All cities need to look more like the Big Apple (or else...).
--------------- Forward Article --------------------
http://www.gristmagazine.com/soapbox/durning081903.asp?source=mailify 

Ecotopia on the Hudson 

Lessons in environmentally friendly living from New York City by Alan
Thein Durning 

19 Aug 2003 
In 1975, Ernest Callenbach published a slim book called Ecotopia, in
which the Northwest secedes from the United States and establishes itself
as an ecological paradise. The text became a counterculture classic, and
the term "Ecotopia" entered the lexicon, embodying the American tendency
to think of the continent's forested far coast as a land of recycling
bins and spotted owls, old-growth purity and environmental correctness.

But Callenbach was wrong, hindsight shows. On the most important
criterion, New York City has a better claim to the title of Ecotopia than
does the soggy region stretching north from San Francisco to the Canadian
border.

Yes, the Northwest has cleaner air and water than the Big Apple, and an
impressive share of its ecosystems still exist in something approximating
their original state, which cannot be said of New York. Yes,
Northwesterners generate 40 percent less trash than New Yorkers and
recycle more of it -- a gap that will widen now that Gotham has gutted
its recycling program. (Callenbach was right about "the rigid practices
of recycling and reuse upon which Ecotopians are said to pride themselves
so fiercely.") And Northwesterners are more frugal with water: The
residents of greater Portland, Ore., consume a fifth less -- and
Seattleites a quarter less -- water per person, despite the large, un-New
Yorkish lawns they irrigate.

And there's little contest when it comes to attitudes and activism. The
Northwest has an attachment to nature and to outdoor pursuits perhaps
unrivaled on the continent, and the region has been the proving ground
for one environmental reform after another: Oregon's 1971 bottle bill and
1972 land-use planning; Seattle's pioneering efforts in energy
conservation in 1975 and comprehensive curbside recycling program in
1988; the region's protection of old-growth forests in the early 1990s;
and, since the late 1990s, a full-fledged salmon recovery effort that
blankets entire metropolitan areas.

But look at Northwesterners' consumption of energy, the most significant
environmental metric, and one that's coupled to everything from
dam-blocked salmon runs to collapsing Antarctic ice shelves, from the
Exxon Valdez to Three Mile Island. Callenbach's book describes a place
that has pared its energy use to a minimum. But today the Northwest --
including Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia -- uses
one-third more energy per resident than does the state of New York. New
York City residents use even less.


The main difference in energy use relates to transportation. In
Callenbach's Ecotopia, there isn't a gas station in sight. In the real,
energy-dystopic Northwest, a typical resident burns more than three times
as much gasoline per day as a typical New Yorker. The gas, of course,
fuels motor vehicles, the principal polluters of local air and the
fastest growing source of greenhouse gases. These climate-altering
pollutants, in turn, are arguably the biggest environmental threat of the
new century; stanching their release tops the planetary to-do list.

The five boroughs of New York City have one car or truck for every four
residents; the Northwest has more than three times as many. In fact, the
Northwest has more vehicles than licensed drivers. So much for "the
Ecotopians' abolition of cars." Worse, Northwesterners are trading their
cars for trucks, which burn more fuel, spew more heat-trapping emissions,
and pose greater collision risks to other drivers and pedestrians.
Oregon's trucks, including minivans and SUVs, are likely to soon
outnumber cars; in Idaho, they already do. But in New York state, just a
quarter of all vehicles are trucks. 

The difference in driving rates is easy to explain: metropolitan New York
is compact and well served by public transit; the Northwest sprawls.
Studies of 68 cities on four continents show that as the population
density of a neighborhoods rises, driving drops off, transit use surges,
and walking and cycling flourish. More than any other factor, density is
the key to reducing our dependence on motor vehicles. And New York is the
New World's density capital, which makes it the winningest city not only
for baseball but also for transit and walking. Portland, the darling of
the urban planning guild, and my hometown of Seattle both pale by
comparison, as does even Vancouver, B.C., which is probably the densest
city west of the Mississippi.

It's true that New York City comes by its transit-friendly nature for
reasons unrelated to, and perhaps antithetical to, environmental
consciousness. The architects of the city's density were unscrupulous
real estate developers who held sway over city hall -- an ecological
triumph by accident. But the Northwest has also benefited from its share
of historical and geographical flukes. Settled late by Old World
migrants, the Northwest has fewer aging dumps, antiquated factories, and
dirty boilers than New York. Its forests were plundered less thoroughly
than those on the East Coast. And its air supply is buffered from Asian
factories by the Pacific Ocean, while New Yorkers breathe the exhaust of
power plants in the Midwest.

So how can the Northwest become more like New York without becoming New
York? Reducing our addiction to automobiles is paramount, and the most
effective way to do this is to curb sprawl and make our cities more
compact and friendlier to walkers, cyclists, and mass transit. We've
already made progress in this area -- witness the dramatic downtown
growth and effective farmland protection policies of Vancouver, B.C. --
but we need to implement other innovations, such as zoning and tax
measures that do a better job of encouraging mixed-use neighborhoods and
modest increases of density, and that better enforce our urban growth
boundaries.

Policies aimed at making it easier for residents to drive less could also
help. Oregon recently passed a bill encouraging insurers to offer
pay-as-you-drive car insurance, which would reward consumers for trimming
their mileage. Seattle's Puget Sound Regional Council is test-driving
congestion pricing, an innovative program that would make the price of
driving reflect its true cost to society and the environment. Vancouver,
B.C., which decided not to build a freeway through its downtown, offers
many lessons in restraining the use of cars in the city. 

Such efforts may help the region finally live up to its reputation as an
ecological paradise. Until then, though, we Northwesterners with our cars
and carbon dioxide will have to look east to find Callenbach's imagined
country. Ecotopia is on the Hudson. 



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