Skip to main content

No return to ‘business as usual’, say world’s city mayors

Clean, green and sustainable need to be urban watchwords from now, says C40
By Adam Hill May 15, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
C40: looking to a brighter urban future (© Jamesteohart | Dreamstime.com)

Mayors from many international cities have warned that release from the coronavirus lockdown “should not be a return to ‘business as usual’ - because that is a world on track for 3°C or more of over-heating”.

The C40 group of cities has released a statement of principles to shape the post-Covid-19 world, pledging “to build a better, more sustainable and fairer society out of the recovery”.

As cities all over the world have introduced measures to encourage walking and cycling, C40’s Global Mayors Covid-19 Recovery Task Force had its first virtual meetings, looking at both the virus and the climate change crisis.

The task force will establish a common framework that all members can use to create a ‘new normal’ for city economies.

It will also "agree upon concrete measures they can put in place for recovery; how to communicate about the climate crisis in a post-Covid-19 world; and how can they influence stimulus packages and interventions to support the necessary transition to a more sustainable, low-carbon, inclusive and healthier economy for people and the planet". 

Among its principles are the idea that the harm caused by the pandemic has not been 'equitable', but has disproportionately affected the poor, and "profoundly impacted the world’s cities" while exposing a lack of preparedness despite lessons learned from recent public health crises such as Sars and Ebola.

"This is, in part, a consequence of the undermining of international mechanisms and institutions which were built to bring peace and prosperity to all," C40 says in a statement. "It is, in part, a consequence of ignoring science-based knowledge."

C40 includes the mayors of cities including Athens, Bogotá, London, Los Angeles and New York.

Michael Bloomberg, C40 board president and former mayor of New York, said: “This task force is committed to helping city leaders as they work on economic recovery in ways that lead us forward into the future, not back into the past. The principles we’ve outlined will guide our efforts to develop a new normal – one that is greener, healthier, and more prosperous for everyone.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Summit of Ministers calls for more global co-operation in transport policy
    May 23, 2014
    “Policymakers are facing greater levels of uncertainty in decision making, with the speed, nature, intensity and timing of change” Ministers of Transport from around the world have called for more international co-operation to create transport systems for the needs of a changing world. “Global transformational change is a characteristic of our age”, ministers from the 54 member countries of the International Transport Forum (ITF) state in a declaration agreed today at their Annual Summit in Leipzig,
  • Airly cleans up with $5.5m funding
    November 18, 2022
    Air quality platform provides data infrastructure to allow cities to reduce pollutants
  • OpenSpace visualises how social distancing will work
    May 26, 2020
    OpenSpace CEO Nicolas Le Glatin tells Adam Hill how Xovis camera tech might help unlock more convenient ways for moving through mobility hubs during Covid-19
  • Connected Places Catapult: let's get holistic
    June 17, 2019
    Two UK organisations - Transport Systems Catapult and Future Cities - have merged to form Connected Places Catapult. Helen Wylde explains what this new start is designed to achieve Changing towns and cities, changing transportation…changing the world – it’s all too easy to sound idealistic. But however sensible a pessimistic outlook might be, it in no way mitigates the absolute urgency of our need to succeed. The coming together of Transport Systems Catapult and Future Cities is significant because