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BEST PRACTICES IN
EUROPEAN UNION
(EU)
STOCKHOLM,SWEDEN
STOCKHOLM,SWEDEN
? Stockholm sits on Sweden?s south-central coast, where
Lake M?laren drains into the Baltic Sea.
? The City of Stockholm, spread across 14 islands, is
located at the heart of Scandinavia, putting all of the
region?s major cities within reach.
? Most tourist attractions in Stockholm can be reached on
foot, and it is possible for visitors to experience culture,
natural scenery and big-city excitement all within a single
day.
General facts & figures about Stockholm
? Capital of Sweden
-820 000 residents
-Area: 209 km2(including 21 km2of water)
? The construction of 15 000 new housing units is planned
for the coming years.
? Around 40% of the city?s land consists of parks or
recreational areas and there are seven nature reserves
within city limits
INDICATORS
? LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL CLIMATE
CHANGE
? LOCAL TRANSPORT
? GREEN URBAN AREAS & SUSTAINABLE
LANDUSE
? NATURE AND BIODIVERSITY
? WASTE PRODUCTION & MANAGEMENT
? WATER CONSUMPTION & WASTE WATER
TREATMENT
LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL
CLIMATE CHANGE
? The amount of greenhouse gas emissions released by each
inhabitant of Stockholm is half the national average.
? Since 1990, emissions per capita have been reduced by 25% in the
Swedish capital.
? Transport emissions are relatively low, and all trains and city buses
run on renewable fuels, while not strictly classified as ?low-emissions?
vehicles
? Despite its northern location and an increasing population, Stockholm
has very low greenhouse gas emissions, down to about 3.4 tonnes
per person in 2009 (compared to 5.4 tonnes per person in 1990).
? possible by the high proportion of renewable energy for heating
houses and other premises, reducing traffic congestion, more clean
vehicles and green electricity.
? now working with citizens and other stakeholders to reduce CO2
emissions to 3 tonnes per resident by 2015, and calculations indicate
that output will actually fall to 2.8 tonnes by that time.
LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL
CLIMATE CHANGE
? 40% of cars sold in Stockholm are clean vehicles
? Over the last decade, the number of bicycle trips by
Stockholm residents has jumped 75%, owing in large part
to the expansion of cycling paths and lanes, together with
Stockholmers? growing interest in health and physical
exercise.
LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL
CLIMATE CHANGE
? more than 70% of Stockholm?s households have access
to district heating, which is mainly powered by renewable
energy. The conversion from oil heating to district heating
has reduced greenhouse gas emissions by 593 000
tonnes since 1990.
? The use of district heating with advanced pollution control
and optimised processes has reduced the number of
small, old oil boilers. This has not only cut CO2emissions,
but has also helped reduce emissions of sulphur dioxide
and other hazardous substances, thereby radically
improving air quality.
LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL
CLIMATE CHANGE
? H?gdalen plant-where the city?s waste is used to produce
energy.
? Heat in waste water is also used to generate district
heating.
? Cold water from lakes and the sea provides for district
cooling, on the other hand, as does the cooling effect from
heat pumps that extract energy from seawater or waste
water.
? The use of district cooling reduces CO2 emissions by
about 50 000 tonnes annually.
? The City of Stockholm uses eco-labelled electricity. Its aim
is for 100% of all the electricity the city purchases to be
environmentally certified.
H?gdalen plant
LOCAL TRANSPORT
? high-speed trains to Sweden?s other major cities, and
excellent regional and local public transport.
? Stockholm has an extensive and well developed public
transport system.
? Over 670 million individual journeys are made each year
on a network with more than 1 900 buses and 1 000 train
and metro carriages.
Greater Stockholm's commuter train
LOCAL TRANSPORT
? Stockholm is a commuter hub, due in large part to a
highly developed and accessible transportation network.
? On an average day, 20 000 ferry and 30 000 train
passengers travel to and from Stockholm. Every day,
around 237 000 people commute into Stockholm,
contributing to a daytime workforce of 525 000 people
employed in 36 000 city locations
GREEN URBAN AREAS &
SUSTAINABLE LANDUSE
? Stockholm is in all aspects a green city. It is surrounded
by more than 200 nature reserves across the region, the
nearest one just a 10-minute metro ride from the city
centre.
? The many parks are part of the high quality of life that
defines the Stockholm brand, and every resident has a
favourite spot to get away from it all – whether for a picnic,
sporting activity or simply to relax.
GREEN URBAN AREAS &
SUSTAINABLE LANDUSE
? In total, Stockholm boasts about 1 000 parks, which make
up approximately 30% of the city?s area. When nature
reserves are taken into account, this proportion rises to
40%.
? The water is so clean that locals can eat the fish they
catch in the city centre.
GREEN URBAN AREAS
? Ekoparken: six miles long, the world?s first national city
park is a haven for deer, hares, rare birds, butterflies and
even grazing cows.
? Djurg?rden: an island close to central Stockholm featuring
Skansen open-air museum and zoo.
? Bergius botanic garden and park: home to an extensive
herb garden, Japanese pond and the world?s largest
water lily.
? L?ngholmen: an idyllic island popular for picnics,
recreation and swimming.
Ekoparken
Djurg?rden
Park on the island of Djurg?rden in central
Stockholm.
Bergius botanic garden and park
Skansen Open-Air Museum
L?ngholmen
NATURE AND BIODIVERSITY
? The Stockholm Park Programme is an action plan for the
development of Stockholm?s parks and green areas.
? provides guidance for their planning and management,
and explicitly gives all residents the right “to live close to
park areas”, for “green retreats, playing, walking and
resting in the sun”.
? As the owner of a large proportion of the land and
waterways within city boundaries, the City of Stockholm
presides over the management of natural resources. It
works on a broad scale to preserve biological diversity
and natural values for its citizens.
NATURE AND BIODIVERSITY
? Stockholm has 24 official bathing beaches, all of them
maintained to the highest environmental standards.
? 15 are at M?laren, 8 in the smaller lakes and one at
Saltsj?n, which extends from the Stockholm archipelago
to the city centre.
? In accordance with EU legislation, Stockholm has
implemented an action plan for bathing waters.
? In 2008, the authorities passed a law introducing
environmental quality norms and mandating bathing-water
profiles.
WASTE PRODUCTION &
MANAGEMENT
? Hammarby Sj?stad- this residential area imposed tough
environmental requirements on buildings, technical
installations and the traffic environment from day one.
? The area is still developing and is to be completed in
2015. The neighbourhood has its own eco-friendly system
for handling energy, waste and water
Hammarby Sj?stad
WASTE PRODUCTION &
MANAGEMENT
? Municipal and household waste generation
?25% material recycling
?1.5% biological treatment
?73.5% incineration with energy recovery
WASTE PRODUCTION &
MANAGEMENT
? Stockholm has a well-functioning integrated waste-
handling and disposal system. Innovations in transporting
waste assist towards widespread recycling, especially of
bio-waste, including underground vacuum-controlled
systems.
? Swedish legislation prohibits any organic waste from
being sent to landfill. In Stockholm, all separately
collected food waste is recycled as biogas and
fertiliser/compost
WASTE PRODUCTION &
MANAGEMENT
? turned waste into a valuable resource.
? waste incineration and converting household waste to
energy.
? In 1909, the first incinerator plant started operating in the
city to reduce the household rubbish going to landfill.
? The principle of using household waste for producing heat
and electricity, reducing the amount of waste sent to
landfill and replacing fossil fuels with combustible waste
has continued and developed. No household municipal
waste ends up in landfill.
? Today, more than 70% of householders have access to
district heating, produced partly by energy extracted from
waste.
WASTE PRODUCTION &
MANAGEMENT
? Reducing the amount of waste generated is one of the most important
challenges for the years ahead.
? Since the 1990s, Stockholm?s Waste Management Administration has
been working hard to raise awareness among citizens about the
environmental impact of waste and the importance of recycling.
? The Strategic Waste Management Plan for 2008-2012 contains
strategic objectives and assigned measures and targets. Among other
things, it calls for increasing the amount of food waste collected and
treated.
? target to treat at least 35% of the food waste from restaurants and
grocery stores and 10% of food waste from households biologically.
? To achieve this, it promotes a separate collection of high-quality food
waste from restaurants.
? In 2007, 9.5% of the food waste from restaurants and groceries and
2% of the food waste from households was treated biologically.
Best practices in EU.Stockholm,Sweden
WATER CONSUMPTION & WASTE
WATER TREATMENT
? Water makes up over 10% of Stockholm?s surface area,
and is part of the uniqueness of the Stockholm brand. The
major waters are Lake M?laren and Saltsj?n Bay, but
there are also 12 small lakes.
? All of them offer residents and visitors opportunities for
swimming, picnics, boating and other recreational
activities.
Lake M?laren
Saltsj?n Bay
WATER CONSUMPTION & WASTE
WATER TREATMENT
? Drinking water in Stockholm is of a high and consistent
quality. Lake M?laren supplies drinking water for about 1
million people living in the region, and water is treated in
two waterworks west of the city.
? Water quality is tightly controlled by the Food
Administration Authority, which must approve all chemical
and microbiological analyses.
? As a water reservoir, Lake M?laren is by any standards a
pure lake and well-suited for the supply of drinking water.
Drinking water is therefore provided through simple and
robust processes.
WATER CONSUMPTION & WASTE
WATER TREATMENT
? The waste water from Stockholm and some neighbouring
areas is treated in two plants that serve a combined
population of 1 million.
? The water is treated with advanced technology for
removing nitrogen and phosphorous, exceeding the
ambitions of the EU Urban Waste Water Directive.
? Biogas is produced in the waste-water treatment plant
and then upgraded for use in public buses as well as
private cars and taxis.
? The excess heat in the sewage water is recovered for
domestic heating. No water is reused.
THE CONNECTED CITY
? Stockholm decided to pursue an unusual, cost-efficient
telecommunications model.
? In 1994, city-owned company Stokab began installing a
fibre-optic network, offering capacity to
telecommunications carriers for less than the cost of
installing it themselves
? The city has 100% fixed and mobile broadband coverage,
and by 2012, the fibre-optic network will extend to all
businesses and apartment block
? the use of fibre optics has a direct impact on the
environment – for example, by reducing the amount of
road digging.
GREEN IT
? Information technology can reduce environmental impact
in a number of ways:
? Modern IT equipment uses up less energy and resources.
? Video- and teleconferencing reduce travel.
? Transport can be better planned (through Intelligent
Transport Systems – ITS).
? Energy use and emissions from buildings, vehicles, etc.
can be more accurately controlled.
SUMMARY
STOCKHOLM?S GREEN FACTS AND
FIGURES
? 1 000 parks
? Seven nature reserves within city boundaries (and more
than 200 in the surrounding area), 1 cultural reserve and
1 city national park
? 95 kg of recycled refuse annually per citizen
? 12 000 trees in the city centre
? 24 official beaches
? World?s largest district cooling network
? Set to become fossil-fuel free by 2050
? The city hosts 2 700 clean-tech companies

More Related Content

Best practices in EU.Stockholm,Sweden

  • 1. BEST PRACTICES IN EUROPEAN UNION (EU) STOCKHOLM,SWEDEN
  • 2. STOCKHOLM,SWEDEN ? Stockholm sits on Sweden?s south-central coast, where Lake M?laren drains into the Baltic Sea. ? The City of Stockholm, spread across 14 islands, is located at the heart of Scandinavia, putting all of the region?s major cities within reach. ? Most tourist attractions in Stockholm can be reached on foot, and it is possible for visitors to experience culture, natural scenery and big-city excitement all within a single day.
  • 3. General facts & figures about Stockholm ? Capital of Sweden -820 000 residents -Area: 209 km2(including 21 km2of water) ? The construction of 15 000 new housing units is planned for the coming years. ? Around 40% of the city?s land consists of parks or recreational areas and there are seven nature reserves within city limits
  • 4. INDICATORS ? LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE ? LOCAL TRANSPORT ? GREEN URBAN AREAS & SUSTAINABLE LANDUSE ? NATURE AND BIODIVERSITY ? WASTE PRODUCTION & MANAGEMENT ? WATER CONSUMPTION & WASTE WATER TREATMENT
  • 5. LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE ? The amount of greenhouse gas emissions released by each inhabitant of Stockholm is half the national average. ? Since 1990, emissions per capita have been reduced by 25% in the Swedish capital. ? Transport emissions are relatively low, and all trains and city buses run on renewable fuels, while not strictly classified as ?low-emissions? vehicles ? Despite its northern location and an increasing population, Stockholm has very low greenhouse gas emissions, down to about 3.4 tonnes per person in 2009 (compared to 5.4 tonnes per person in 1990). ? possible by the high proportion of renewable energy for heating houses and other premises, reducing traffic congestion, more clean vehicles and green electricity. ? now working with citizens and other stakeholders to reduce CO2 emissions to 3 tonnes per resident by 2015, and calculations indicate that output will actually fall to 2.8 tonnes by that time.
  • 6. LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE ? 40% of cars sold in Stockholm are clean vehicles ? Over the last decade, the number of bicycle trips by Stockholm residents has jumped 75%, owing in large part to the expansion of cycling paths and lanes, together with Stockholmers? growing interest in health and physical exercise.
  • 7. LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE ? more than 70% of Stockholm?s households have access to district heating, which is mainly powered by renewable energy. The conversion from oil heating to district heating has reduced greenhouse gas emissions by 593 000 tonnes since 1990. ? The use of district heating with advanced pollution control and optimised processes has reduced the number of small, old oil boilers. This has not only cut CO2emissions, but has also helped reduce emissions of sulphur dioxide and other hazardous substances, thereby radically improving air quality.
  • 8. LOCAL CONTRIBUTION TO GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE ? H?gdalen plant-where the city?s waste is used to produce energy. ? Heat in waste water is also used to generate district heating. ? Cold water from lakes and the sea provides for district cooling, on the other hand, as does the cooling effect from heat pumps that extract energy from seawater or waste water. ? The use of district cooling reduces CO2 emissions by about 50 000 tonnes annually. ? The City of Stockholm uses eco-labelled electricity. Its aim is for 100% of all the electricity the city purchases to be environmentally certified.
  • 10. LOCAL TRANSPORT ? high-speed trains to Sweden?s other major cities, and excellent regional and local public transport. ? Stockholm has an extensive and well developed public transport system. ? Over 670 million individual journeys are made each year on a network with more than 1 900 buses and 1 000 train and metro carriages.
  • 12. LOCAL TRANSPORT ? Stockholm is a commuter hub, due in large part to a highly developed and accessible transportation network. ? On an average day, 20 000 ferry and 30 000 train passengers travel to and from Stockholm. Every day, around 237 000 people commute into Stockholm, contributing to a daytime workforce of 525 000 people employed in 36 000 city locations
  • 13. GREEN URBAN AREAS & SUSTAINABLE LANDUSE ? Stockholm is in all aspects a green city. It is surrounded by more than 200 nature reserves across the region, the nearest one just a 10-minute metro ride from the city centre. ? The many parks are part of the high quality of life that defines the Stockholm brand, and every resident has a favourite spot to get away from it all – whether for a picnic, sporting activity or simply to relax.
  • 14. GREEN URBAN AREAS & SUSTAINABLE LANDUSE ? In total, Stockholm boasts about 1 000 parks, which make up approximately 30% of the city?s area. When nature reserves are taken into account, this proportion rises to 40%. ? The water is so clean that locals can eat the fish they catch in the city centre.
  • 15. GREEN URBAN AREAS ? Ekoparken: six miles long, the world?s first national city park is a haven for deer, hares, rare birds, butterflies and even grazing cows. ? Djurg?rden: an island close to central Stockholm featuring Skansen open-air museum and zoo. ? Bergius botanic garden and park: home to an extensive herb garden, Japanese pond and the world?s largest water lily. ? L?ngholmen: an idyllic island popular for picnics, recreation and swimming.
  • 18. Park on the island of Djurg?rden in central Stockholm.
  • 22. NATURE AND BIODIVERSITY ? The Stockholm Park Programme is an action plan for the development of Stockholm?s parks and green areas. ? provides guidance for their planning and management, and explicitly gives all residents the right “to live close to park areas”, for “green retreats, playing, walking and resting in the sun”. ? As the owner of a large proportion of the land and waterways within city boundaries, the City of Stockholm presides over the management of natural resources. It works on a broad scale to preserve biological diversity and natural values for its citizens.
  • 23. NATURE AND BIODIVERSITY ? Stockholm has 24 official bathing beaches, all of them maintained to the highest environmental standards. ? 15 are at M?laren, 8 in the smaller lakes and one at Saltsj?n, which extends from the Stockholm archipelago to the city centre. ? In accordance with EU legislation, Stockholm has implemented an action plan for bathing waters. ? In 2008, the authorities passed a law introducing environmental quality norms and mandating bathing-water profiles.
  • 24. WASTE PRODUCTION & MANAGEMENT ? Hammarby Sj?stad- this residential area imposed tough environmental requirements on buildings, technical installations and the traffic environment from day one. ? The area is still developing and is to be completed in 2015. The neighbourhood has its own eco-friendly system for handling energy, waste and water
  • 26. WASTE PRODUCTION & MANAGEMENT ? Municipal and household waste generation ?25% material recycling ?1.5% biological treatment ?73.5% incineration with energy recovery
  • 27. WASTE PRODUCTION & MANAGEMENT ? Stockholm has a well-functioning integrated waste- handling and disposal system. Innovations in transporting waste assist towards widespread recycling, especially of bio-waste, including underground vacuum-controlled systems. ? Swedish legislation prohibits any organic waste from being sent to landfill. In Stockholm, all separately collected food waste is recycled as biogas and fertiliser/compost
  • 28. WASTE PRODUCTION & MANAGEMENT ? turned waste into a valuable resource. ? waste incineration and converting household waste to energy. ? In 1909, the first incinerator plant started operating in the city to reduce the household rubbish going to landfill. ? The principle of using household waste for producing heat and electricity, reducing the amount of waste sent to landfill and replacing fossil fuels with combustible waste has continued and developed. No household municipal waste ends up in landfill. ? Today, more than 70% of householders have access to district heating, produced partly by energy extracted from waste.
  • 29. WASTE PRODUCTION & MANAGEMENT ? Reducing the amount of waste generated is one of the most important challenges for the years ahead. ? Since the 1990s, Stockholm?s Waste Management Administration has been working hard to raise awareness among citizens about the environmental impact of waste and the importance of recycling. ? The Strategic Waste Management Plan for 2008-2012 contains strategic objectives and assigned measures and targets. Among other things, it calls for increasing the amount of food waste collected and treated. ? target to treat at least 35% of the food waste from restaurants and grocery stores and 10% of food waste from households biologically. ? To achieve this, it promotes a separate collection of high-quality food waste from restaurants. ? In 2007, 9.5% of the food waste from restaurants and groceries and 2% of the food waste from households was treated biologically.
  • 31. WATER CONSUMPTION & WASTE WATER TREATMENT ? Water makes up over 10% of Stockholm?s surface area, and is part of the uniqueness of the Stockholm brand. The major waters are Lake M?laren and Saltsj?n Bay, but there are also 12 small lakes. ? All of them offer residents and visitors opportunities for swimming, picnics, boating and other recreational activities.
  • 34. WATER CONSUMPTION & WASTE WATER TREATMENT ? Drinking water in Stockholm is of a high and consistent quality. Lake M?laren supplies drinking water for about 1 million people living in the region, and water is treated in two waterworks west of the city. ? Water quality is tightly controlled by the Food Administration Authority, which must approve all chemical and microbiological analyses. ? As a water reservoir, Lake M?laren is by any standards a pure lake and well-suited for the supply of drinking water. Drinking water is therefore provided through simple and robust processes.
  • 35. WATER CONSUMPTION & WASTE WATER TREATMENT ? The waste water from Stockholm and some neighbouring areas is treated in two plants that serve a combined population of 1 million. ? The water is treated with advanced technology for removing nitrogen and phosphorous, exceeding the ambitions of the EU Urban Waste Water Directive. ? Biogas is produced in the waste-water treatment plant and then upgraded for use in public buses as well as private cars and taxis. ? The excess heat in the sewage water is recovered for domestic heating. No water is reused.
  • 36. THE CONNECTED CITY ? Stockholm decided to pursue an unusual, cost-efficient telecommunications model. ? In 1994, city-owned company Stokab began installing a fibre-optic network, offering capacity to telecommunications carriers for less than the cost of installing it themselves ? The city has 100% fixed and mobile broadband coverage, and by 2012, the fibre-optic network will extend to all businesses and apartment block ? the use of fibre optics has a direct impact on the environment – for example, by reducing the amount of road digging.
  • 37. GREEN IT ? Information technology can reduce environmental impact in a number of ways: ? Modern IT equipment uses up less energy and resources. ? Video- and teleconferencing reduce travel. ? Transport can be better planned (through Intelligent Transport Systems – ITS). ? Energy use and emissions from buildings, vehicles, etc. can be more accurately controlled.
  • 38. SUMMARY STOCKHOLM?S GREEN FACTS AND FIGURES ? 1 000 parks ? Seven nature reserves within city boundaries (and more than 200 in the surrounding area), 1 cultural reserve and 1 city national park ? 95 kg of recycled refuse annually per citizen ? 12 000 trees in the city centre ? 24 official beaches ? World?s largest district cooling network ? Set to become fossil-fuel free by 2050 ? The city hosts 2 700 clean-tech companies