Source: BMWSB / HGEsch
A Congress with the Executive Director of UN-Habitat, representatives of OECD and national governments and local authorities attending would have allowed for an intensive and public multi-level discussion on how the policy levels could support each other in practice.
If the Congress would have followed the scheme of the National Urban Policy Programme (OECD, UN-Habitat) it would have used the diagnostic presented by Schellnhuber and other speakers to discuss policy formulations with clear and result based actions aiming at risk mitigation and goal achievement. Instead, panellists mainly presented their own activities and the government presented the Urban Greenspace Federal Prize 2022 awards. No doubts, this is all important: Political dialogue is part of opinion formation in a democracy and the Prize is a gratification for achievements and at the same time it inspires future action. However, by the soft and sterling approach the linkage to the hard facts of the diagnosis got lost. Participants left without knowing what needs to be done by them.
On the day before the Congress the German government hosted in the nearby city of Potsdam the first-ever G7 Ministerial Meeting on Sustainable Urban Development. The Communiqué of the meeting doesn’t include major new commitments but the fact of the first-ever event itself and the fact that Japan, next year’s G7 Chair will continue the work of the German chairmanship can be considered a success. In that respect, the German government organized –with style– two successful meetings within one week. But, if the achievements are ambitious enough for ‘Shaping Transformation and Achieving Urban Resilience’ is a different story.
On the day after the Congress German newspapers weren’t full with reports about the congress. Instead, Berlin’s leading daily ‘Tagesspiegel’ published a double interview with Franziska Giffey and Anne Hidalgo, the mayors of Berlin and Paris. Both did not attend the Congress and were not invited to attend the G7 Ministerial Meeting. They met in the same week in Berlin at ‘Q Berlin’a conference of metropolitan cities. There they discussed their future cooperation including climate change as a key challenge for their cities. Wow, they discussed the same subjects as the Congress and G7! Something must have gone wrong in multi-level communication and cooperation if two prominent mayors like Ms Giffey and Ms Hidalgo meet in Berlin separately from important national and international meetings addressing their cities' challenges.
Working myself in supporting multi-level cooperation between local, national and international levels I know that many efforts are needed but it's worth the investment because it can lead to more effective and efficient multi-level cooperation.
Source: Tagesspiegel, 17 September 2022