Skip to main content

ADB funds Xiangtan smart city ambitions

Bank will help realise 60km of bus lanes with signal priority in Chinese municipality 
By Ben Spencer October 22, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Xiangtan programme will help upgrade street layout to provide better walking access (© ADB)

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved $200 million in loans to support China's Xiangtan municipal government as it shifts to smart city development. 

Xiangtan is a prefecture-level city in the central part of Hunan province. 

ADB says greenhouse gas emissions increased in Xiangtan by 4.5% a year during 2005-16.

The municipal government has taken measures to reduce carbon emissions including the deployment of clean vehicles and the promotion of low-carbon technologies. 

ADB says the Xiangtan Low-Carbon Transformation Sector Development Program will help the municipal government establish 60km of dedicated bus lanes with transit signal priority and real-time bus information. 

According to the bank, it will upgrade street layout to provide better walking and cycling access, redesign the access at two railway stations for easy mode-shift and improving road safety at school zones.

Na Won Kim, ADB senior urban development specialist, describes Xiangtan as an “old industrial city” that is committed to “achieving carbon peaking by 2028”.

“To support this target, the assistance will take a sector development programme approach to bring well-designed low-carbon and climate-resilient infrastructure, information, and knowledge platforms, and policy reforms that will provide an enabling environment and the right incentives to stimulate low-carbon behaviours and practices,” Won Kim adds. 

ADB is providing a $150m for project activities and a second $50m policy-based loan which is to be paid in two instalments following the completion of reforms aimed at low-carbon technologies.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Siemens Mobility is clearing the air
    October 2, 2020
    Tens of thousands of premature deaths in the UK alone are linked to air quality - but it doesn’t have to be that way. Siemens Mobility’s Wilke Reints explains why
  • Cities get road priorities right
    March 22, 2022
    Cities including Paris, Milan and London have all announced serious expansions to their bicycling infrastructure over the last few years. The era of active travel is here, finds Alan Dron
  • $130m infrastructure spend in Vancouver
    August 18, 2022
    TransLink invests in cycling paths, walkways, multi-use paths, intersections and roads
  • LA launches own ‘Green New Deal’
    August 15, 2019
    Los Angeles, once a temple to the automobile, has followed the Democrats in launching its own Green New Deal – and the city has made big pledges on urban mobility investment The Democratic Party has started something. The Green New Deal, one of whose most high-profile supporters is new congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, intends to persuade the public that swift action is necessary to combat climate change. Now the city of Los Angeles has followed suit, releasing what it calls ‘LA’s Green New Deal’.