Misplaced Pages

Aalborg Charter

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Charter of European Sustainable Cities and Towns Towards Sustainability otherwise known as the Aalborg Charter (1994) is an urban environment sustainability initiative approved by the participants at the first European Conference on Sustainable Cities & Towns in Aalborg, Denmark. It is inspired by the Rio Earth Summit’s Local Agenda 21 plan, and was developed to contribute to the European Union’s Environmental Action Programme, ‘Towards Sustainability’.

The Charter is based on the consensus of individuals, municipalities, NGOs, national and international organisations, and scientific bodies.

Approximately 2700 local authorities from more than 40 countries have signed the Charter. This has resulted in the largest European movement of its type.

There are three related parts to the Charter. Part 1 is a consensus declaration of European sustainable cities and towns towards sustainability. Part 2 relates to the creation of the European Sustainable Cities & Towns Campaign. Part 3 is declaration of intent that local governments will seek to engage in Local Agenda 21 processes.

The Aalborg Commitments

Ten years after the release of the Aalborg Charter, the 4th European Conference on Sustainable Cities & Towns was again held in Aalborg (2004).

The purpose of the event was to develop a common understanding of sustainability, and as a consequence to develop a framework to be used at the local level that would better articulate how to embed sustainability across municipality sectors. By consensus of participants, including organisations such as Association of Cities and Regions for Recycling (ACRR); Climate Alliance -Klima-Bündnis -Alianza del Climae.V; Council of European Municipalities & Regions (CEMR); Energie Cités; EUROCITIES; ICLEI Local Governments for Sustainability; Medcities; Union of Baltic Cities (UBC), and the World Health Organization (WHO) - Healthy Cities, the Aalborg Commitments were agreed on and have so far been signed by more than 700 mayors from across Europe.

The Commitments are:

  1. Governance
  2. Urban management
  3. Natural common goods
  4. Responsible consumption
  5. Planning and design
  6. Better mobility
  7. Local action for health
  8. Sustainable local economy
  9. Social equity and justice
  10. Local to global

References

  1. "Sustainable cities -Aalborg Charter" (PDF).
  2. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-13. Retrieved 2013-09-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. "European Sustainable Cities Platform | The Aalborg Charter".
  4. "Sustainable cities" (PDF).
  5. "European Sustainable Cities Platform | The Aalborg Commitments".
  6. "Sustainable cities - Aalborg Commitments Signatories" (PDF).
  7. "Sustainable cities - Aalborg Commitments" (PDF).
Aalborg
Neighborhoods
and administration
Landmarks
Culture
Museums
Education
Sports
Companies and retail
Transport
Sustainability
Principles
Consumption
World population
Technology
Biodiversity
Energy
Food
Water
Accountability
Applications
Sustainable management
Agreements and
conferences
Categories: