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Stockholm, Scandinavia, the world's highest standard of living?
www.thelocal.se ^ | 04/04/2010 | AFP/The Local

Posted on 04/06/2010 1:51:30 PM PDT by WesternCulture

"The environment here is good, it's beautiful, it's clean," summed up Anna Elig, a 37 year-old Stockholm dweller pushing her eight-week-old daughter's carriage through the city centre on a cool, sunny afternoon.

"All the moms and dads who are on parental leave go out for walks around the city ... This wouldn't work in Paris," she chuckled, strolling along the broad walkway near the sparkling water.

With 40 percent of the inner city composed of green spaces, the Baltic Sea archipelago city seems a natural place to begin the European Commission's Green Capital initiative.

"I wasn't surprised," said Katarina Eckerberg, a professor of political science and head of an environmental institute.

"Stockholm has a highly developed environmental policy, and any foreigner who comes here is probably surprised that we can benefit from nature as much as we do in the very center of town," she said.

Revelling in nature is a way of life in Sweden, so deeply engrained in the national character that widespread environmental activism already began here as long as 50 years ago.

"Maybe it's because (Sweden) is so sparsely populated and many of us have summer cottages, that Swedes have such a high regard for the environment," Gustaf Landahl, who heads Stockholm's environment and planning department, told AFP.

Even in Stockholm, virtually all residents live within walking distance of lakes, hiking trails and other natural settings, and stepping into a pair of cross-country skis outside their front door is commonplace.

It's a capital that "all along had the privilege of being a town built on water," said Eckerberg, and Stockholmers are ready to defend this privilege.

In the 1960s, when pollution forced Stockholmers to stop fishing or swimming in downtown areas, a bottom-up movement emerged to clean up city waters, Eckerberg said.

Today, the salmon caught there is edible and swimming poses no health risk.

But what impressed the European Commission, the EU executive body, was not what they could see, but what they couldn't.

"I spoke to the evaluation committee and I think what impressed them the most is how we've been able to reduce our CO2 emissions," Landahl said.

Indeed, the city brought environment-damaging carbon dioxide emissions down to 3.4 tonnes per capita in 2009 and hopes to slash that to 3.0 tonnes by 2015.

In Sweden as a whole, CO2 emissions are only six tonnes per capita, as compared to the European average of 10 tonnes per capita.

Stockholm's efforts have focussed on the two biggest environmental culprits: road transport and heating, which together account for 43 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions in the EU.

In a city where freezing winter temperatures can last up to five months, this was a challenge. One solution was investing in district heating, which hooks up 75 percent of buildings in the capital to central heating plants that run primarily on renewables and also produce electricity.

And in the transport sector, "we've been able to reduce emissions even though the municipality has grown," Landahl said proudly, noting that in the rest of Europe transport emissions tend to rise as cities expand.

Stockholm officials tirelessly campaign against residents using their own cars, and even during the long, cold winters 19 percent of Stockholmers bike or walk to work, according to figures from 2007. In summer, that number jumps to 33 percent.

Many others in the spread-out capital region also ride public transport, to the point that figures published by the city show that the number of users continues to rise each month.

Despite the award, there are those who feel the EU's first Green Capital could do more.

"Even in Stockholm, there is a lot of discussion and disputes about whether some current developments are in line with environmental considerations or not," Eckerberg noted.

A major problem, she said, was the booming real estate development along the waterfront that at points has blocked public access and risks endangering the delicate Baltic Sea ecosystem.

"There's much more to be done," she said. "More could always be done."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: europe; nannystate; scandinavia; socialism; standardofliving; stockholm; sweden; welfarestate
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1 posted on 04/06/2010 1:51:30 PM PDT by WesternCulture
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To: WesternCulture

lol.

“Standard of Living” on whose scale?


2 posted on 04/06/2010 1:53:05 PM PDT by GeronL (There is only a "Happily ever after" for you if you're the one writing your own script)
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To: WesternCulture

I like Stockholm. Beer is expensive there, though.


3 posted on 04/06/2010 1:54:01 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: WesternCulture

The dingbat will be having to wear a burka soon.


4 posted on 04/06/2010 1:57:19 PM PDT by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: WesternCulture

I wonder how many ROP no-go zones Stockholm has, like the ones in Malmo ...


5 posted on 04/06/2010 1:57:26 PM PDT by bassmaner (Hey commies: I am a white male, and I am guilty of NOTHING! Sell your 'white guilt' elsewhere.)
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To: WesternCulture

With the exception of Malmo-istan, most of Sweden is very homogenous. i.e. cultural diversity in most cases lowers the standard of living and quality of life.


6 posted on 04/06/2010 1:58:27 PM PDT by Frantzie (McCain=Obama's friend. McCain called AMERICANS against amnesty - "racists")
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To: GeronL

“Standard of Living” on whose scale?

- I don’t know where you live, but believe it or not, Stockholm wages are pretty impressive. Few cities can compete.


7 posted on 04/06/2010 1:58:52 PM PDT by WesternCulture
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To: WesternCulture


What about the muslim infestation and gang rapes of white women? Nothing about that in the article...
8 posted on 04/06/2010 1:58:59 PM PDT by jimbo123
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To: WesternCulture

Oh please. That is not the only gauge of Standard of Living. I bet they tax everything to death.


9 posted on 04/06/2010 2:01:27 PM PDT by GeronL (There is only a "Happily ever after" for you if you're the one writing your own script)
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To: 1rudeboy

but it’s clean beer.


10 posted on 04/06/2010 2:01:30 PM PDT by wolfcreek (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lsd7DGqVSIc)
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To: Frantzie; WesternCulture
WC, Isn't it true that most of the left-wing South American exiles and Mediterrenean peoples have either intermarried with the Swedes or gone home to their original countries? Have the Slavs that have immigrated to Sweden since the 1960s intermarried or stayed apart as an ethnic group?

I once dated a girl who was born in Colombia, but who moved to Stockholm as a child with her mother. She considered herself Swedish through and through.

11 posted on 04/06/2010 2:02:18 PM PDT by Clemenza (Remember our Korean War Veterans)
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To: pissant; Frantzie; bassmaner

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2328696/posts


12 posted on 04/06/2010 2:02:23 PM PDT by WesternCulture
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To: WesternCulture

Someday I’d like to visit Scandanavia.


13 posted on 04/06/2010 2:02:34 PM PDT by midnightcat
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To: WesternCulture
Green is the metric? No thanks.

Besides, it's not even accurate. If the highest standard of living is determined by who is greener, shouldn't it be some naked tribe in the Amazon somewhere?

14 posted on 04/06/2010 2:03:09 PM PDT by LibWhacker (America awake!)
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To: WesternCulture

One solution was investing in district heating, which hooks up 75 percent of buildings in the capital to central heating plants that run primarily on renewables and also produce electricity.

So...if that plant breaks down for any reason, is sabotaged, bombed by enemies, etc....hundreds of thousands of Sweedes freeze to death. Brilliant!


15 posted on 04/06/2010 2:03:10 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: WesternCulture

Hmmmm. Isn’t it Sweden that has an alarming (but apparently not to Swedes) suicide rate?


16 posted on 04/06/2010 2:03:29 PM PDT by luvbach1 (Worse than we could have imagined.)
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To: WesternCulture

High wages, high wage taxes. And high road taxes, gas taxes, high sales tax, sewer tax, environmental tax, television tax, dog tax, packaging tax, flying tax, and whatever other tax they can come up with. Heckuva deal.


17 posted on 04/06/2010 2:04:44 PM PDT by bergmeid (Fumigate Washington NOW!!)
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To: midnightcat

“Someday I’d like to visit Scandanavia”

- Most welcome.

I’ll take you on a tour in my fully Volvo V70 to places like Dalsland, Värmland and Bohuslän!


18 posted on 04/06/2010 2:04:57 PM PDT by WesternCulture
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To: WesternCulture
On the other hand, a Liberal/Socialist mindset is a defect that is not necessarily passed on to the offspring..

LOL! Thank God it is not.

19 posted on 04/06/2010 2:05:03 PM PDT by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: WesternCulture
There are rules on this Forum about mentioning Sweden :


20 posted on 04/06/2010 2:05:33 PM PDT by CholeraJoe (The Last of the Bohicans!)
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