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posted by CoolHand on Tuesday February 16 2016, @08:38PM   Printer-friendly
from the living-the-dream dept.

Very few carbon-based lifeforms are inhabiting the United Arab Emirates' revolutionary yet unrealized zero-carbon city:

Years from now passing travellers may marvel at the grandeur and the folly of the futuristic landscape on the edges of Abu Dhabi: the barely occupied office block, the deserted streets, the vast tracts of undeveloped land and – most of all – the abandoned dream of a zero-carbon city. Masdar City, when it was first conceived a decade ago, was intended to revolutionise thinking about cities and the built environment.

Now the world's first planned sustainable city – the marquee project of the United Arab Emirates' (UAE) plan to diversify the economy from fossil fuels - could well be the world's first green ghost town. As of this year - when Masdar was originally scheduled for completion - managers have given up on the original goal of building the world's first planned zero-carbon city.

Masdar City is nowhere close to zeroing out its greenhouse gas emissions now, even at a fraction of its planned footprint. And it will not reach that goal even if the development ever gets fully built, the authorities admitted. "We are not going to try to shoehorn renewable energy into the city just to justify a definition created within a boundary," said Chris Wan, the design manager for Masdar City. "As of today, it's not a net zero future," he said. "It's about 50%."

When Masdar City began, in 2006, the project was touted as a model for a green mixed-use urban landscape: a global hub for the cleantech industry, with 50,000 residents and 40,000 commuters. Foster + Partners designed a car-free city scape, with Jetson-style driverless electric cars shuttling passengers between buildings incorporating built-in shades and kitted out with smart technologies to resist the scorching desert heat, and keep cooling costs down. Mubadala, Abu Dhabi's state-owned investment company, pledged financial support to the estimated $22bn experiment in urban design.

Ten years on, however, only a fraction of the town has been built - less than 5% of the original six square km "greenprint", as Wan called it. The completion date has been pushed back to 2030. [...] The pioneering autonomous transport system - which was originally supposed to stretch to 100 stations - was scrapped after the first two stops. There is a bike-sharing station – though it's a good 10 miles away from Abu Dhabi, and there are no bike paths. [...] [Chris Wan] maintained it was important to look at Masdar City within the context of the other renewable energy holdings of the parent company. Among Mubadala's other holdings, Masdar Clean Energy is developing the Shams solar farm.

Some more background on Masdar City (مدينة مصدر).


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  • (Score: 2) by Gravis on Wednesday February 17 2016, @09:54PM

    by Gravis (4596) on Wednesday February 17 2016, @09:54PM (#305968)

    And the chemistry is what makes it less than green. Many types of recycling you end up with toxic nastiness left over.

    if you end up with anything unwanted that isn't a pure element, you aren't finished with the recycling process.

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  • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Thursday February 18 2016, @11:21AM

    by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Thursday February 18 2016, @11:21AM (#306277) Homepage Journal

    Arsenic is a pure element and also quite toxic, just as an example.

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    • (Score: 2) by Gravis on Thursday February 18 2016, @12:10PM

      by Gravis (4596) on Thursday February 18 2016, @12:10PM (#306288)

      sure, plenty of elements are toxic to humans but doesn't mean they aren't perfectly useful to make chemicals we want. Just add a Gallium atom to your Arsenic atom and suddenly you have Gallium arsenide which is a valuable semiconductor.