4 Cities Harming the Environment and What They're Doing About ItMuch of the world's pollution comes from major cities. But the worst contributors are coming up with some smart solutions.

ByJohn Boitnott

contribut意见表达的企业家狗万官方ors are their own.

Cities are a key contributor to climate change.

As home to56%of the world's population,citiesproduce more than 70% of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. High levels of economic activity mean high energy use, particularly in the building and transportation sectors.

Building cities takes significant resources, and massive highways and parking lots do not capture carbon or prevent flooding as trees and wetlands do.

Related:What Makes Smart Cities Smart

How cities are bad for the environment

As a result, cities produce significant amounts of air pollution. About86%of people living in cities have seven times greater exposure to air pollutants than World Health Organization guidelines. This excess exposure impacts physical health and can even make youdumber.

Cities also produce lots of waste and will keep making more. By 2050, cities will discard3.4 billion tonsof garbage. Not only does it take up valuable land, but waste also produces methane, making it responsible for 5% of GHG emissions globally.

While there are about14,000cities around the world contributing to this problem, a recent report found that 25 mega cities (almost half of them in China) produce52%of global GHG emissions.

Here's a look at the big polluters and some green solutions they're employing to make these sprawling, urban areas cleaner and more livable.

  1. Air pollution in Beijing

Home to around 21 million people, Beijing is one of the top 10 polluters, primarily due to industrial buildings and on-road transportation. For this reason, air pollution has been a significant area of focus for Beijing since the2008 Olympics.

Entrepreneurs inChinaare working to help people deal with toxic air, launching companies that create everything from air filters for homes, which use sensors to detect pollution and fans to direct that pollution out of the home, to bottled air designed to give people a hit of oxygen on particularly polluted days.

These startups may be doing wonders for individual health, but there's still an opportunity for businesses to help prevent pollution by increasing energy efficiency ordecarbonizing transport.

  1. Transportation emissions in Los Angeles

Los Angeles is known for its sprawling, 6-lane freeways and epic traffic jams. Like Beijing, on-road transportation accounts for a substantial amount of Los Angeles's GHG emissions,19%to be exact.

Gasonline-powered private vehicles and industrial trucking that use fossil fuels account for most of LA's on-road pollution, including GHG emissions, air pollutants, and heat and noise pollution.

But new technologies are in the works that help get people where they need to go while reducing private vehicle trips.Micromobilityprojects, such as bike shares and scooters, allow people to ditch cars and rideshares for shorter trips using these smaller, zero-emission vehicles. Apps likeMoovit, a map platform that improves access to public transportation by giving live updates on public transport services, get people out of cars and onto environmentally friendly transit options.

The government is also being proactive. Last month, California air quality officials released a bold climate plan that requires California's emissions to be reduced by at least 40% by 2030 and 85% by 2045. The plan includes a rule that all new passenger vehicle sales in California will be zero-emission or long-range hybrid by 2035.

Related:Mercedes Unveils First Heavy-Duty Electric Delivery Truck

  1. Waste in New York

While buildings and transportation account for most of New York's GHG emissions, waste comes in third, accounting for5%of the Big Apple's total GHG emissions. In general, Americans wastea lot. The average American produces 2 kg of waste daily, up to 809 kg annually.

The good news for businesses is that sustainable waste strategies create ten times more jobs than sending waste to landfills or burning it. Today New York City is only recycling17%of its waste and composting 1.4%. Food waste has been a particularly stubborn problem for the city. Despite government-backed food waste challenges and bills curbing restaurant waste, the city continues to struggle asadvocatescall for more robust, reliable, and accessible composting.

Companies are developing technologies to combat this food waste problem.One startupcreated a process to grind up old food and use digestive enzymes to turn it into fertilizer within three hours. Other companies are working to stop the problem at their source withZero Waste Manufacturing. This strategy centers on reducing and reusing materials throughout the supply chain to achieve optimal levels of consumption.

Related:How to Start a Waste Management Company

  1. Building efficiency in Frankfurt

In Frankfurt, Germany, industrial, commercial, and residential buildings contribute substantially to GHG emissions.

Increasing efficiency can play a major role in reducing these emissions.Smart cityinitiatives are one-way cities like Frankfurt increase their efficiency and improve their quality of life.Smart City Frankfurtworked with businesses, scientists, and citizens to identify 12 priorities that needed attention. They included intelligent traffic control, which reduces emissions from idling, smart heating for houses, which reduces unnecessary energy use, and improved environmental and health data.

Not only do these initiatives help cities reduce emissions, but they also hold opportunities for new businesses to jump in and help develop new technologies. As global temperatures rise, cities will find themselves with new problems to manage, and demand for smart solutions will grow.

Related:Here's How Smart Cites are Going to Open Business Opportunities For People Dealing in the Latest Technology;

If you want to know more about how your own city ranks in air pollution, check outIQ Air.

Wavy Line
John Boitnott

Entrepreneur Leadership Network VIP

Journalist, Digital Media Consultant and Investor

John Boitnott is a longtime digital media consultant and journalist living in San Francisco. He's written for Venturebeat, USA Today and FastCompany.

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