Published on Sustainable Cities

National and local leaders in Latin America: Sustainable cities are resilient cities

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Cities are critical engines of global growth. But as cities grow, they’re increasingly vulnerable to climate change and natural disasters. 
 
The year of 2017 was one of many recent reminders of that “new normal”—from Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria that pounded coastal United States and the Caribbean to the severe drought that struck Somali, which led to the displacement and even life losses of individuals and families.

 


Even when lives are not threatened, livelihoods are at stake: Without major action taken to invest in urban resilience, climate change may force up to 77 million urban residents back into poverty by 2030.

[Report: Investing in Urban Resilience]

This helps explain why many city leaders attending the World Urban Forum in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia this week resonate with the same message: Sustainable cities are resilient cities.

 


At the forum, we spoke with national, municipal, and civil society leaders on the issue of urban resilience—including ministers and mayors from three Latin American countries, a region full of emerging cities and aspiring populations that are no stranger to hurricanes, earthquakes, and other natural disasters. 
 
Watch the videos below and leave a comment to let us know what your city may be doing differently to enhance urban resilience.
  [[avp asset="/content/dam/videos/ecrgp/2018/jun-20/jose_corral_hd.flv"]]/content/dam/videos/ecrgp/2018/jun-20/jose_corral_hd.flv[[/avp]]
Jose Corral (in Spanish only)
Mayor of Santa Fe, Argentina
 
 
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Authors

Sameh Wahba

Regional Director, Sustainable Development, Europe and Central Asia, The World Bank

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