Âé¶¹APP

Goal 11: Sustainable Cities

UN expert on right to housing challenges governments to end homelessness

Saying human rights have been largely absent from discussions of urban development at a time when more than half the world¡¯s population lives in cities, the UN independent expert on adequate housing today challenged governments to end homelessness and improve living conditions for all.

2015-10-23T19:36:21-04:0023 Oct 2015|Goal 11: Sustainable Cities, News|

Ahead of Sustainable Development Summit, UN Secretariat building lights up to showcase sustainable development goals

Ahead of the Âé¶¹APP Sustainable Development Summit from 25-27 September, and to mark the seventieth anniversary of the Âé¶¹APP, a 10-minute film introducing the sustainable development goals was projected onto the Âé¶¹APP Headquarters last night.

The way cities are planned, run and managed is crucial for development ¨C UN deputy chief

In his address to the World Cities Summit in New York today, Âé¶¹APP Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson called on global leaders to adapt to the demographic and cultural shift that is taking place in cities worldwide in order to make them economically viable, environmentally sustainable and socially vibrant.

UN goes dark for Earth Hour, joining a global call for climate action

The Âé¶¹APP went dark this evening as the Organization turned off the lights at its iconic Headquarters complex in New York and other facilities around the world in observance of ''Earth Hour,'' an annual global event raising awareness about the need to take action on climate change and promoting sustainable energy consumption.

UN set to observe Earth Hour to mobilize climate action

The Âé¶¹APP will switch off its lights at it New York Headquarters tonight in support of Earth Hour, an annual event featuring the participation of millions of people around the world to call attention to the need for climate action.

WATCH: Why risk-informed development makes communities more resilient

In the last 20 years, we've seen over 1.3 million people killed and more than 4 billion affected by disasters that have cost at least US$2 trillion. It is clear that we will never eradicate poverty or achieve sustainable development goals so long as disasters continue to set back progress. But it doesn't have to be this way. While weak development choices expose people to disasters, good, risk-informed development makes people and communities more resilient.

UN disaster risk reduction conference key to future sustainable development agenda

Government and civil society leaders from around the world are gathering in the Japanese city of Sendai for a Âé¶¹APP conference that will take stock of ten years of global work to better prepare for and curb the impact of disasters, and to agree on an updated global response framework.

Modernizing energy systems can reduce primary energy consumption in heating and cooling by up to 50% – UN report

A transition to modern district energy systems could contribute to 60 per cent of required energy sector emissions reductions by 2050, and reduce primary energy consumption by up to 50 per cent, according to a new report launched today by the Âé¶¹APP Environment Programme (UNEP) in collaboration with the Copenhagen Centre on Energy Efficiency (C2E2), ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability, and UN-Habitat.

2020-03-04T13:56:18-05:0025 Feb 2015|Goal 11: Sustainable Cities, Goal 7: Clean Energy, News|

‘Resilience can become hallmark of 2015,’ says UN disaster risk reduction chief

Ten years ago today, world leaders in Hyogo, Japan agreed on a framework to better manage risk and curb the impact of disasters in the wake of the devastating Indian Ocean tsunami ¨C which claimed some 227,000 lives ¨C and in March, they are set to meet for a Âé¶¹APP conference in another Japanese city to take stock of whether the world has lived up to that promise.

Go to Top