1. The Role of Funding, Financing and Emerging Technologies in delivering and managing infrastructure for the 21st Century
- Author
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Schooling, Jennifer, Geddes, Rick, Frawley, Dee Dee, Mair, Robert J, O'Rourke, Thomas D, Powrie, William, Soga, Kenichi, and Threlfall, Richard
- Subjects
net zero ,infrastructure delivery ,technology ,infrastructure ,infrastructure asset management ,resilience - Abstract
The UK Engineering and Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC) and the US National Science Foundation (NSF) supported a Workshop entitled, The Role of Funding, Financing and Emerging Technologies in Delivering and Managing Infrastructure for the 21st Century. The Workshop was held in New York City from the 11th to the 15th of July 2022. It included 30 participants invited by US members of the organizing committee, and 25 invited by UK members as well as online participants. The Workshop assembled a multidisciplinary group of international experts from academia, policy, and practice to explore how to improve infrastructure delivery through innovative funding and financing as well as emerging technologies. This Report captures the discussion and narratives arising from the Workshop and presents recommendations for policy, industry and future research. The Workshop focused on the interconnections between resilience, net-zero carbon and social equity within the context of infrastructure funding and financing. However, each challenge is examined separately in this Report for clarity. The complex interconnections across those issues are acknowledged throughout, with emphasis on the systems and systems-of-systems nature of those challenges. Although this Report addresses challenges related to infrastructure delivery and resilience, and to historical inequities of infrastructure provision and services, challenges related to climate change are considered the most urgent and affect all of the others. Time is running out to address carbon emissions. The window of opportunity to keep an increase in global temperature to 1.5C in reach and to avoid the worst impacts of global warming is closing fast – at best we have less than seven years to halve current global emissions1. The built environment is estimated to contribute from 39% (UN, 2017) to 70% (WRI, 2021) of carbon emissions depending on how emissions are allocated by sector.
- Published
- 2023
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