The paper proposes some reflections resulting from the author’s ongo-ing research activities on Green Infrastructure and Ecosystem Services, which, when integrated into urban planning, can improve the supply of goods and ser-vices for the well-being of society, by incorporating the ability to adapt to current risks and future climate change, reducing the ecological footprint and ecological debts, while improving resilience, health, and quality of life, and leaving no one behind, in line with the UN 2030 Agenda. Despite the relevance of the topic and the critical feature of the “time factor” in addressing a climate crisis requiring urgent responses and far-sighted policy choices, and the numerous international documents and commitments, scientific advances have not yet produced adequate operational impacts, which are fully integrated and widespread in policies, strate-gies, and actions at a local level, in order to move towards the necessary ecological transition in the perspective of integral ecology. Nevertheless, in the EU scenario, there are many interesting experiences aimed at an ecological transition that goes beyond the technological and energy transition and concerns foremost the cli-mate issue and the exit from the fossil fuel system, but also the dramatic loss of biodiversity, conflicts over access and use of resources, the international geopo-litical instability, and profound economic and social inequalities. In this ongoing process, cities are drivers of innovation and, through the selected case studies pro-posed later in this paper, it is possible to highlight the lessons learned in terms of critical and/or success factors; identify some guidelines to adapt possible solutions to the specific issues to be addressed in different contexts; suggest future research and in-depth perspectives.

Implementing the Ecological Transition: Green Infrastructure and Ecosystem Services as Key Factors for Urban Planning Innovative Paradigms / Pultrone, Gabriella. - 1272:(2025), pp. 138-150. [10.1007/978-3-031-82927-7_9]

Implementing the Ecological Transition: Green Infrastructure and Ecosystem Services as Key Factors for Urban Planning Innovative Paradigms

Gabriella Pultrone
2025-01-01

Abstract

The paper proposes some reflections resulting from the author’s ongo-ing research activities on Green Infrastructure and Ecosystem Services, which, when integrated into urban planning, can improve the supply of goods and ser-vices for the well-being of society, by incorporating the ability to adapt to current risks and future climate change, reducing the ecological footprint and ecological debts, while improving resilience, health, and quality of life, and leaving no one behind, in line with the UN 2030 Agenda. Despite the relevance of the topic and the critical feature of the “time factor” in addressing a climate crisis requiring urgent responses and far-sighted policy choices, and the numerous international documents and commitments, scientific advances have not yet produced adequate operational impacts, which are fully integrated and widespread in policies, strate-gies, and actions at a local level, in order to move towards the necessary ecological transition in the perspective of integral ecology. Nevertheless, in the EU scenario, there are many interesting experiences aimed at an ecological transition that goes beyond the technological and energy transition and concerns foremost the cli-mate issue and the exit from the fossil fuel system, but also the dramatic loss of biodiversity, conflicts over access and use of resources, the international geopo-litical instability, and profound economic and social inequalities. In this ongoing process, cities are drivers of innovation and, through the selected case studies pro-posed later in this paper, it is possible to highlight the lessons learned in terms of critical and/or success factors; identify some guidelines to adapt possible solutions to the specific issues to be addressed in different contexts; suggest future research and in-depth perspectives.
2025
Inglese
1272
Moraci F, Bevilacqua C, Pizzimenti P
Ecological and Digital Transition in Cities. NMP 2024.
138
150
13
978-3-031-82927-7
978-3-031-82926-0
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-031-82927-7_9
SPRINGER
Cham
SVIZZERA
Esperti anonimi
Ecosystem Services cdot Ecological Transition cdot Green Infrastructure
This research work is the result of the research activities conducted within the following PNRR research project funded by the European Union – NextGenerationEU: “Pilot Project 4.6.1 “Climate adaptation plans for the reduction of the ecological footprint and ecologi-cal debt, aimed at improving the conservation and transformation response in terms of resilience and quality of life in the Calabrian and Lucanian urban and territorial systems” (Goal 4.6-Plan-ning for Climate Change to boost cultural and natural heritage: demand-oriented ecosystem ser-vices based on enabling ICT and AI technologies-Tech4You Innovation Ecosystem), Finanziato dall’Unione Europea-Next Generation EU, Missione 4 Componente 2-CUP C33C22000290006 (ECS_00000009).
Internazionale
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
Pultrone, Gabriella
2 Contributo in Volume::2.1 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
1
268
Implementing the Ecological Transition: Green Infrastructure and Ecosystem Services as Key Factors for Urban Planning Innovative Paradigms / Pultrone, Gabriella. - 1272:(2025), pp. 138-150. [10.1007/978-3-031-82927-7_9]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12318/157146
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