional boundaries of cities, cities can 45 influence large upstream emissions through their supply chains, as well as through activities that rely 46 on resources outside city limits. The dual strategy of implementing local actions and taking 47 responsibility for the entire supply chains of imported and exported goods can reduce GHG emissions 48 outside of a city’s administrative boundaries (see Figure 8.15). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-73 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Waste prevention, minimisation, and management provides the potential of alleviating resource usage 2 and upstream emissions from urban settlements (Swilling et al. 2018; Chen et al. 2020a; Harris et al. 3 2020). Integrated waste management and zero-waste targets can allow urban areas to maximize the 4 mitigation potential while reducing pressures on land use and the environment. This mitigation option 5 reduces emissions due to (1) avoided emissions upstream in the supply chain of materials based on 6 measures for recycling and the reuse of materials, (2) avoided emissions due to land use changes as well 7 as emissions that are released into the atmosphere from waste disposal, and (3) avoided primary energy 8 (see Glossary) spending and emissions. Socio-behavioural change that reduces waste generation 9 combined with technology and infrastructure according to the waste hierarchy can be especially 10 effective. The mitigation potential of waste-to-energy depends on the technological choices that are 11 undertaken (e.g., anaerobic digestion of the organic fraction), the emissions factor of the energy mix 12 that it replaces, and its broader role within integrated municipal solid management practices (Eriksson 13 et al. 2015; Potdar et al. 2016; Yu and Zhang 2016; Soares and Martins 2017; Alzate-Arias et al. 2018; 14 Islam 2018). The climate mitigation potential of anaerobic digestion plants can increase when power, 15 heat and/or cold is co-produced (Thanopoulos et al. 2020). 16 Urban food systems, as well as city-regional production and distribution of food, factors into supply 17 chains. Reducing food demand from urban hinterlands can have a positive impact on energy and water 18 demand for food production (Eigenbrod and Gruda 2015) (see ‘food system’ in Glossary). Managing 19 food waste in urban areas through recycling or reduction of food waste at source of consumption would 20 require behavioural change (Gu et al. 2019). Urban governments could also support shifts towards more 21 climate-friendly diets, including through procurement policies. These strategies have created economic 22 opportunities or have enhanced food security while reducing the emissions that are associated with 23 waste and the transportation of food. Strategies for managing food demand in urban areas would depend 24 on the integration of food systems in urban planning. 25 Urban and peri-urban agriculture and forestry is pursued by both developing and some developed 26 country cities. There is increasing evidence for economically feasible, socially acceptable, and 27 environmentally supportive urban and peri-urban agricultural enterprises although these differ between 28 cities (Brown 2015; Eigenbrod and Gruda 2015; Blay-Palmer et al. 2019; De la Sota et al. 2019). The 29 pathways include integrated crop-livestock systems, urban agroforestry systems, aquaculture-livestock- 30 crop systems, and crop systems (Lwasa et al. 2015), while the mitigation potential of urban and peri- 31 urban agriculture has medium agreement and low evidence. Strategies for urban food production in 32 cities have also relied on recycling nutrients from urban waste and utilisation of harvested rainwater or 33 wastewater. 34 Systems for water reallocation between rural areas and urban areas will require change by leveraging 35 technological innovations for water capture, water purification, and reducing water wastage either by 36 plugging leakages or changing behaviour in regard to water use (Eigenbrod and Gruda 2015; Prior et 37 al. 2018). Reducing energy use for urban water systems involves reducing energy requirements for 38 water supply, purification, distribution, and drainage (Ahmad et al. 2020). Various levels of rainwater 39 harvesting in urban settings for supplying end-use water demands or supporting urban food production 40 can reduce municipal water demands, including by up to 20% or more in Cape Town (Fisher-Jeffes et 41 al. 2017). 42 43 8.4.7 Cross-sectoral integration 44 There are two broad categories of urban mitigation strategies. One is from the perspective of key sectors, 45 including clean energy, sustainable transport, and construction (Rocha et al. 2017; Álvarez Fernández 46 2018; Magueta et al. 2018; Seo et al. 2018; Waheed et al. 2018); the coupling of these sectors can be 47 enabled through electrification (see Section 8.4.3.1). The other looks at the needs for emissions through 48 a more systematic or fundamental understanding of urban design, urban form, and urban spatial Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-74 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 planning (Wang et al. 2017; Privitera et al. 2018), and proposes synergistic scenarios for their 2 integration for carbon neutrality (Ravetz et al. 2020). 3 Single-sector analysis in low-carbon urban planning examines solutions in supply, demand, operations, 4 and assets management either from technological efficiency or from a system approach. For example, 5 the deployment of renewable energy technologies for urban mitigation can be evaluated in detail and 6 the transition to zero-carbon energy in energy systems and EVs in the transport sector can bring about 7 a broad picture for harvesting substantial low-carbon potentials through urban planning (Álvarez 8 Fernández 2018; Tarigan and Sagala 2018) (high agreement, robust evidence). 9 The effect of urban carbon lock-in on land use, energy demand, and emissions vary depending on 10 national circumstances (Wang et al. 2017; Pan 2020). Systematic consideration of urban spatial 11 planning and urban forms, such as polycentric urban regions and rational urban population density, is 12 essential not only for liveability but also for achieving net zero GHG emissions as it aims to shorten 13 commuting distances and is able to make use of NBS for energy and resilience (high agreement, medium 14 evidence). However, crucial knowledge gaps remain in this field. There is a shortage of consistent and 15 comparable GHG emissions data at the city level and a lack of in-depth understanding of how urban 16 renewal and design can contribute to carbon neutrality (Mi et al. 2019). 17 An assessment of opportunities suggests that strategies for material efficiency that cross-cut sectors will 18 have greater impact than those that focus one dimensionally on a single sector (UNEP and IRP 2020). 19 In the urban context, this implies using less material by the design of physical infrastructure based on 20 light-weighting and down-sizing, material substitution, prolonged use, as well as enhanced recycling, 21 recovery, remanufacturing, and reuse of materials and related components. For example, light-weight 22 design in residential buildings and passenger vehicles can enable about 20% reductions in lifecycle 23 material-related GHG emissions (UNEP and IRP 2020). 24 The context of urban areas as the nexus of both sectors (i.e., energy, and urban form and planning) 25 underlines the role of urban planning and policies in contributing to reductions in material-related GHG 26 emissions while enabling housing and mobility services for the benefit of inhabitants. In addition, 27 combining resource efficiency measures with strategic densification can increase the GHG reduction 28 potential and lower resource impacts. While resource efficiency measures are estimated to reduce GHG 29 emissions, land use, water consumption, and metal use impacts from a lifecycle assessment perspective 30 by 24–47% over a baseline, combining resource efficiency with strategic densification can increase this 31 range to about 36–54% over the baseline for a sample of 84 urban settlements worldwide (Swilling et 32 al. 2018). 33 Evidence from a systematic scoping of urban solutions further indicates that the GHG abatement 34 potential of integrating measures across urban sectors is greater than the net sum of individual 35 interventions due to the potential of realizing synergies when realized in tandem, such as urban energy 36 infrastructure and renewable energy (Sethi et al. 2020). Similarly, system-wide interventions, such as 37 sustainable urban form, are important for increasing the GHG abatement potential of interventions 38 based on individual sectoral projects (Sethi et al. 2020). Overall, the pursuit of inter-linkages among 39 urban interventions are important for accelerating GHG reductions in urban areas (Sethi et al. 2020); 40 this is also important for reducing reliance on carbon capture and storage technologies (CCS) at the 41 global scale (Figures 8.15 and 8.21). 42 Currently, cross-sectoral integration is one of the main thematic areas of climate policy strategies among 43 the actions that are adopted by signatories to an urban climate and energy network (Hsu et al. 2020c). 44 Although not as prevalent as those for efficiency, municipal administration, and urban planning 45 measures (Hsu et al. 2020c), strategies that are cross-cutting in nature across sectors can provide 46 important emission saving opportunities for accelerating the pace of climate mitigation in urban areas. 47 Cross-sectoral integration also involves mobilizing urban actors to increase innovation in energy Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-75 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 services and markets beyond individual energy efficiency actions (Hsu et al. 2020c). Indeed, single- 2 sector versus cross-sector strategies for 637 cities from a developing country can enable an additional 3 15–36% contribution to the national climate mitigation reduction potential (Ramaswami et al. 2017a). 4 The strategies at the urban level involved those for energy cascading and exchange of materials that 5 connected waste, heat, and electricity strategies (Section 8.5 and Box 8.4). 6 The feasibility of upscaling multiple response options depends on the urban context as well as the stage 7 of urban development with certain stages providing additional opportunities over others (Dienst et al. 8 2015; Maier 2016; Affolderbach and Schulz 2017; Roldán-Fontana et al. 2017; Zhao et al. 2017a; Beygo 9 and Yüzer 2017; Lwasa 2017; Pacheco-Torres et al. 2017; Alhamwi et al. 2018; Kang and Cho 2018; 10 Lin et al. 2018; Collaço et al. 2019) (see Figures 8.19 and 8.21, and SM8.2). 11 12 8.5 Governance, institutions, and finance 13 Governance and other institutions act as core components to urban systems by facilitating and managing 14 linkages between different sectors, geographic regions, and stakeholders. This position renders 15 subnational governments and institutions key enablers of climate change mitigation (Seto et al. 2016, 16 2021; Hsu et al. 2018, 2020c; ; Vedeld et al. 2021) (see Section 8.4.1). Indeed, since AR5 more research 17 has emerged identifying theses actors as vehicles through which to accelerate local-to-global efforts to 18 decarbonize (IPCC 2018a; Hsu et al. 2020b; Salvia et al. 2021; Seto et al. 2021) (see also Chapter 13, 19 and Sections 4.2.3, 14.5.5, 15.6.5 and 16.4.7, and ‘subnational actors’ in Glossary). The current extent 20 (Section 8.3.3) and projected rise (Section 8.3.4.2) in the urban share of global emissions underscores 21 the transformative global impact of supporting urban climate governance and institutions (see also 22 Section 8.5.2). Further, the multisector approach to mitigation emphasized in this chapter (see Sections 23 8.4 and 8.6, and Figure 8.21) highlights the need for facilitation across sectors (Hsu et al. 2020c) (see 24 also Figure 8.19). 25 26 8.5.1 Multi-level governance 27 SR1.5 identified multilevel governance (see Glossary for full definition) as an enabling condition that 28 facilitates systemic transformation consistent with keeping global temperatures below 1.5°C (IPCC 29 2018a, 18–19). The involvement of governance at multiple levels is necessary to enable cities to plan 30 and implement emissions reductions targets (high confidence) (Seto et al. 2021) (see Boxes 8.3 and 31 8.4). Further, regional, national, and international climate goals are most impactful when local 32 governments are involved alongside higher levels, rendering urban areas key foci of climate governance 33 more broadly (high confidence) ( Fuhr et al. 2018; Kern 2019; Hsu et al. 2020b). 34 Since AR5, multilevel governance has grown in influence within the literature and has been defined as 35 a framework to understanding the complex interaction of the many players involved in GHG generation 36 and mitigation across geographic scales—the ‘vertical’ levels of governance from neighbourhoods to 37 the national and international levels, and those ‘horizontal’ networks of non-state and subnational actors 38 at various scales (Corfee-Morlot et al. 2009; Seto et al. 2014; Castán Broto 2017b; Fuhr et al. 2018; 39 Peng and Bai 2018; Kern 2019), and well as the complex linkages between them (Vedeld et al. 2021). 40 This more inclusive understanding of climate governance provides multiple pathways through which 41 urban actors can engage in climate policy to reduce emissions. 42 Multilevel, multi-player climate governance in practice 43 A multilevel, multi-player framework highlights both the opportunities and constraints on local 44 autonomy to engage in urban mitigation efforts (Castán Broto 2017b; Fuhr et al. 2018; Vedeld et al. 45 2021). When multiple actors—national, regional, and urban policymakers, as well as nonstate actors Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-76 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 and civil society—work together to exploit the opportunities, it leads to the most impactful mitigation 2 gains (Melica et al. 2018). This framework also highlights the multiple paths and potential synergies 3 available to actors who wish to pursue mitigation policies despite not having a full slate of enabling 4 conditions (Castán Broto 2017b; Keller 2017; Fuhr et al. 2018; Hsu et al. 2020b,a; Seto et al. 2021). 5 For example, Section 8.4.3. and 8.4.5 highlight how instigating the electrification of urban energy 6 systems requires a ‘layered’ approach to policy implementation across different levels of governance 7 (see Section 8.4.3.1 for specific policy mechanisms associated with electrification), with cities playing 8 a key role in setting standards, particularly through mechanisms like building codes (Hsu et al. 2020c; 9 Salvia et al. 2021), as well as through facilitation between stakeholders (e.g., consumers, government, 10 utilities, etc.) to advocate for zero-emissions targets (Linton et al. 2021; Seto et al. 2021). Local 11 governments can minimize trade-offs associated with electrification technologies by enabling circular 12 economy practices and opportunities (Pan et al. 2015; Gaustad et al. 2018; Sovacool et al. 2020). These 13 include public-private partnerships between consumers and producers, financial and institutional 14 support, and networking for stakeholders like entrepreneurs, so as to increase accessibility and 15 efficiency of recycling for consumers by providing a clear path from consumer waste back to the 16 producers (Pan et al. 2015; Prendeville et al. 2018; Fratini et al. 2019). Box 8.3 discusses the mitigation 17 benefits of coordination between local and central government in the context of Shanghai’s GHG 18 emissions reductions goals. 19 Still, there are constraints on urban autonomy that might limit urban mitigation influence. The capacity 20 of subnational governments to autonomously pursue emissions reductions on their own depends on 21 different political systems and other aspects of multilevel governance, such as innovation, legitimacy, 22 and institutional fit, as well as the resources, capacity, and knowledge available to subnational 23 technicians and other officials (Widerberg and Pattberg 2015; Valente de Macedo et al. 2016; Green 24 2017; Roger et al. 2017). Financing is considered one of the most crucial facets of urban climate change 25 mitigation. It is also considered one of the biggest barriers given the limited financial capacities of local 26 and regional governments (see Section 8.5.4 and 8.5.5). 27 When sufficient local autonomy is present, local policies have the ability to upscale to higher levels of 28 authority imparting influence at higher geographic scales. Established urban climate leaders with large 29 institutional capacity can influence small and mid-sized cities, or other urban areas with less 30 institutional capacity, to enact effective climate policies, by engaging with those cities through 31 transnational networks and by adopting a public presence of climate leadership (Chan et al. 2015; Kern 32 2019; Seto et al. 2021) (see Section 8.5.3). Increasingly, subnational actors are also influencing their 33 national and international governments through lobbying efforts that call on them to adopt more 34 ambitious climate goals and provide more support for subnational GHG mitigation effort. These 35 dynamics underscore the importance of relative local autonomy in urban GHG mitigation policy. They 36 also highlight the growing recognition of subnational authorities’ role in climate change mitigation by 37 national and international authorities. 38 The confluence of political will and policy action at the local level, and growing resources offered 39 through municipal and regional networks and agreements, have provided a platform for urban actors to 40 engage in international climate policy (see Section 8.5.3). This phenomena is recognized in the Paris 41 Agreement, which, for the first time in a multilateral climate treaty, referenced the crucial role 42 subnational and nonstate actors like local communities have in meeting the goals set forth in the 43 agreement (UNFCCC 2015). The Durban Platform for Enhanced Action (Widerberg and Pattberg 2015) 44 as well as UN Habitat’s NUA and the 2030 Development Agenda are other examples of the international 45 sphere elevating the local level to global influence (Fuhr et al. 2018). Another facet of local-to-global 46 action is the emergence of International Cooperative Initiatives (ICIs) (Widerberg and Pattberg 2015). 47 One such ICI, the City Hall Declaration, was signed alongside the Paris Agreement during the first 48 Climate Summit for Local Leaders. Signatories included hundreds of local government leaders, private Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-77 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 sector representatives, and NGOs, who pledged to enact the goals of the Paris Agreement through their 2 own spheres of influence (Cities for Climate 2015). A similar Summit has been held at each subsequent 3 UNFCCC COP. Like transnational climate networks, these platforms provide key opportunities to local 4 governments to further their own mitigation goals, engage in knowledge transfer with other cities and 5 regions, and shape policies at higher levels of authority (Cities for Climate 2015; Castán Broto 2017b). 6 7 START BOX 8.3 HERE 8 Box 8.3 Coordination of fragmented policymaking for low-carbon urban development: example 9 from Shanghai 10 As a growing megacity in the Global South, Shanghai represents the challenge of becoming low carbon 11 despite its economic growth and population size (Chen et al. 2017). Shanghai was designated as one of 12 the pilot low-carbon cities by the central government. The city utilized a coordination mechanism for 13 joining fragmented policymaking across the city’s economy, energy, and environment. The 14 coordination mechanism was supported by a direct fund that enabled implementation of cross-sector 15 policies beyond a single-sector focus across multiple institutions while increasing capacity for enabling 16 a low carbon transition for urban sustainability (Peng and Bai 2020). 17 Implementation and governance process 18 In Shanghai, coordination between the central and local governments had an instrumental role for 19 encouraging low-carbon policy experimentation. Using a nested governance framework, the central 20 government provided target setting and performance evaluation while the local government initiated 21 pilot projects for low-carbon development. The policy practices in Shanghai surpassed the top-down 22 targets and annual reporting of GHG emissions, including carbon labelling standards at the local level, 23 pilot programs for transitioning sub-urban areas, and the engagement of public utilities (Peng and Bai 24 2018). 25 Towards low-carbon urban development 26 New policy measures in Shanghai were built upon a series of related policies from earlier, ranging from 27 general energy saving measures to air pollution reduction. This provided a continuum of policy learning 28 for implementing low-carbon policy measures. An earlier policy was a green electricity scheme based 29 on the Jade Electricity Program while the need for greater public awareness was one aspect requiring 30 further attention in policy design (Baeumler et al. 2012), supporting policy-learning for policies later 31 on. The key point here is that low-carbon policies were built on and learned from earlier policies with 32 similar goals. 33 Outcomes and impacts of the policy mix 34 Trends during 1998 and 2015 indicate that energy intensity decreased from about 130 ton per million 35 RMB to about 45 ton per million RMB and carbon intensity decreased from about 0.35 Mt per billion 36 RMB to 0.10 Mt per billion RMB (Peng and Bai 2018). These impacts on energy and carbon intensities 37 represent progress while challenges remain. Among the challenges are the need for investment in low 38 carbon technology and increases in urban carbon sinks (Yang and Li 2018) while cross-sector 39 interaction and complexity are increasing. 40 END BOX 8.3 HERE 41 42 8.5.2 Mitigation potential of urban subnational actors 43 A significant research question that has been paid more attention in both the scientific and policy 44 communities is related to subnational actors’ role in and contribution to global climate mitigation. The Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-78 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2018 UN Environment Programme’s (UNEP) annual Emissions Gap report in 2018 included for the 2 first time a special chapter on subnational and non-state (i.e., businesses and private actors) and assessed 3 the landscape of studies aiming to quantify their contributions to global climate mitigation. Non-state 4 action on net zero GHG or CO2 emissions continues to be emphasized (UNEP 2021) (see Box 8.4). 5 There has been an increase in the number of studies aiming to quantify the overall aggregate mitigation 6 impact of subnational climate action globally. Estimates for the significance of their impact vary widely, 7 from up to 30 MtCO2-eq from 25 cities in the United States in 2030 (Roelfsema 2017), to a 2.3 GtCO2- 8 eq reduction in 2030 compared to a current policy scenario from over 10,239 cities participating in 9 GCoM (Hsu et al. 2018; GCoM 2019). For regional governments, the Under 2 Coalition, which includes 10 260 governments pledging goals to keep global temperature rise below 2°C, is estimated to reduce 11 emissions by 4.2 GtCO2-eq in 2030, compared to a current policy scenario (Kuramochi et al. 2020). 12 Some studies suggest that subnational mitigation actions (Roelfsema 2017; Kuramochi et al. 2020) are 13 in addition to national government mitigation efforts and can therefore reduce emissions even beyond 14 current national policies, helping to ‘bridge the gap’ between emissions trajectories consistent with 15 least-cost scenarios for limiting temperature rise below 1.5°C or 2°C (Blok et al. 2012). In some 16 countries, such as the United States, where national climate policies have been curtailed, the potential 17 for cities and regions’ emissions reduction pledges to make up the country’s Paris NDC is assessed to 18 be significant (Kuramochi et al. 2020). 19 These estimates are also often contingent on assumptions that subnational actors fulfil their pledges and 20 that these actions do not result in rollbacks in climate action (i.e., weakening of national climate 21 legislation) from other actors or rebound in emissions growth elsewhere, but data tracking or 22 quantifying the likelihood of their implementation remains rare (Chan et al. 2018; Hsu et al. 2019; Hale 23 et al. 2020; Kuramochi et al. 2020). Reporting networks may attract high-performing cities, suggesting 24 an artificially high level of cities interested in taking climate action or piloting solutions that may not 25 be effective elsewhere (van der Heijden 2018). These studies could also present a conservative view of 26 potential mitigation impact because they draw upon publicly reported mitigation actions and inventory 27 data, excluding subnational actors that may be taking actions but not reporting them (Kuramochi et al. 28 2020). The nuances of likelihood, and the drivers and obstacles of climate action across different 29 contexts is a key source of uncertainty around subnational actors’ mitigation impacts. 30 31 8.5.3 Urban climate networks and transnational governance 32 As of 2019, more than 10,000 cities and regions (Hsu et al. 2020a) have recorded participation in a 33 transnational or cooperative climate action network, which are voluntary membership networks of a 34 range of subnational governments such as cities, as well as regional governments like states and 35 provinces (Hsu et al. 2020a). These organizations, often operating across and between national 36 boundaries, entail some type of action on climate change. Among the most prominent climate networks 37 are GCoM, ICLEI, and C40, all of which ask its members to adopt emission reduction commitments, 38 develop climate action plans, and regularly report on emissions inventories. 39 Municipal and regional networks and agreements have provided a platform for urban actors to engage 40 in international climate policy (Fraundorfer 2017; Keller 2017; Fuhr et al. 2018; Hsu et al. 2018, 2020b; 41 Westman and Broto 2018; Kern 2019; Seto et al. 2021). Their impact comes through (1) providing 42 resources for cities and regions to reduce their GHG emissions and improve environmental quality more 43 generally, independent of national policy; (2) encouraging knowledge transfer between member cities 44 and regions; and (3) as platforms of national and international policy influence (Castán Broto 2017b; 45 Fuhr et al. 2018). 46 Subnational governments that participate in transnational climate networks, however, are primarily 47 located in developed countries, particularly Europe and North America, with far less representation in Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-79 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 developing countries. In one of the largest studies of subnational climate mitigation action, more than 2 93% of just over 6,000 quantifiable subnational climate commitments come from cities and regions 3 based in the European Union (NewClimate Institute et al. 2019). Such gaps in geographic coverage 4 have been attributed to factors such as the dominating role of Global North actors in the convening and 5 diffusion of ‘best practices’ related to climate action (Bouteligier 2013), or the more limited autonomy 6 or ability of subnational or non-state actors in Global South countries to define boundaries and interests 7 separately from national governments, particularly those that exercise top-down decision-making or 8 have vertically-integrated governance structures (Bulkeley et al. 2012). Many of the participating 9 subnational actors from under-represented regions are large mega-cities (of 10 million people or more) 10 that will play a pivotal role in shaping emissions trajectories (Data Driven Yale et al. 2018; NewClimate 11 Institute et al. 2019). 12 While these networks have proven to be an important resource in local-level mitigation, their long-term 13 effects and impact at larger scales is less certain (Valente de Macedo et al. 2016; Fuhr et al. 2018). Their 14 influence is most effective when multiple levels of governance are aligned in mitigation policy. 15 Nevertheless, these groups have become essential resources to cities and regions with limited 16 institutional capacity and support (Kern 2019) (for more on transnational climate networks and 17 transnational governance more broadly, see Sections 13.5 and 14.5). 18 19 START BOX 8.4 HERE 20 Box 8.4 Net zero targets and urban settlements 21 Around the world, net zero emissions targets, whether economy-wide or targeting a specific sector (e.g., 22 transport, buildings) or emissions scope (e.g., direct scope 1, or both scope 1 and 2), have been adopted 23 by at least 826 cities and 103 regions that represent 11% of the global population with 846 million 24 people across 6 continents (NewClimate Institute and Data-Driven EnviroLab 2020). In some countries, 25 the share of such cities and regions have reached a critical mass by representing more than 70% of their 26 total populations with or without net zero emissions targets at the national level. 27 In some cases, the scope of these targets extends beyond net zero emissions from any given sector based 28 on direct emissions (see Glossary) and encompass downstream emissions from a consumption-based 29 perspective with 195 targets that are found to represent economy-wide targets. These commitments 30 range from ‘carbon neutrality’ (see Glossary) or net zero GHG emissions targets, which entail near 31 elimination of city’s own direct or electricity-based emissions but could involve some type of carbon 32 offsetting, to more stringent net zero emissions goals (Data-Driven EnviroLab and NewClimate 33 Institute 2020) (for related definitions, such as ‘carbon neutral,’ ‘net zero CO2 emissions,’ ‘net zero 34 GHG emissions’ and ‘offset,’ see Glossary). 35 Currently, 43% of the urban areas with net zero emissions targets have also put into place related action 36 plans while about 24% have integrated net zero emissions targets into formal policies and legislation 37 (Data-Driven EnviroLab and NewClimate Institute 2020). Moreover, thousands of urban areas have 38 adopted renewable energy-specific targets for power, heating/cooling and transport and about 600 cities 39 are pursuing 100% renewable energy targets (REN21 2019, 2021) with some cities already achieving 40 it. 41 The extent of realising and implementing these targets with the collective contribution of urban areas 42 to net zero emissions scenarios with sufficient timing and pace of emission reductions will require a 43 coordinated integration of sectors, strategies, and innovations (Swilling et al. 2018; Hsu et al. 2020c; 44 Sethi et al. 2020; UNEP and IRP 2020). In turn, the transformation of urban systems can significantly 45 impact net zero emissions trajectories within mitigation pathways. Institutional capacity, governance, Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-80 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 financing, and cross-sector coordination is crucial for enabling and accelerating urban actions for rapid 2 decarbonization. 3 END BOX 8.4 HERE 4 5 8.5.4 Financing urban mitigation 6 Meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement will require fundamental changes that will be most successful 7 when cities work together with provincial and national leadership and legislation, third-sector 8 leadership, transformative action, and supportive financing. Urban governments often obtain their 9 powers from provincial, state and/or national governments, and are subjected to laws and regulations to 10 regulate development and implement infrastructure. In addition, the sources of revenue are often set at 11 these levels so that many urban governments rely on state/provincial and national government funds for 12 improving infrastructure, especially transit infrastructure. The increasing financialisation of urban 13 infrastructures is another factor that can make it more difficult for local governments to determine 14 infrastructure choices (O’Brien et al. 2019). Urban transit system operations, in particular, are heavily 15 subsidized in many countries, both locally and by higher levels of government. As a result of this 16 interplay of policy and legal powers among various levels of government, the lock-in nature of urban 17 infrastructures and built environments will require multi-level governance response to ensure meeting 18 decarbonization targets. The reliance on state and national policy and/or funding can accelerate or 19 impede the decarbonization of urban environments (McCarney et al. 2011; McCarney 2019). 20 The world’s infrastructure spending is expected to more than double from 2015 to 2030 under a low- 21 carbon and climate resilient scenario. More than 70% of the infrastructure will concentrate in urban 22 areas by requiring USD 4.5-5.4 trillion per year (CCFLA 2015) . However, today’s climate finance 23 flows for cities or ‘urban climate finance,’ estimated at USD 384 billion annually on average in 2017/18, 24 are insufficient to meet the USD 4.5 trillion to USD 5.4 trillion-dollar annual investment needs for urban 25 mitigation actions across key sectors (CCFLA 2015; CPI and World Bank 2021; Negreiros et al. 2021). 26 Low-carbon urban form (e.g., compact, high-density, and mixed-use characteristics) is likely to 27 economize spending in infrastructure along with the application of new technologies and renewable 28 energies that would be able to recover the increasing upfront cost of low-carbon infrastructure from 29 more efficient operating and energy savings (Global Commission on the Economy and Climate 2014; 30 Foxon et al. 2015; Bhattacharya et al. 2016; Floater et al. 2017; Colenbrander et al. 2018b) (medium 31 evidence, high agreement). 32 Governments have traditionally financed a large proportion of infrastructure investment. When budget 33 powers remain largely centralized, intergovernmental transfers will be needed to fund low-carbon 34 infrastructure in cities. During the COVID-19 pandemic, cities tend to rely more on intergovernmental 35 transfers in the form of stimulus packages for economic recovery. Nonetheless, the risk of high carbon 36 lock-ins is likely to increase in rapidly growing cities if long-term urban mitigation strategies are not 37 incorporated into short-term economic recovery actions (Granoff et al. 2016; Floater et al. 2017; 38 Colenbrander et al. 2018b; CPI and World Bank 2021; Negreiros et al. 2021). Indeed, large and complex 39 infrastructure projects for urban mitigation are often beyond the capacity of both national government 40 and local municipality budgets. Additionally, the COVID-19 pandemic necessitates large government 41 expenditures for public health programs and decimates municipal revenue sources for urban 42 infrastructure projects in cities. 43 To meet the multi-trillion-dollar annual investment needs in urban areas, cities in partnership with 44 international institutions, national governments, and local stakeholders increasingly play a pivotal role 45 in mobilizing global climate finance resources for a range of low-carbon infrastructure projects and 46 related urban land use and spatial planning programs across key sectors (high confidence). In particular, Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-81 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 national governments are expected to set up enabling conditions for the mobilization of urban climate 2 finance resource by articulating various goals and strategies, improving pricing, regulation and 3 standards, and developing investment vehicles and risk sharing instruments (Qureshi 2015; Bielenberg 4 et al. 2016; Granoff et al. 2016; Floater et al. 2017; Sudmant et al. 2017; Colenbrander et al. 2018b; 5 Zhan and de Jong 2018; Hadfield and Cook 2019; CPI and World Bank 2021; Negreiros et al. 2021). 6 Indeed, 75% of the global climate finance for both mitigation and adaptation in 2017 and 2018 took the 7 form of commercial financing (e.g., balance sheets, commercial-rate loans, and equity), while 25% 8 came from the form of concessionary financing (e.g., grants, below-market-rate loans, etc.). However, 9 cities in developing countries are facing difficulty making use of commercial financing and gaining 10 access to international credit markets. Cities without international creditworthiness currently rely on 11 local sources, including domestic commercial banks (Global Commission on the Economy and Climate 12 2014; CCFLA 2015; Floater et al. 2017; Buchner et al. 2019) (medium evidence, high agreement). 13 Cities with creditworthiness have rapidly become issuers of ‘green bonds’ eligible for renewable 14 energy, energy efficiency, low-carbon transport, sustainable water, waste, and pollution, and other 15 various climate mitigation projects across the global regions since 2013. The world’s green bond market 16 reached USD 1 trillion in cumulative issuance, with issuance of USD 280 billion in 2020, during the 17 COVID-19 pandemic. While green municipal bonds still account for a small share of the whole green 18 bond market in 2020, scale is predicted to grow further in emerging markets over the coming years. 19 Green municipal bonds have great potential for cities to expand and diversify their investor base. In 20 addition, the process of issuing green municipal bonds is expected to promote cross-sector cooperation 21 within a city by bringing together various agencies responsible for finance, climate change, 22 infrastructure, planning and design, and operation. Indeed, the demand for green bonds presently 23 outstrips supply as being constantly over-subscripted (Global Commission on the Economy and Climate 24 2014; Saha and D’Almeida 2017; Amundi and IFC 2021) (robust evidence, high agreement). 25 On the other hand, cities without creditworthiness face difficulty making use of commercial financing 26 and getting access to international credit markets (Global Commission on the Economy and Climate 27 2014; CCFLA 2015; Floater et al. 2017). The lack of creditworthiness is one of the main problems 28 preventing cities from issuing green municipal bonds in developing countries. As a prerequisite for the 29 application of municipal debt-financing, it is an essential condition for cities to ensure sufficient own 30 revenues from low-carbon urbanization, or the default risk becomes too high for potential investors. 31 Indeed, many cities in developed countries and emerging economies have already accumulated 32 substantial amounts of debts through bond insurances, and on-going debt payments prevent new 33 investments in low-carbon infrastructure projects. 34 National governments and multilateral development banks might be able to provide support for debt 35 financing by developing municipal creditworthiness programs and issuing sovereign bonds or providing 36 national guarantees for investors (Floater et al. 2017). Another problem with green municipal bonds is 37 the lack of aggregation mechanisms to support various small-scale projects in cities. Asset-backed 38 securities are likely to reduce the default risk for investors through portfolio diversification and create 39 robust pipelines for a bundle of smalls-scale projects (Granoff et al. 2016; Floater et al. 2017; Saha and 40 D’Almeida 2017). 41 In principle, the upfront capital costs of various low-carbon infrastructure projects, including the costs 42 of urban climate finance (dividend and interest payments), are eventually transferred to users and other 43 stakeholders in the forms of taxes, charges, fees, and other revenue sources. Nevertheless, small cities 44 in developing countries are likely to have a small revenue base, most of which is committed to recurring 45 operating costs, associated with weak revenue collection and management systems. In recent years, 46 there has been scope to apply not only user-based but also land-based funding instruments for the 47 recovery of upfront capital costs (Braun and Hazelroth 2015; Kościelniak and Górka 2016; Floater et 48 al. 2017; Colenbrander et al. 2018b; Zhan and de Jong 2018; Zhan et al. 2018a). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-82 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 In practice, however, the application of land-based or ‘land value capture’ funding requires cities to 2 arrange various instruments, including property (both land and building taxes), betterment levies/special 3 assessments, impact fees (exactions), tax increment financing, land readjustment/land pooling, sales of 4 public land/development rights, recurring lease payments, and transfer taxes/stamp duties, across 5 sectors in different urban contexts (Suzuki et al. 2015; Chapman 2017; Walters and Gaunter 2017; 6 Berrisford et al. 2018). Land value capture is expected not only for cities to generate additional revenue 7 streams but also to prevent low-density urban expansion around city-fringe locations. Inversely, land 8 value capture is supposed to perform well when accompanied by low-carbon urban form and private 9 real estate investments along with the application of green building technologies (Suzuki et al. 2015; 10 Floater et al. 2017; Colenbrander et al. 2018b) (robust evidence, high agreement). 11 For the implementation of land-based funding, property rights are essential. However, weak urban-rural 12 governance leads to corruption in land occupancy and administration, especially in developing countries 13 with no land information system or less reliable paper-based land records under a centralized 14 registration system. The lack of adequate property rights seriously discourages low-carbon 15 infrastructure and real estate investments in growing cities. 16 The emerging application of blockchain technology for land registry and real estate investment is 17 expected to change the governance framework, administrative feasibility, allocative efficiency, public 18 accountability, and political acceptability of land-based funding in cities across developed countries, 19 emerging economies, and developing countries (Graglia and Mellon 2018; Kshetri and Voas 2018). 20 Particularly, the concept of a transparent, decentralized public ledger is adapted to facilitate value-added 21 property transactions on a P2P basis without centralized intermediate parties and produce land-based 22 funding opportunities for low-carbon infrastructure and real estate development district-wide and city- 23 wide in unconventional ways (Veuger 2017; Nasarre-Aznar 2018). 24 The consolidation of local transaction records into national or supranational registries is likely to 25 support large-scale land formalisation, but most pilot programs are not yet at the scale (Graglia and 26 Mellon 2018). Moreover, the potential application of blockchain for land-based funding instruments is 27 possibly associated with urban form attributes, such as density, compactness, and land use mixture, to 28 disincentivize urban expansion and emissions growth around city-fringe locations (medium confidence) 29 (Allam and Jones 2019). 30 31 8.5.5 Barriers and enablers for implementation 32 Irrespective of geography or development level, many cities face similar climate governance challenges 33 such as lacking institutional, financial, and technical capacities (Gouldson et al. 2015; Hickmann and 34 Stehle 2017; Sharifi et al. 2017; Fuhr et al. 2018). Large-scale system transformations are also deeply 35 influenced by factors outside governance and institutions such as private interests and power dynamics 36 (Jaglin 2014; Tyfield 2014). In some cases, these private interests are tied up with international flows 37 of capital. At the local level, a lack of empowerment, high upfront costs, inadequate and uncertain 38 funding for mitigation, diverse and conflicting policy objectives, multiple agencies and actors with 39 diverse interests, high levels of informality, and a siloed approach to climate action are constraining 40 factors to mainstreaming climate action (Beermann et al. 2016; Gouldson et al. 2016; Pathak and 41 Mahadevia 2018; Khosla and Bhardwaj 2019). 42 Yet urban mitigation options that can be implemented to transform urban systems involve the interplay 43 of multiple enablers and barriers. Based on a framework for assessing feasibility from a multi- 44 dimensional perspective, feasibility is malleable and various enablers can be brought into play to 45 increase the implementation of mitigation options. The scope of this assessment enables an approach 46 for considering multiple aspects that have an impact on feasibility as a tool for policy support (Singh et 47 al. 2020). In Figure 8.19, the assessment framework that is based on geophysical, environmental- Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-83 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 ecological, technological, economic, socio-cultural, and institutional dimensions is applied to identify 2 the enablers and/or barriers in implementing mitigation options in urban systems. The feasibility of 3 options may differ across context, time, and scale (see Supplementary Material 8.2). The line of sight 4 upon which the assessment is based includes urban case studies (Lamb et al. 2019) and assessments of 5 land use and spatial planning in IPCC SR1.5 (IPCC 2018a). 6 Across the enablers and barriers of different mitigation options, urban land use and spatial planning for 7 increasing co-located densities in urban areas has positive impacts in multiple indicators, particularly 8 reducing land use and preserving carbon sinks when the growth in urban extent is reduced and avoided, 9 which if brought into interplay in decision-making, can support the enablers for its implementation. 10 Improvements in air quality are possible when higher urban densities are combined with modes of active 11 transport, electrified mobility as well as urban green and blue infrastructure (see Sections 8.3.4, 8.4 and 12 8.6). The demands on geophysical resources, including materials for urban development, will depend 13 on whether additional strategies are in place with largely negative impacts under conventional practices. 14 The technological scalability of multiple urban mitigation options is favourable while varying according 15 to the level of existing urban development and scale of implementation (see Tables SM8.3 - SM8.4 in 16 Supplementary Material 8.2). 17 Similarly, multiple mitigation options have positive impacts on employment and economic growth, 18 especially when urban densities enable productivity. Possible distributional effects, including 19 availability of affordable accommodation and access to greenspace, are best addressed when urban 20 policy packages combine more than one policy objective. Such an approach can provide greater support 21 to urban mitigation efforts with progress towards shifting urban development to sustainability. The 22 electrification of the urban energy system involves multiple enablers that support the feasibility of this 23 mitigation option, including positive impacts on health and well-being. In addition, increases in urban 24 densities can support the planning of district heating and cooling networks that can decarbonize the 25 built environment at scale with technology readiness levels increasing for lower temperature supply 26 options. Preventing, minimizing, and managing waste as an urban mitigation option can be enabled 27 when informality in the sector is transformed to secure employment effects and value addition based on 28 the more circular use of resources (see Tables SM8.3 and SM8.4 in Supplementary Material 8.2, and 29 Sections 8.4.3 and 8.4.5). 30 As a combined evaluation, integrating multiple mitigation options in urban systems involves the greatest 31 requirement for strengthening institutional capacity and governance through cross-sectoral coordination 32 (see Section 8.4 and 8.6, and Figure 8.21). Notably, integrated action requires significant effort to 33 coordinate sectors and strategies across urban growth typologies (see Section 8.6). Institutional 34 capacity, if not strengthened to a suitable level to handle this process—especially to break out of carbon 35 lock-in—can fall short of the efforts this entails. These conditions can pose barriers for realizing cross- 36 sectoral coordination while the formation of partnerships and stakeholder engagement take place as 37 important enablers. Overcoming institutional challenges for cross-sectoral coordination can support 38 realizing synergies among the benefits that each mitigation option can offer within and across urban 39 systems, including for the SDGs. These include those that can be involved in co-located and walkable 40 urban form together with decarbonizing and electrifying the urban energy system as well as urban green 41 and blue infrastructure, providing the basis for more liveable, resource efficient and compact urban 42 development with benefits for urban inhabitants (see Section 8.2). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-84 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 3 Figure 8.19 Feasibility assessment based on the enablers and barriers of implementing mitigation options for urban systems across multiple dimensions. 4 The figure summarizes the extent to which different factors would enable or inhibit the deployment of mitigation options in urban systems. These factors are 5 assessed systematically based on 18 indicators in 6 dimensions (geophysical, environmental-ecological, technological, economic, socio-cultural, and institutional 6 dimensions). Blue bars indicate the extent to which the indicator enables the implementation of the option (E) and orange bars indicate the extent to which an 7 indicator is a barrier (B) to the deployment of the option, relative to the maximum possible barriers and enablers assessed. The shading indicates the level of 8 confidence, with darker shading signifying higher levels of confidence. Supplementary Material SM8.2 provides an overview of the extent to which the feasibility of 9 options may differ across context, time and scale of implementation (Table SM8.3) and includes line of sight upon which the assessment is based (Table SM8.4). The 10 line of sight builds upon urban case studies in (Lamb et al. 2019) and assessments for land use and urban planning (IPCC 2018a) involving 414 references. The 11 assessment method is further explained in Annex II, Section 11. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-85 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 8.6 A roadmap for integrating mitigation strategies for different 2 urbanization typologies 3 The most effective and appropriate packages of mitigation strategies will vary depending on several 4 dimensions of a city. This section brings together the urban mitigation options described in Section 8.4 5 and assesses the range of mitigation potentials for different types of cities. There is consensus in the 6 literature that mitigation strategies are most effective when multiple interventions are coupled together. 7 Urban-scale interventions that implement multiple strategies concurrently through policy packages are 8 more effective and have greater emissions savings than when single interventions are implemented 9 separately. This is because a citywide strategy can have cascading effects across sectors, that have 10 multiplicative effects on GHG emissions reduction within and outside a city’s administrative 11 boundaries. Therefore, city-scale strategies can reduce more emissions than the net sum of individual 12 interventions, particularly if multiple scales of governance are included (see Sections 8.4 and 8.5). 13 Furthermore, cities have the ability to implement policy packages across sectors using an urban systems 14 approach, such as through planning, particularly those that affect key infrastructures (see Figures 8.15, 15 8.17 and 8.22). 16 The way that cities are laid out and built will shape the entry points for realising systemic transformation 17 across urban form and infrastructure, energy systems, and supply chains. Section 8.3.1 discusses the 18 ongoing trend of rapid urbanization—and how it varies through different forms of urban development 19 or ‘typologies’ (see Figure 8.6). Below, Figure 8.20 distils the typologies of urban growth across three 20 categories: emerging, rapidly growing, and established. Urban growth is relatively stabilized in 21 established urban areas with mature urban form while newly taking shape in emerging urban areas. In 22 contrast, rapidly growing urban areas experience pronounced changes in outward and/or upward 23 growth. These typologies are not mutually exclusive, and can co-exist within an urban system; cities 24 typically encompass a spectrum of development, with multiple types of urban form and various 25 typologies (Mahtta et al. 2019). 26 Taken together, urban form (Figure 8.16) and growth typology (Figure 8.20) can act as a roadmap for 27 cities or sub-city communities looking to identify their urban context and, by extension, the mitigation 28 opportunities with the greatest potential to reduction GHG emissions. Specifically, this considers 29 whether a city is established with existing and managed infrastructure, rapidly growing with new and 30 actively developing infrastructure, or emerging with large amounts of infrastructure build-up. The long 31 lifespan of urban infrastructure locks in behaviour and committed emissions. Therefore, the sequencing 32 of mitigation strategies is important for determining emissions savings in the short- and long-term. 33 Hence, different types of cities will have different mitigation pathways, depending upon a city’s urban 34 form and state of that city’s urban development and infrastructure; the policy packages and 35 implementation plan that provide the highest mitigation potential for rapidly growing cities with new 36 infrastructures will differ from those for established cities with existing infrastructure. 37 Mitigation options that involve spatial planning, urban form, and infrastructure—particularly co-located 38 and mixed land use, as well as TOD—provide the greatest opportunities when urban areas are rapidly 39 growing or emerging (see Section 8.4.2). Established urban areas that are already compact and walkable 40 have captured mitigation benefits from these illustrative strategies to various extents. Conversely, 41 established urban areas that are dispersed and auto-centric have foregone these opportunities with the 42 exception of urban infill and densification that can be used to transform or continue to transform the 43 existing urban form. Figure 8.21 underscores that urban mitigation options and illustrative strategies 44 differ by urban growth typologies and urban form. Cities can identify their entry points for sequencing 45 mitigation strategies. 46 The emissions reduction potential of urban mitigation options further varies based on governance 47 contexts, institutional capacity, economic structure, as well as human and physical geography. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-86 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 According to the development level, for instance, urban form can remain mostly planned or unplanned, 2 taking place spontaneously, with persistent urban infrastructure gaps remaining (Lwasa et al. 2018; 3 Kareem et al. 2020). Measures for closing the urban infrastructure gap while addressing ‘leapfrogging’ 4 opportunities (see Glossary) for mitigation and providing co-benefits represent possibilities for shifting 5 development paths for sustainability (see Cross-Chapter Box 5 in Chapter 4). 6 7 Figure 8.20 Urban Growth Typologies 8 9 Urban growth typologies define the main patterns of urban development, synthesized from Mahtta et al. 10 (2019) and Lall et al. (2021) 11 12 Emerging urban areas are undergoing the build-up of new infrastructure. These are new urban areas 13 that are budding out. Rapidly growing urban areas are undergoing significant changes in either outward 14 and/or upward growth, accompanied by large-scale development of new urban infrastructure. 15 Established urban areas are relatively stable with mature urban form and existing urban infrastructures. 16 Each of these typologies represents different levels of economic development and state of urbanization. 17 Rapidly growing urban areas that are building up through vertical development are often those with 18 higher levels of economic development. Rapidly growing urban areas that are building outward through 19 horizontal expansion occurs at lower levels of economic development and are land intensive. Like with 20 urban form, different areas of a single city can undergo different growth typologies. Therefore a city will 21 be comprised of multiple urban growth typologies. 22 23 Source: Synthesized and adapted from Mahtta et al. (2019) and Lall et al. (2021) 24 25 Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-87 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 Figure 8.21 Priorities and potentials for packages of urban mitigation strategies across typologies of 3 urban growth (Figure 8.20) and urban form (Figure 8.16) 4 The horizontal axis represents urban growth typologies based on emerging, rapidly growing, and 5 established urban areas. The vertical axis shows the continuum of urban form, from compact and 6 walkable, to dispersed and auto-centric. Urban areas can first locate their relative positioning in this 7 space according to their predominant style of urban growth and urban form. The urban mitigation 8 options are bundled across four broad sectors of mitigation strategies: (1) spatial planning, urban form, 9 and infrastructure (blue); (2) electrification and net zero emissions resources (yellow); (3) urban green 10 and blue infrastructure (green); and (4) socio-behavioural aspects (purple). The concentric circles 11 indicate lower, medium, and higher mitigation potential considering the context of the urban area. For 12 each city type (circular graphic) the illustrative urban mitigation strategy that is considered to provide 13 the greatest cascading effects across mitigation opportunities is represented by a section that is larger 14 relative to others; those strategy sections outlined in black are ‘entry points’ for sequencing of strategies. 15 Within each of the larger strategy sections (i.e.., spatial planning, urban green and blue infrastructure, 16 etc.), the size of the sub-strategy sections are equal and do not suggest any priority or sequencing. The 17 relative sizes of the strategies and extent of mitigation potential are illustrative and based on the authors' 18 best understanding and assessment of the literature. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-88 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 2 8.6.1 Mitigation opportunities for established cities 3 Established cities will achieve the largest GHG emissions savings by replacing, repurposing, or 4 retrofitting the building stock, encouraging modal shift, electrifying the urban energy system, as well 5 as infilling and densifying urban areas. 6 Shifting pathways to low-carbon development for established cities with existing infrastructures and 7 locked-in behaviours and lifestyles is admittedly challenging. Urban infrastructures such as buildings, 8 roads, and pipelines often have long lifetimes that lock-in emissions, as well as institutional and 9 individual behaviour. Although the expected lifetime of buildings varies considerably by geography, 10 design, and materials, typical lifespans are at minimum 30 years to more than 100 years. 11 Cities where urban infrastructure has already been built have opportunities to increase energy efficiency 12 measures, prioritize compact and mixed-use neighbourhoods through urban regeneration, advance the 13 urban energy system through electrification, undertake cross-sector synergies, integrate urban green and 14 blue infrastructure, encourage behavioural and lifestyle change to reinforce climate mitigation, and put 15 into place a wide range of enabling conditions as necessary to guide and coordinate actions in the urban 16 system and its impacts in the global system. Retrofitting buildings with state of the art deep energy 17 retrofit measures could reduce emissions of the existing stock by about 30–60% (Creutzig et al. 2016a) 18 and in some cases up to 80% (Ürge-Vorsatz et al. 2020) (see Section 8.4.3). 19 Established cities that are compact and walkable are likely to have low per capita emissions, and thus 20 can keep emissions low by focusing on electrification of all urban energy services and using urban green 21 and blue infrastructure to sequester and store carbon while reducing urban heat stress. Illustrative 22 mitigation strategies with the highest mitigation potential are decarbonizing electricity and energy 23 carriers while electrifying mobility, heating, and cooling (see Table 8.3 and Figure 8.19). Within 24 integrated strategies, the importance of urban forests, street trees, and green space as well as green roofs, 25 walls, and retrofits, also have high mitigation potential (see Section 8.4.4 and Figure 8.18). 26 Established cities that are dispersed and auto-centric are likely to have higher per capita emissions and 27 thus can reduce emissions by focusing on creating modal shift and improving public transit systems in 28 order to reduce urban transport emissions, as well as focusing on infilling and densifying. Only then 29 can the urban form constraints on locational and mobility options be increased. Among mitigation 30 options based on spatial planning, urban form, and infrastructure, urban infill and densification has 31 priority. For these cities, the use of urban green and blue infrastructure will be essential to offset residual 32 emissions that cannot be reduced because their urban form is already established and difficult to change. 33 System-wide energy savings and emissions reductions for low-carbon urban development is widely 34 recognized to require both behavioural and structural changes (Zhang and Li 2017). Synergies between 35 social and ecological innovation can reinforce the sustainability of urban systems while decoupling 36 energy usage and economic growth (Hu et al. 2018; Ma et al. 2018). In addition, an integrated 37 sustainable development approach that enables cross-sector energy efficiency, sustainable transport, 38 renewable energy, and local development in urban neighbourhoods can address issues of energy poverty 39 (Pukšec et al. 2018). In this context, cross-sectoral, multi-scale, and public-private collaborative action 40 is crucial to steer societies and cities closer to low-carbon futures (Hölscher et al. 2019). Such action 41 includes those for guiding residential living area per capita, limiting private vehicle growth, expanding 42 public transport, improving the efficiency of urban infrastructure, enhancing urban carbon pools, and 43 minimizing waste through sustainable, ideally circular, waste management (Lin et al. 2018). Through a 44 coordinated approach, urban areas can be transformed into hubs for renewable and distributed energy, 45 sustainable mobility, as well as inclusivity and health (Newman et al. 2017; Newman 2020). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-89 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Urban design for existing urban areas include strategies for urban energy transitions for carbon 2 neutrality based on renewable energy, district heating for the city centre and suburbs, as well as green 3 and blue interfaces (Pulselli et al. 2021). Integrated modelling approaches for urban energy system 4 planning, including land-use and transport and flexible demand-side options, is increased when 5 municipal actors are also recognized as energy planners (Yazdanie and Orehounig 2021) (see Section 6 8.4.3). Enablers for action can include the co-design of infill residential development through an 7 inclusive and participatory process with citizen utilities and disruptive innovation that can support net 8 zero carbon power while contributing to 1.5°C pathways, the SDGs, and affordable housing 9 simultaneously (Wiktorowicz et al. 2018). Cross-sectoral strategies for established cities, including 10 those taking place among 120 urban areas, also involve opportunities for sustainable development 11 (Kılkış 2019, 2021b). 12 A shared understanding for urban transformation through a participatory approach can largely avoid 13 maladaptation and contribute to equity (Moglia et al. 2018). Transformative urban futures that are 14 radically different from the existing trajectories of urbanization, including in developing countries, can 15 remain within planetary boundaries while being inclusive of the urban poor (Friend et al. 2016). At the 16 urban policy level, an analysis of 12,000 measures in urban-level monitoring emissions inventories 17 based on the mode of governance further suggests that local authorities with lower population have 18 primarily relied on municipal self-governing while local authorities with higher population more 19 frequently adopted regulatory measures as well as financing and provision (Palermo et al. 2020b). 20 Policies that relate to education and enabling were uniformly adopted regardless of population size 21 (Palermo et al. 2020b). Multi-disciplinary teams, including urban planners, engineers, architects, and 22 environmental institutions, can support local decision-making capacities, including for increasing 23 energy efficiency and renewable energy considering building intensity and energy use (Mrówczyńska 24 et al. 2021) (see also Section 8.5). 25 8.6.2 Mitigation opportunities for rapidly growing cities 26 Rapidly growing cities with new and actively developing infrastructures can avoid higher future 27 emissions through using urban planning to co-locate jobs and housing, and achieve compact urban 28 form; leapfrogging to low-carbon technologies; electrifying all urban services, including 29 transportation, cooling, heating, cooking, recycling, water extraction, wastewater recycling, etc.; and 30 preserving and managing existing green and blue assets. 31 Rapidly growing cities have significant opportunities for integrating climate mitigation response 32 options in earlier stages of urban development, which can provide even greater opportunities for 33 avoiding carbon lock-in and shifting pathways towards net zero GHG emissions. In growing cities that 34 are expected to experience large increases in population, a significant share of urban development 35 remains to be planned and built. The ability to shift these investments towards low-carbon development 36 earlier in the process represents an important opportunity for contributing to net zero GHG emissions 37 at the global scale. In particular, evidence suggests that investment in low-carbon development 38 measures and re-investment based on the returns of the measures even without considering substantial 39 co-benefits can provide tipping points for climate mitigation action and reaching peak emissions at 40 lower levels while decoupling emissions from economic growth, even in fast-growing megacity 41 contexts with well-established infrastructure (Colenbrander et al. 2017). 42 At the same time, some of the rapidly growing cities in developing countries can have existing walkable 43 urban design that can be maintained and supported with electrified urban rail plus renewable-energy- 44 based solutions to avoid a shift to private vehicles (Sharma 2018). In addition, community-based 45 distributed renewable electricity can be applicable for the regeneration of informal settlements rather 46 than more expensive informal settlement clearance (Teferi and Newman 2018). Scalable options for 47 decentralized energy, water, and wastewater systems, as well as spatial planning and urban agriculture 48 and forestry, are applicable to urban settlements across multiple regions simultaneously (Lwasa 2017). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-90 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Rapidly urbanizing areas can experience pressure for rapid growth in urban infrastructure to address 2 growth in population. This challenge can be addressed with coordinated urban planning and support 3 from enabling conditions for pursuing effective climate mitigation (see Section 8.5 and Box 8.3). The 4 ability to mobilize low-carbon development will also increase opportunities for capturing co-benefits 5 for urban inhabitants while reducing embodied and operational emissions. Transforming urban growth, 6 including its impacts on energy and materials, can be carefully addressed with the integration of cross- 7 sectoral strategies and policies. 8 Rapidly growing cities have entry points into an integrated strategy based on spatial planning, urban 9 form and infrastructure (see Figure 8.21). For rapidly growing cities that may be co-located and 10 walkable at present, remaining compact is better ensured when co-location and mixed land use as well 11 as TOD continues to be prioritized (see Section 8.4.2). Concurrently, ensuring that electricity and 12 energy carriers are decarbonized while electrifying mobility, heating and cooling will support the 13 mitigation potential of these cities. Along with an integrated approach across other illustrative 14 strategies, switching to net zero materials and supply chains holds importance (see Section 8.4.3). Cities 15 that remain compact and walkable can provide a greater array of locational and mobility options to the 16 inhabitants that can be adopted for mitigation benefits. Rapidly growing cities that may currently be 17 dispersed and auto-centric can capture high mitigation potential through urban infill and densification. 18 Conserving existing green and blue assets, thereby protecting sources of carbon storage and 19 sequestration, as well as biodiversity, have high potential for both kinds of existing urban form, 20 especially when the rapid growth can be controlled. 21 8.6.3 Mitigation opportunities for new and emerging cities 22 New and emerging cities have unparalleled potential to become low or net zero emissions urban areas 23 while achieving high quality of life by creating compact, co-located, and walkable urban areas with 24 mixed land use and TOD, that also preserve existing green and blue assets. 25 The fundamental building blocks that make up the physical attributes of cities, such as the layout of 26 streets, the size of the city blocks, the location of where people live versus where they work, can affect 27 and lock in energy demand for long time periods (Seto et al. 2016) (see Section 8.4.1). A large share of 28 urban infrastructures that will be in place by 2050 has yet to be constructed and their design and 29 implementation will determine both future GHG emissions as well as the ability to meet mitigation 30 goals (Creutzig et al. 2016a) (see Figure 8.10 and Table 8.1). Thus, there are tremendous opportunities 31 for new and emerging cities to be designed and constructed to be low-emissions while providing high 32 quality of life for their populations. 33 The UN International Resource Panel (IRP) estimates that building future cities under conventional 34 practices will require a more than doubling of material consumption, from 40 billion tonnes annually in 35 2010 to about 90 billion tonnes annually by 2050 (Swilling et al. 2018). Thus, the demand that new and 36 emerging cities will place on natural resource use, materials, and emissions can be minimized and 37 avoided only if urban settlements are planned and built much differently than today, including 38 minimized impacts on land use based on compact urban form, lowered use of materials, and related 39 cross-sector integration, including energy-driven urban design for sustainable urbanization. 40 Minimising and avoiding raw material demands depend on alternative options while accommodating 41 the urban population. In addition, operational emissions that can be committed by new urban 42 infrastructure can range between 8.5 GtCO2 and 14 GtCO2 annually up to 2030 (Erickson and Tempest 43 2015). Buildings and road networks are strongly influenced by urban layouts, densities, and specific 44 uses. Cities that are planned and built much differently than today through light-weighting, material 45 substitution, resource efficiency, renewable energy, and compact urban form, have the potential to 46 support more sustainable urbanization and provide co-benefits for inhabitants (see Figures 8.17 and 47 8.22). Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-91 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 In this context, illustrative mitigation strategies that can serve as a roadmap for emerging cities includes 2 priorities for co-located and mixed land use, as well as TOD, within an integrated approach (see Table 3 8.3 and Figure 8.19). This has cascading effects, including conserving existing green and blue assets 4 (e.g., forests, grasslands, wetlands, etc.), many of which sequester and store carbon. Priorities for 5 decarbonizing electricity and energy carriers while electrifying mobility, heating, and cooling take place 6 within the integrated approach (see Section 8.4.3). Increasing greenways and permeable surfaces, 7 especially from the design of emerging urban areas onward, can be pursued, also for adaptation co- 8 benefits and linkages with the SDGs (see Section 8.4.4 and Figure 8.18). 9 10 11 Figure 8.22 Raw material demands and committed emissions from building urban areas 12 The horizontal bars represent the projected increase in raw material demands in the year 2050. The 13 vertical bars represent the possible range of committed CO 2 emissions in 2030. The importance of 14 alternative solutions to reduce raw material demands and committed emissions while increasing co- 15 benefits is represented by the circular process on the right side. 16 Source: Drawn using data from Erickson and Tempest (2015) and Swilling et al. (2018) 17 In low energy-driven urban design, parameters are evaluated based on the energy performance of the 18 urban area in the early design phase of future urban development (Shi et al. 2017b). Energy-driven 19 urban design generates and optimizes urban form according to the energy performance outcome (Shi et 20 al. 2017b). Beyond the impact of urban form on building energy performance, the approach focuses on 21 the interdependencies between urban form and energy infrastructure in urban energy systems. The 22 process can provide opportunities for both passive options for energy-driven urban design, such as the 23 use of solar gain for space heating, or of thermal mass to moderate indoor temperatures, as well as active 24 options that involve the use of energy infrastructure and technologies while recognising interrelations 25 of the system. Future urban settlements can also be planned and built with net zero CO2 or net zero 26 GHG emissions, as well as renewable energy targets, in mind. Energy master planning of urban areas 27 that initially target net zero operational GHG emissions can be supported with energy master planning 28 from conceptual design to operation, including district scale energy strategies (Charani Shandiz et al. 29 2021). 30 31 Integrated scenarios across sectors at the local level can decouple resource usage from economic growth 32 (Hu et al. 2018) and enable 100% renewable energy scenarios (Zhao et al. 2017a; Bačeković and 33 Østergaard 2018). Relative decoupling is obtained (Kalmykova et al. 2015) with increasing evidence 34 for turning points in per capita emissions, total emissions, or urban metabolism (Chen et al. 2018b; Shen Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-92 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 et al. 2018). The importance of integrating energy and resource efficiency in sustainable and low-carbon 2 city planning (Dienst et al. 2015), structural changes, as well as forms of disruptive social innovation, 3 such as the ‘sharing economy’ (see Glossary), is also evident based on analyses for multiple cities, 4 including those that can be used to lower the carbon footprints of urban areas relative to sub-urban areas 5 (Chen et al. 2018a). 6 To minimize carbon footprints, new cities can utilize new intelligence functions as well as changes in 7 energy sources and material processes. Core design strategies of a compact city can be facilitated by 8 data-driven decision-making so that new urban intelligence functions are holistic and pro-active rather 9 than reactive (Bibri 2020). In mainstream practices, for example, many cities use environmental impact 10 reviews to identify potentially negative consequences of individual development projects on 11 environmental conditions in a piecemeal project basis. 12 New cities can utilize: system-wide analyses of construction materials, or renewable power sources, 13 that minimize ecosystem disruption and energy use, through the use of lifecycle assessments for 14 building types permitted in the new city (Ingrao et al. 2019); urban-scale metabolic impact assessments 15 for neighbourhoods in the city (Pinho and Fernandes 2019); strategic environmental assessments 16 (SEAs) that go beyond the individual project and assess plans for neighbourhoods (Noble and 17 Nwanekezie 2017); or the modelling of the type and location of building masses, tree canopies and 18 parks, and temperature (surface conditions) and prevailing winds profiles to reduce the combined effects 19 of climate change and UHI phenomena, thus minimising the need for air conditioning (Matsuo and 20 Tanaka 2019). 21 Resource-efficient, compact, sustainable, and liveable urban areas can be enabled with an integrated 22 approach across sectors, strategies, and innovations. From a geophysical perspective, the use of 23 materials with lower lifecycle GHG impacts, including the use of timber in urban infrastructure and the 24 selection of urban development plans, with lower material and land demand can lower the emission 25 impacts of existing and future cities (Müller et al. 2013; Carpio et al. 2016; Liu et al. 2016a; Ramage et 26 al. 2017; Shi et al. 2017a; Stocchero et al. 2017; Bai et al. 2018; Zhan et al. 2018b; Swilling et al. 2018; 27 Xu et al. 2018b; UNEP and IRP 2020) (see Figure 8.17). The capacity to implement relevant policy 28 instruments in an integrated and coordinated manner within a policy mix while leveraging multilevel 29 support as relevant can increase the enabling conditions for urban system transformation (Agyepong 30 and Nhamo 2017; Roppongi et al. 2017). 31 The integration of urban land use and spatial planning, electrification of urban energy systems, 32 renewable energy district heating and cooling networks, urban green and blue infrastructure, and 33 circular economy can also have positive impacts on improving air and environmental quality with 34 related co-benefits for health and well-being (Diallo et al. 2016; Nieuwenhuijsen and Khreis 2016; 35 Shakya 2016; Liu et al. 2017; Ramaswami et al. 2017a; Sun et al. 2018b; Tayarani et al. 2018; Park and 36 Sener 2019; González-García et al. 2021). Low-carbon development options can be implemented in 37 ways that reduce impacts on water use, including water use efficiency, demand management, and water 38 recycling, while increasing water quality (Koop and van Leeuwen 2015; Topi et al. 2016; Drangert and 39 Sharatchandra 2017; Lam et al. 2017, 2018; Vanham et al. 2017; Kim and Chen 2018). The ability for 40 enhancing biodiversity while addressing climate change depends on improving urban metabolism and 41 biophilic urbanism towards urban areas that are able to regenerate natural capital (Thomson and 42 Newman 2018; IPBES 2019b). 43 There are readily available solutions for low-carbon urban development that can be further supported 44 by new emerging ones, such as tools for optimising the impact of urban form on energy infrastructure 45 (Hu et al. 2015; Shi et al. 2017b; Xue et al. 2017; Dobler et al. 2018; Egusquiza et al. 2018; Pedro et al. 46 2018; Soilán et al. 2018). The costs of low-carbon urban development are manageable and enhanced 47 with a portfolio approach for cost-effective, cost-neutral, and re-investment options with evidence 48 across different urban typologies (Colenbrander et al. 2015, 2017; Gouldson et al. 2015; Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-93 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Nieuwenhuijsen and Khreis 2016; Saujot and Lefèvre 2016; Sudmant et al. 2016; Brozynski and 2 Leibowicz 2018). 3 Low-carbon urban development that triggers economic decoupling can have a positive impact on 4 employment and local competitiveness (Kalmykova et al. 2015; Chen et al. 2018b; García-Gusano et 5 al. 2018; Hu et al. 2018; Shen et al. 2018). In addition, sustainable urban transformation can be 6 supported with participatory approaches that provide a shared understanding of future opportunities and 7 challenges where public acceptance increases with citizen engagement and citizen empowerment as 8 well as an awareness of co-benefits (Blanchet 2015; Bjørkelund et al. 2016; Flacke and de Boer 2017; 9 Gao et al. 2017; Neuvonen and Ache 2017; Sharp and Salter 2017; Wiktorowicz et al. 2018; Fastenrath 10 and Braun 2018; Gorissen et al. 2018; Herrmann et al. 2018; Moglia et al. 2018). Sustainable and low- 11 carbon urban development that integrates issues of equity, inclusivity, and affordability, while 12 safeguarding urban livelihoods, providing access to basic services, lowering energy bills, addressing 13 energy poverty, and improving public health can also improve the distributional effects of existing and 14 future urbanization (Friend et al. 2016; Claude et al. 2017; Colenbrander et al. 2017; Ma et al. 2018; 15 Mrówczyńska et al. 2018; Pukšec et al. 2018; Wiktorowicz et al. 2018) (see Section 8.2). 16 Information and communications technologies can play an important role for integrating mitigation 17 options at the urban systems level for achieving zero-carbon cities. Planning for decarbonisation at the 18 urban systems level involves integrated considerations of the interaction among sectors, including 19 synergies and trade-offs among households, businesses, transport, land use, and lifestyles. The 20 utilisation of big data, artificial intelligence and Internet of Things (IoT) technologies can be used to 21 plan, evaluate and integrate rapidly progressing transport and building technologies, such as 22 autonomous EVs, zero energy buildings and districts as an urban system, including energy-driven urban 23 design (Creutzig et al. 2020; Yamagata et al. 2020). Community level energy sharing systems will 24 contribute to realising the decarbonization potential of urban systems at community scale, including in 25 smart cities (see Section 4.2.5.9 in Chapter 4, Box 10.2 in Chapter 10 and Cross-Chapter Box 11 in 26 Chapter 16). 27 28 8.5 Knowledge Gaps 29 While there is growing literature on urban NBS, which encompasses urban green and blue infrastructure 30 in cities, there is still a knowledge gap regarding how these climate mitigation actions can be integrated 31 in urban planning and design, as well as their mitigation potential, especially for cities that have yet to 32 be built. In moving forward with the research agenda on cities and climate change science, 33 transformation of urban systems will be critical; however, understanding this transformation and how 34 best to assess mitigation action remain key knowledge gaps (Butcher-Gollach 2018; Pathak and 35 Mahadevia 2018; Rigolon et al. 2018; Anguelovski et al. 2019; Buyana et al. 2019; Trundle 2020; 36 Azunre et al. 2021). 37 There is a key knowledge gap in respect to the potential of the informal sector in developing country 38 cities. Informality extends beyond illegality of economic activities to include housing, locally developed 39 off-grid infrastructure, and alternative waste management strategies. Limited literature and 40 understanding of the mitigation potential of enhanced informal sector is highlighted in the key research 41 agenda on cities from the cities and climate change science conference (Prieur-Richard et al. 2018). 42 City-level models and data for understanding of urban systems is another knowledge gap. With 43 increased availability of open data systems, big data and computing capacities, there is an opportunity 44 for analysis of urban systems (Frantzeskaki et al. 2019). 45 While there is much literature on urban climate governance, there is still limited understanding of the 46 governance models and regimes that support multi-level decision making for mitigation and climate Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-94 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 action in general. Transformative climate action will require changing relationships between actors to 2 utilize the knowledge from data and models and deepen understanding of the urban system to support 3 decision-making. 4 5 8.6.4 COVID-19 and cities 6 The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted many aspects of urban life while raising questions about urban 7 densities, transportation, public space, and other urban issues. The impact of COVID-19 on urban 8 activity and urban GHG emissions may offer insights into urban emissions and their behavioural drivers 9 and may include structural shifts in emissions that last into the future. The science is unclear as to the 10 links between urban characteristics and COVID-19, and involves multiple aspects. For example, some 11 research shows higher COVID-19 infection rates with city size (e.g., Dalziel et al. 2018; Stier et al. 12 2021), as well as challenges to epidemic preparedness due to high population density and high volume 13 of public transportation (Layne et al. 2020; Lee et al. 2020). Other research from 913 metropolitan areas 14 shows that density is unrelated to COVID-19 infection rates and, in fact, has been inversely related to 15 COVID-19 mortality rates when controlled by metropolitan population. 16 Dense counties are found to have significantly lower mortality rates, possibly due to such advantages 17 as better health care systems as well as greater adherence to social-distancing measures (Hamidi et al. 18 2020). Sustainable urbanization and urban infrastructure that address the SDGs can also improve 19 preparedness and resilience against future pandemics. For example, long-term exposure to air pollution 20 has been found to exacerbate the impacts of COVID-19 infections (Wu et al. 2020b), while urban areas 21 with cleaner air from clean energy and greenspace, can provide advantages. 22 Some studies indicate that socio-economic factors, such as poverty, racial and ethnic disparities, and 23 crowding are more significant than density in COVID-19 spread and associated mortality rate (Borjas 24 2020; Maroko et al. 2020; Lamb et al. 2021). The evidence for the connection between household 25 crowding and the risk of contagion from infectious diseases is also strong. A 2018 World Health 26 Organisation (WHO) systematic review of the effect of household crowding on health concluded that a 27 majority of studies of the risk of non-tuberculosis infectious diseases, including flu-related illnesses, 28 were associated with household crowding (Shannon et al. 2018). 29 Though preliminary, some studies suggest that urban areas saw larger overall declines in emissions 30 because of lower commuter activity and associated emissions. For example, researchers have explored 31 the COVID-19 impact in the cities of Los Angeles, Baltimore, Washington, DC, and San Francisco Bay 32 Area in the United States. In the San Francisco region, a decline of 30% in anthropogenic CO2 was 33 observed, which was primarily due to changes in on-road traffic (Turner et al. 2020). Declines in the 34 Washington, DC/Baltimore region and in the Los Angeles urban area were 33% and 34%, respectively, 35 in the month of April compared to previous years (Yadav et al. 2021). 36 At the global scale COVID-related lock-down and travel restrictions reduced daily CO2 emissions by - 37 17% in early April 2020 compared to 2019 values (Le Quéré et al. 2020; Liu et al. 2020b), though 38 subsequent studies have questioned the accuracy of the indirect proxy data used (Gurney et al. 2021b; 39 Oda et al. 2021). Research at the national scale in the United States found that daily CO2 emissions 40 declined -15% during the late March to early June time period (Gillingham et al. 2020). Sector analysis 41 indicates that gasoline transportation and electricity generation contributed to the majority of the April- 42 May 2020 decline (Gurney et al. 2021b). Research in China estimated that the first quarter of 2020 saw 43 an 11.5% decline in CO2 emissions relative to 2019 (Zheng et al. 2020; Han et al. 2021). In Europe, 44 estimates indicated a -12.5% decline in the first half of 2020 compared to 2019 (Andreoni 2021). 45 Rebound to pre-COVID trajectories has been evidenced following the ease of travel restrictions 46 (Gurney et al. 2021b; Le Quéré et al. 2021). It remains unclear to what extent COVID resulted in any 47 structural change in the underlying drivers of urban emissions. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-95 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 Changes in local air pollution emissions, particularly due to altered transportation patterns, have caused 2 temporary air quality improvements in many cities around the world (see critical review by a Adam et 3 al. 2021). Many outdoor air pollutants, such as particulates, nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide, and 4 volatile organic compounds declined during national lockdowns. Levels of tropospheric ozone, 5 however, remained constant or increased. A promising transformation that has been observed in many 6 cities is an increase in the share of active travel modes such as cycling and walking (Sharifi and 7 Khavarian-Garmsir 2020). While this may be temporary, other trends, such as increased rates of 8 teleworking and/or increased reliance on smart solutions that allow remote provision of services provide 9 an unprecedented opportunity to transform urban travel patterns (Belzunegui-Eraso and Erro-Garcés 10 2020; Sharifi and Khavarian-Garmsir 2020). 11 Related to the transport sector, the pandemic has resulted in concerns regarding the safety of public 12 transport modes, which has resulted in significant reductions in public transport ridership in some cities 13 (Bucsky 2020; de Haas et al. 2020) while providing opportunities for urban transitions in others 14 (Newman AO 2020). Considering the significance of public transportation for achieving low-carbon 15 and inclusive urban development, appropriate response measures could enhance health safety of public 16 transport modes and regain public trust (Sharifi and Khavarian-Garmsir 2020). Similarly, there is a 17 perceived correlation between the higher densities of urban living and the risk of increased virus 18 transmission (Hamidi et al. 2020; Khavarian-Garmsir et al. 2021). 19 While city size could be a risk factor with higher transmission in larger cities (Hamidi et al. 2020; Stier 20 et al. 2021), there is also evidence showing that density is not a major risk factor and indeed cities that 21 are more compact have more capacity to respond to and control the pandemic (Hamidi et al. 2020). 22 Considering the spatial pattern of density, even distribution of density can reduce the possibility of 23 crowding that is found to contribute to the scale and length of virus outbreak in cities. Overall, more 24 research is needed to better understand the impacts of density on outbreak dynamics and address public 25 health concerns for resilient cities. 26 Cities could seize this opportunity to provide better infrastructure to further foster active transportation. 27 This could, for example, involve measures, such as expanding cycling networks and restricting existing 28 streets to make them more pedestrian- and cycling-friendly contributing to health and adaptation co- 29 benefits as discussed in Section 8.2 (Sharifi 2021). Strengthening the science-policy interface is another 30 consideration that could support urban transformation (also see Cross-chapter Box 1 in Chapter 1). 31 32 8.6.5 Future urban emissions scenarios 33 The urban share of global emissions is significant and is expected to increase in the coming decades. 34 This places emphasis on the need to expand development of urban emissions scenarios within climate 35 mitigation scenarios (Gurney et al. 2021a). The literature on globally comprehensive analysis of urban 36 emissions within the existing IPCC scenario framework remain very limited curtailing understanding 37 of urban emissions tipping points, mitigation opportunities and overall climate policy complexity. A 38 recent review of the applications of the SSP/RCP scenario framework recommends downscaling global 39 SSPs to improve the applicability of this framework to regional and local scales (O’Neill et al. 2020). 40 This remains an urgent need and will require multi-disciplinary research efforts, particularly as net zero 41 emissions targets are emphasized. 42 43 8.6.6 Urban emissions data 44 Though there has been a rapid rise in quantification and analysis of urban emissions, gaps remain in 45 comprehensive global coverage, particularly in the Global South, and reliance on standardized 46 frameworks and systematic data is lacking (Gurney and Shepson 2021; Mueller et al. 2021). The Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-96 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 development of protocols by (BSI 2013; Fong et al. 2014; ICLEI 2019b) that urban areas can use to 2 organize emissions accounts has been an important step forward, but no single agreed-upon reporting 3 framework exists (Lombardi et al. 2017; Chen et al. 2019b; Ramaswami et al. 2021). Additionally, there 4 is no standardisation of emissions data and limited independent validation procedures (Gurney and 5 Shepson 2021). This is partly driven by the recognition that urban emissions can be conceptualized 6 using different frameworks, each of which has a different meaning for different urban communities (see 7 section 8.1.6.2). Equally important is the recognition that acquisition and analysis of complex data used 8 to populate urban GHG inventory protocols remains a barrier for local practitioners (Creutzig et al. 9 2019). The limited standardization has also led to incomparability of the many individual or city cluster 10 analyses that have been accomplished since AR5. Finally, comprehensive, global quantification of 11 urban emissions remains incomplete in spite of recent efforts (Moran et al. 2018; Zheng et al. 2018; 12 Harris et al. 2020; Jiang et al. 2020; Wei et al. 2021; Wiedmann et al. 2021). 13 Similarly, independent verification or evaluation of urban GHG emissions has seen a large number of 14 research studies (e.g., Wu et al. 2016; Sargent et al. 2018; Whetstone 2018; Lauvaux et al. 2020). This 15 has been driven by the recognition that self-reported approaches may not provide adequate accuracy to 16 track emissions changes and provide confidence for mitigation investment (Gurney and Shepson 2021). 17 The most promising approach to independent verification of urban emissions has been the use of urban 18 atmospheric monitoring (direct flux and/or concentration) as a means to assess and track urban GHG 19 emissions (Davis et al. 2017). However, like the basic accounting approach itself, standardization and 20 practical deployment and scaling is an essential near-term need. 21 22 Frequently Asked Questions 23 FAQ 8.1 Why are urban areas important to global climate change mitigation? 24 Over half of the world’s population currently resides in urban areas—a number forecasted to increase 25 to nearly 70% by 2050. Urban areas also account for a growing proportion of national and global 26 emissions depending on emissions scope and geographic boundary. These trends are projected to grow 27 in the coming decades; in 2100, some scenarios show the urban share of global emissions above 80%, 28 with 63% being at the minimum for any scenario (with the shares being in different contexts of 29 emissions reduction or increase) (Sections 8.3.3 and 8.3.4). As such, urban climate change mitigation 30 considers the majority of the world’s population, as well some of the key drivers of global emissions. 31 In general, emissions scenarios with limited outward urban land expansion are also associated with a 32 smaller rise in global temperature (Section 8.3.4). 33 The urban share of global emissions and its projected growth stem in part from urban carbon lock-in— 34 that is, the path dependency and inertia of committed emissions through the long lifespan of urban 35 layout, infrastructures, and behaviour. As such, urban mitigation efforts that address lock-in can 36 significantly reduce emissions (Section 8.4.1). Electrification of urban energy systems in tandem with 37 implementing multiple urban-scale mitigation strategies, could reduce urban emissions by 90% by 38 2050--thereby significantly reducing global emissions (Section 8.3.4). Urban areas can also act as points 39 of intervention to amplify synergies and co-benefits for accomplishing the Sustainable Development 40 Goals (Section 8.2). 41 FAQ 8.2 What are the most impactful options cities can take to mitigate urban emissions, and 42 how can these be best implemented? 43 The most impactful urban mitigation plans reduce urban GHG emissions by considering the long 44 lifespan of urban layout and urban infrastructures (Section 8.4.1 and 8.6). Chapter 8 identifies three 45 overarching mitigation strategies with the largest potential to decrease current, and avoid future, urban Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-97 Total pages: 157 Final Government Distribution Chapter 8 IPCC AR6 WGIII 1 emissions: (1) reduce urban energy consumption across all sectors including through spatial planning 2 and infrastructure that supports compact, walkable urban form (Section 8.4.2); (2) decarbonize through 3 electrification of the urban energy system, and switch to net zero emissions resources (i.e., low-carbon 4 infrastructure) (Section 8.4.3); and (3) enhance carbon sequestration through urban green and blue 5 infrastructure (e.g., green roofs, urban forests and street trees, etc.), which can also offer multiple co- 6 benefits like reducing ground temperatures and supporting public health and well-being (Section 8.4.4). 7 Integrating these mitigation strategies across sectors, geographic scales, and levels of governance will 8 yield the greatest emissions savings (Sections 8.4 and 8.5). 9 A city’s layout, patterns, and spatial arrangements of land use, transportation systems, and built 10 environment (urban form), as well as its state and form(s) of development (urban growth typology), can 11 inform the most impactful emissions savings ‘entry point’ and priorities for urban mitigation strategies 12 (Sections 8.4.2 and 8.6). For rapidly growing and emerging urban areas, there is the opportunity to 13 avoid carbon lock-in by focusing on urban form that promotes low-carbon infrastructure and enables 14 low-impact behaviour facilitated by co-located medium to high densities of jobs and housing, 15 walkability, and transit-oriented development (Sections 8.6.2 and 8.6.3). For established cities, 16 strategies include electrification of the grid and transport, and implementing energy efficiency across 17 sectors (Section 8.6.1). 18 FAQ 8.3 How do we estimate global emissions from cities, and how reliable are the estimates? 19 There are two different emissions estimation techniques applied, individually or in combination, to the 20 four frameworks outlined in Section 8.1.6.2 to estimate urban GHG emissions: ‘top-down’ and ‘bottom- 21 up.’ The top-down technique uses atmospheric GHG concentrations and atmospheric modelling to 22 estimate direct (scope 1) emissions (see Glossary). The bottom-up technique estimates emissions using 23 local activity data or direct measurements such as in smokestacks, traffic data, energy consumption 24 information, and building use. Bottom-up techniques will often include 'indirect emissions (see 25 Glossary) from purchased electricity (scope 2) and the urban supply chain (scope 3). Inclusion of 26 supply-chain emissions often requires additional data such as consumer purchasing data and supply 27 chain emission factors. Some researchers also take a hybrid approach combining top-down and bottom- 28 up estimation techniques to quantify territorial emissions. Individual self-reported urban inventories 29 from cities have shown chronic underestimation when compared to estimates using combined top- 30 down/bottom-up atmospherically calibrated estimation techniques. 31 No approach has been systematically applied to all cities worldwide. Rather, they have been applied 32 individually or in combination to subsets of global cities. Considerable uncertainty remains in 33 estimating urban emissions. However, top-down approaches have somewhat more objective techniques 34 for uncertainty estimation in comparison to bottom-up approaches. Furthermore, supply chain 35 estimation typically has more uncertainty than direct or territorial emission frameworks. Do Not Cite, Quote or Distribute 8-98 Total pages: 157