“Global Challenge, Global Solutions” is a series hosted on Climasphere highlighting inspiring, innovative, and creative global solutions to the challenge of climate change in the lead up to the next major climate conference, COP22. These solutions have been provided by members of the Earth To Marrakech coalition, a group of more than 50 media organizations, civil society groups, and businesses from around the world who are raising their voices in a collective call to move from words to action on climate change. Let’s send a message, from Earth To Marrakech: The solutions to climate change are out there, and they’re inspiring.
Green Belt Limits Sprawl and Boosts Food Security
Medellín’s city greening project, the Metropolitan Green Belt, is tackling sprawl while creating recreational areas, parkland, and food growing spaces. The city has so far planted more than 120,000 native plants and trees on 85 hectares of land. Of this rehabilitated land, nearly 2,500 m2 has been transformed into terraced gardens, mitigating risks of climate change by better protecting the land, and the residents who live on it, from landslides while providing residents with spaces to grow food. The Green Belt also seeks to better connect existing residents to the city by upgrading informal homes and introducing public services and transit options in the settlements at the urban edge. The city aims to involve locals as much as possible in the project’s planning and execution, having so far provided employment to more than 5,000 residents.
RELEVANCE OF SOLUTION
Medellín’s social inequality is visible in the landscape, as many low-income residents occupy unsafe land, prone to landslides, on steep slopes on the outskirts of the city. With the Metropolitan Green Belt project, the city seeks to provide safer living conditions for its marginalized groups, while also protecting the city’s crucial natural resources.
TRIPLE BOTTOM LINE:
ENVIRONMENTAL
More than 100,000 native plants and trees planted as part of the project are helping to restore ecosystems on sloping edges of the city.
SOCIAL
The project has engaged more than 64,000 community members, and the project’s agroecological gardens have benefitted more than 300 families.
ECONOMIC
The project seeks to improve livelihoods and encourage entrepreneurship among the city’s marginalized residents.