Canadian Biomass - JulyAugust 2018

Editorial

2018-08-02 11:53:08

‘Don’t wait for the government’

Swedish city sets a high green bar for Canadian municipalities

Mayor Anna Tenje of Vaxjo, Sweden, is enormously proud of her city. She lovingly describes sleek wooden apartments built alongside sparkling blue lakes and lush green forests in the municipality of 92,000.

But it wasn’t always this way. In the 1970s the Swedish city underwent a restoration of its central lakes, and in 1996, Vaxjo became the first city in the world to mandate a fossil-fuel free future by 2030. To reach its ambitious goal, the city uses bioenergy via a wood-fuelled CHP district energy system that supplies 90 per cent of the heating demand, as well as municipal waste biogas plants and smallscale hydro, solar and wind installations. City buses run on biofuel, and smart urban planning encourages bicycle commuting.

For years the community has designated itself Europe’s greenest city, and in 2017 the EU Commission validated their claim with the European Green Leaf Award 2018.

Since the 1996 decision, Vaxjo has reduced emissions by 58 per cent and improved economic growth by 32 per cent. “We have shown that this is possible,” Tenje told an audience of hundreds in Prince George. Tenje gave a keynote address at the Canadian Bioeconomy Conference and Exhibition in early June, and I had the pleasure of being in the audience for her talk. (Read coverage of the conference on page 7.)

Her most poignant advice for the crowd: “Don’t wait for the national legislation; it won’t come for years.” Effective change, she said, begins not at a federal or even international level, but in the cities and municipalities around the world. “I would like to see more communities take the chance,” Tenje said.

I could almost feel the head nods around me; particularly from host city Mayor Lyn Hall, who has long been an advocate for the bioeconomy in Prince George. The city boasts a wood-based district energy system that connects 11 downtown buildings, while the Prince George campus of the University of Northern B.C. has a biomass gasification plant.

Unfortunately, Tenje’s message was preached to the choir. The conference room was packed, but attendees more often than not were industry insiders or politicians already on board to support the bioeconomy. It’s a message that all Canadian municipalities large and small should hear: When it comes to the environment, don’t wait for government. Economic prosperity and clean energy can go hand in hand; Vaxjo and Prince George both prove that it’s possible.

But there’s a lesson in there for the bio-industry as well. Continue making pitches to municipal governments. Don’t wait for Ottawa or your province to further incentivise your project. Funding programs come and go (they are very much ‘going’ in Ontario courtesy of the new provincial government) but as the changing climate continues to put pressure on all municipalities around the world, the right solution will make sense to a growing number of cities, towns and rural and remote communities.

©Annex Biomass_CFI_OF. View All Articles.

Editorial
https://magazine.canadianbiomassmagazine.ca/article/Editorial/3156089/517194/article.html

Menu
  • Page View
  • Contents View
  • Advertisers

Issue List

Summer 2025

Spring 2025

Winter 2025

Fall 2024

Summer 2024

Spring 2024

Winter 2024

Fall 2023

Summer 2023

Spring 2023

Winter 2023

Fall 2022

Summer 2022

Spring 2022

Winter 2022

Fall 2021

Summer 2021

Spring 2021

Winter 2021

Fall 2020

Summer 2020

Spring 2020

Winter 2020

Fall 2019

Summer 2019

Spring 2019

Winter 2019

September-October 2018

JulyAugust 2018

MayJune 2018

March April 2018

January-February 2018

November/December 2017

September/October 2017

July/August 2017

May-June 2017

March-April 2017

January February 2017

November December 2016

October 2016

July August 2016

June 2016

March April 2016

January February 2016

November/December 2015

September/October 2015

July August 2015

May-June 2015

March-April 2015

January-February 2015

November - December 2014

September October 2014

Intersaw Guide 2014

July August 2014

May June 2014

March/April 2014

January/February 2014

November/December 2013

September/October 2013

August/September 2013

May/June 2013

March/April 2013

January/February 2013

November/December 2012

September/October 2012

July/August 2012

May/June 2012

March/April 2012

January/February 2012

November/December 2011

September/October 2011

July/August 2011

May/June 2011

April 2011

January/February 2011

November/December 2010

September/October 2010

July/August 2010

May/June 2010

March/April 2010

January/February 2010

November/December 2009

September/October 2009

August 2009

June 2009

March 2009

December 2008

August 08


Library