Can Phoenix be greened?
Posted November 8, 2011 in Living Sustainably, Solving Global Warming
Today’s title is the question somewhat pessimistically posed by NYU professor Andrew Ross in The New York Times. Ross argues that, if so, it will have to be with a broader effort and despite intense political resistance.
Over a decade ago, I was doing research for a book about sprawl that became Once There Greenfields, written with my friends and then-colleagues Matt Raimi and Don Chen. I remember coming across a startling statistic: metro Phoenix had become the size of Delaware. And that was 1998. Given the deep, deep hole of carbon emissions, water consumption and pollution that we have dug ourselves into with unchecked sprawl, especially in the Sun Belt, how are we going to get out? Certainly not without much smarter land use, including retrofitting some of the mess already made.
Ross would seem to agree. And, he argues, cities like Phoenix may be more representative of the true challenges facing us than green leaders like Portland and San Francisco. Here are some of the sobering nuggets highlighted in his column:
- “Central Arizona is in the ‘bull’s eye’ of climate change, warming up and drying out faster than any other region in the Northern Hemisphere”;
“Across [Arizona’s Valley of the Sun] lies 1,000 square miles of low-density tract housing, where few signs of greening are evident”;- “In the Arizona Legislature, talk of global warming is verboten and Republican lawmakers can be heard arguing for the positive qualities of greenhouse gases. Most politicians are still praying for another housing boom on the urban fringe; they have no Plan B”;
- “Whereas uptown populations are increasingly sequestered in green showpiece zones, residents in low-lying areas who cannot afford the low-carbon lifestyle are struggling to breathe fresh air or are even trapped in cancer clusters”;
Ross argues that, if contemplated, tech-heavy solutions ignore the consequences of sprawl, they are doomed to fail:
“Solar chargers and energy-efficient appliances are fine, but unless technological fixes take into account the needs of low-income residents, they will end up as lifestyle add-ons for the affluent. Phoenix’s fledgling light-rail system should be expanded to serve more diverse neighborhoods, and green jobs should be created in the central city, not the sprawling suburbs. Arizona has some of the best solar exposure in the world, but it allows monopolistic utilities to impose a regressive surcharge on all customers to subsidize roof-panel installation by the well-heeled ones. Instead of green modifications to master-planned communities at the urban fringe, there should be concerted infill investment in central city areas now dotted with vacant lots.”
I couldn’t agree more. Read the entire column here.
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Kaid Benfield writes (almost) daily about community, development, and the environment. For more posts, see his blog's home page.
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Comments
Charles — Nov 8 2011 11:37 AM
Lack of a Plan B seems to be a recurring theme, one that our ancestors would have found disturbing, I'm sure.
The fact that we've also bet so much on not just a continuation of the status quo but an expansion of it, makes the lack of a viable fallback position even crazier. We're all in.
Thanks Kaid.
Jim Noonan — Nov 8 2011 09:27 PM
Unfortunately there are some places where a discussion about sustainability must go beyond a discussion of land use patterns. The terminal problem in Phoenix is not walkability, it is water.Having already pumped the Colorado dry, there are not many alternatives that will make any growth, sprawled or otherwise, sustainable in Phoenix and other areas of the arid southwest.
Even if the deniers of global warming in the State legislature are correct, there is no water, and certainly no water that Arizona has any additional rights to in the face of other demands for the same resource. Neither is there any viable technology to resolve the need for new water sources. It is not my usual position to say this, but no discussion of transit, solar energy solutions, or land use will change that basic underlying fact of nature.
No. Phoenix can not be 'greened'.
Kaid @ NRDC — Nov 9 2011 09:07 AM
It's hard to disagree with your point about water, Jim, and that goes for much of the arid American West, unfortunately. So the question becomes, 'what the heck do we do now?'
Teresa Brice — Nov 9 2011 12:35 PM
There is a Plan B - it is called the Sustainable Communities Working Group and LISC Phoenix is helping to lead the charge. Together with Raza Development Fund, we have capitalized a $20 million fund to incentivize and target development along the new light rail corridor. This development would be mixed use, higher density that can cut water use by as much as 2/3 from current Phx average densities. But the SCWG is not just about funding - it is about leveraging transit to re-direct development to help address the inequities that Ross cites in his book. If you want more info, contact LISC Phoenix.