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Jacqueline Nivard

Residential energy consumption in urban China: A decomposition analysis - 0 views

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    Residential energy consumption (REC) is the second largest energy use category (10%) in China and urban residents account for 63% of the REC.
Jacqueline Nivard

Chinese urban residential construction to 2040 - 0 views

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    This paper projects Chinese urban residential construction out to 2040.
Jacqueline Nivard

Is economic transition harmful to China's urban environment? Evidence from industrial a... - 0 views

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    his study explores the environmental effects of the triple transition process of marketisation, globalisation and decentralisation using data on industrial SO2 and soot emissions at the prefecture-city level
Jacqueline Nivard

Chinese urban residential construction - 0 views

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    This article considers the medium- and long-term prospects for residential construction in China and their implications for steel consumption.
Monique Abud

Ecocity 2013 - Ecocity World summit - 1 views

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    Nantes, 25-27 Sept. 2013 The city of Nantes will welcome and organize the 10th edition of ECOCITY as part of the initiative "Nantes European Green Capital 2013".
Monique Abud

China needs land reform for efficient of urbanization: Wu Jinglian - 0 views

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    China's urbanization has been inefficient as a result of an unhealthy real estate system, according to Wu Jinglian, a leading economist speaking in China's Economy Development Innovation Forum in Shanghai.
Monique Abud

Working together to promote urbanization cooperation and sustainable development - 0 views

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    n recent years, the steady momentum on China-EU relations has sustained strong growth in practical cooperation across all sectors on both sides. For China-EU relations, the current international economic situation and our respective development strategy mean both opportunities and challenges. To leverage strength from the international environment and to better meet the challenges, China and Europe must explore new grounds to achieve growth. Based on this principle, at the beginning of this year, the two sides have reached an important agreement to prioritize urbanization and sustainable development in our cooperation and have moved further to establish urbanization partnership between China and the EU.
Monique Abud

Building the 21st Century City: Inclusion, Innovation, and Globalization - 0 views

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    San Francisco, California The Fairmont Hotel April 3-6, 2013
Monique Abud

Low carbon earth summit 2012, Joint with World sustainable energy conference - 0 views

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    October 19-21, Guangzhou baiyun international convention center LCES-2012 will continue to provide an alternative platform to other global conferences in related to climate change and environment protection. We will focus more on practical perspectives on green economy, promotion of sustainable or renewable energy, and exhibit technical resolutions to solve and predict the existing issues. Through the massive operations on comprehensive topics related low carbon economy and industries, we hope the summit can provide best information to exchange channels for all endeavors on low carbon fields who are working on controlling global climate changes from policy makers, NGO leaders, economists, investors, engineers, scientists, industrial leaders, carbon traders, brokers, clean emerge producers, energy consumers, toward daily low carbon life practitioners and advocators etc. Thus, LCES-2012 can provide help our society and humanity with unprecedented impacts on the world sustainable development, new economy growth and renewable energy innovation to commercialization.
Monique Abud

Quality towers over quantity in building cities - 0 views

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    Updated: 2012-06-22 16:53 By Harry den Hartog (China Daily) China should learn from Europe and lead the way in urban planning
Monique Abud

2nd International Symposium on Corporate Responsibility & Sustainable Development - 0 views

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    Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, Guangzhou, China April 9, 2013 - April 12, 2013 Second international symposium exploring emerging issues in corporate responsibility and sustainable development. Presentations and debates will highlight current thinking and how these issues are being addressed around the world nowadays. Promoted by: Centre for Corporate Responsibility (London Metropolitan University Business School) http://www.londonmet.ac.uk/lmbs/research/ccr/csr_home.cfm Institute for the Study of Corporate Social Responsibility (Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson University) http://www.ryerson.ca/csrinstitute
Jacqueline Nivard

Raefer Wallis: Green architecture that regenerates - 0 views

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    Architect Raefer Wallis is a pioneer in green building in China, and his passion is figuring out scalable solutions to environmental regeneration. [Note: We want you to see these talks exactly as they happened! The archive footage might be a little rougher than the usual TED.com talk.]
Monique Abud

Farmers left behind amid urbanization - 2 views

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    By Cong Mu (Global Times) 08:27, September 17, 2012 For the first time in China, there are more urban citizens than rural residents in the country, but rural-urban inequalities remain, according to a research report released Saturday by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) in Beijing.
Monique Abud

Construction and Real Estate Hinder China's Growth - 0 views

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    Construction and Real Estate Hinder China's Growth By KEITH BRADSHER Published: September 9, 2012 CHENGDU, China - With more than 100 tall cranes on the skyline, this metropolis in western China looks vibrant at first glance despite the country's sharp economic slowdown.
Monique Abud

It Is Time to Really Complete Urbanization - 0 views

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    China has finished the "urbanization of place" but not of people, and the main obstacle is the household registration system
Monique Abud

Experts Debate Reforms for Sustainable Urbanization - 0 views

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    While there's broad agreement China will continue to urbanize rapidly, there is disagreement as to how exactly
Monique Abud

Taking the Higher Ground for Hukou Reform - 0 views

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    A State Council directive made welcome changes to the household registration system, but so much more is needed
Monique Abud

[China myths] The rapid march towards urbanisation - 0 views

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    Posted by Kate Mackenzie on Aug 30 14:09. In our first post in this series, we examined the widely-held belief that China's steel demand will continue to rise at a rapid rate. FT Alphaville, along with others, contend that such forecasts are on shaky ground. This is, in part, because of the dubiousness of one of the underlying assumptions: that China will rapidly urbanise more of its population. (Here's a very recent example of this argument, from Stephen Roach.) The proportion Chinese living in urban areas just passed the 50 per cent mark in the past year but, the story goes, there is more to come. This will in turn mean more industrialisation, more modernisation, a bigger and consuming middle class and of course more GDP growth. In other words: [...] farmers who once led simple, subsistence-level lives now become factory and service workers in the city, reside in apartments furnished with appliances, occasionally eat out, and perhaps even send their kids to college. In the process, self-sufficient rural households are transformed into workers receiving higher wages and participating in the commodity economy of consumption. As such, urbanization is as much an economic and social transformation as it is a spatial and demographic process. Sounds great doesn't it? The above quote however comes from a paper by Kam Wing Chan in Eurasian Geography and Economics early this year. Chan is a professor of geography at the University of Washington, and he doesn't agree that this is how things will continue to play out for China.
Monique Abud

Urbanization and Economic Growth in China - 0 views

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    by Nicholas Borst |September 12th, 2012 It's an article of faith amongst many analysts that China's rapid urbanization will inevitably suck up any excess housing supply and boost consumption as new urbanites enter the middle class.
Monique Abud

UCI 2012 Call For Research - 0 views

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    The Urban China Initiative aims to be the source of the best and most innovative solutions to urban development issues in China. To achieve this goal, UCI conducts a grant program to support research concerning China's urban development and sustainability. UCI accepts research applications on an annual basis for grants up to RMB 100,000. It also provides assistance and guidance during the research process and facilitates the publication of working papers and implementation through city pilots (Click here for more supports UCI GRANTS provide). The Initiative supports research on the effectiveness of programs and technologies related to urban development; emerging domestic and global best practices in project design, development, and execution; and paths to successful structural adjustment in China's cities. Grant-supported research focuses on sustainable urbanization (Click here for detailed requirements). Candidates are required to submit an application package which includes a detailed research proposal and CV (download application form and proposal template) to grant@urbanchinainitiative.org. The deadline for the upcoming round of funding is December 20, 2012. Research for the grants is expected to be completed within a year. For inquiry, please contact us via contact@urbanchinainitiative.org or +86(10)-8525-5245.
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