Is Copenhagen the World's Most Sustainable City?

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • Is Copenhagen the world's most sustainable city? It aims to be carbon neutral by 2025 - and here's how it's doing it. Subscribe: freeth.ink/youtube-subscribe-...
    By 2050, 70% of the world’s population will live in urban areas (up from 50% now). With the climate crisis worsening, how can we support urbanization in a sustainable way? Copenhagen, Denmark is a city implementing strategies that could be a model for the future of cities.
    Climate change is driven by carbon emissions, so Copenhagen is embracing green energy, public transportation, and environmentalism as keys to urban sustainability. If it gets to net zero emissions, it could provide a roadmap for green cities worldwide. 2/3 of the world's carbon emissions come from cities, and with many countries in the developing world undergoing urbanization at the same time as economic development, urban sustainable development is an issue of high importance.
    What do you think - what global city is the best template for the city of the future? Or do you prefer rural living? Let us know what you think in the comments and stay tuned for more stories in Freethink's new original series the Future of Cities.
    For more stories profiling pioneers of science and tech innovation, subscribe to Freethink on CZcams: freeth.ink/youtube-subscribe-toc
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 443

  • @freethink
    @freethink  Před 4 lety +96

    How should we make cities more sustainable?

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +14

      @@aaronberta3958 That would definitely help making living there more sustainable! The high cost of living in cities has a lot of people commuting for hours in many places or moving to smaller ones. Making it more affordable to live closer to work would cut emissions and help people continue to move there. And more homeless shelters would certainly help both the urban environment and people in need.

    • @aaronberta3958
      @aaronberta3958 Před 4 lety +6

      @@freethink it definitely would!

    • @giuseppenativo2123
      @giuseppenativo2123 Před 4 lety +11

      The first thing is to reduce the number of vehicles on the streets, everywhere. Before the mass production of cars, people used to walk, used bicycles and streetcars. To be dependent from this vehicles changed the habits of the population and opened the road to foundation cities, sprawl and toxic pollution/energy wasting.

    • @dailymoney5917
      @dailymoney5917 Před 4 lety +6

      The first step is to make public transportation and then reduce motorized vehicles ... If the above has gone well then make a green building and build green land for the public

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +5

      ​@@dailymoney5917 Good point! Cars are responsible for most air pollution in cities (auto.howstuffworks.com/percentage-of-air-pollution-due-to-cars.htm). Hopefully more cities improve public transit and create walkable neighborhoods. Along with a higher percentage of cars being electric, we could drastically reduce both greenhouse gases and local air pollution produced by cities in the coming years.

  • @Jl777100
    @Jl777100 Před 4 lety +185

    They mean business when they say that the residents of Copenhagen are trying to become a clean city. When I was with my Danish friend walking around Copenhagen I put a plastic bottle in the regular thrash can. He looked at me and asked me what I was doing, proceeds to take out the bottle, and places it in the recycling machine. He then looks at me and says: "this is how we do it in Denmark."

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +24

      Model citizen!

    • @Jl777100
      @Jl777100 Před 4 lety +6

      @@nielsenn7012 Nope, he is from Southern Jutlant.

    • @peterzichau6994
      @peterzichau6994 Před 3 lety +10

      Because you get money when you put it in the machine.

    • @mariusmatei2946
      @mariusmatei2946 Před 2 lety +6

      @@peterzichau6994 that's an incentive, but not the reason!!

    • @britneyb8876
      @britneyb8876 Před rokem +1

      Wish everyone did this

  • @Maaarrina
    @Maaarrina Před 4 lety +185

    Was in Copenhagen last week! Shocked to see how many people bike and how clean the city in general is. The people are incredibly nice and kind as well. Think Copenhagen might just be the best city I’ve ever visited by far.

    • @sillygoose18282
      @sillygoose18282 Před 4 lety +1

      The clean part is not true in the entire city but rest of it is defekt true and many people bike abd love it too.

    • @cloroxbleach4227
      @cloroxbleach4227 Před 4 lety +6

      @@cristianotorres7847 Someone had a bad day. Just jealous.

    • @davidjacobsen308
      @davidjacobsen308 Před 4 lety +8

      @@cristianotorres7847 ... that's not my experience of Copenhagen. You're incredibly negative about the city if you live there then why not leave?

    • @cloroxbleach4227
      @cloroxbleach4227 Před 4 lety

      @@cristianotorres7847 lmao you aint the only 1.

    • @Ducksonalltube
      @Ducksonalltube Před 4 lety +1

      @@cristianotorres7847 Nogen trænger til en krammer 😳

  • @tehDropzzz
    @tehDropzzz Před 4 lety +179

    Leaving a comment here just so youtube algorithm can put this video higher and more people can see it!

  • @gildashounmanou4301
    @gildashounmanou4301 Před 4 lety +189

    As a non-Danish Copenhagener I'm so proud of my two bikes 😃

  • @wonderingmonitor1996
    @wonderingmonitor1996 Před 4 lety +252

    Copenhagen is really leading the way. I've been there in June (also off the beaten path) and can confirm it is a very liveable, green city. Not the cheapest place of course, but nothing in life is without a price. In my opinion, well worth the price: cool vibes, you can really tell that its inhabitants want to move in this sustainable direction. Still considering migrating so I can join in on their movement. 😊

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +4

      Wondering Monitor awesome, glad to hear your experience! Drop us a line if you do end up moving there :)

    • @mikeyestrada1674
      @mikeyestrada1674 Před 4 lety +3

      Wondering Monitor it’s cheap if you live in Denmark but for foreigners ppl can’t really afford it

    • @stefanrosquist
      @stefanrosquist Před 4 lety +18

      just a few things .. I live in Denmark and it is pricey because we get a high salary. (an uneducated worker get 15-20$ pr. hrs.) but we also have a high income tax, and the green initiatives are paid by the taxes not the company's so the prices of commodities are not affected by the green movement, we started on windmills in the early 90's, and people where laughing at us back then. and we have a lot of laws when building and designing so the carbon footprint it as low as possible.
      unfortunately the last 10 years we had a government that thought we done enough, so they slowed down on the green initiatives. that resulted in a decline in our hunt for green cites. but now we have a new goverment that has 70% carbon reduction (as of 1990) as a top priority
      and mikey ... no it is not cheap for Danes as well.. a bottle of coke is still 5$, but we are great at reusing our stuff, and everywhere you go or look there are shops and people that tell you to stop wasting food and reuse everything from plastic trays to electronics. we have 6 diffrent trash cans to sort our trash in.
      so no it is not cheap to live here for a dane either... but when we travel we feel like kings, because everything is sooo cheap

    • @wonderingmonitor1996
      @wonderingmonitor1996 Před 4 lety +3

      vilikkebruge google oh yes, I noticed the prices on everything. VAT is even higher than where I live now (25% in Denmark if I recall correctly?). I guess it also depends from person to person, but personally I don't mind paying extra tax for initiatives like these, of which we all benefit. Really liked the mindset that a lot of people seemed to share, a sense that we need to do this for all of us. Noticed it when talking to locals (young and old, common people and high educated, and also migrated Danes), in Copenhagen, and even in places like Køge and Gilleleje.

    • @stefanrosquist
      @stefanrosquist Před 4 lety +6

      @@wonderingmonitor1996 yes there is a flat 25% VAT on everything here (we are talking about removing it on organic food, so we can eat more healthy and eat less meat.) The labor cost are also pretty high, we also pay the highest tax on electricity in EU, but most people are either happy or content about it. besides we got free schools from 1st grade to PhD, free healthcare, it is such a blessing not to pay 400$ for an ambulance, or choose between my pension or a chemotherapy. so that is why most people are happy about the high tax levels.
      but what people often forget about the green energy sector is how many it employs. in Denmark we got Vestas a windmill company ( the largest in the world) it was just a small company in the 80's. but then we started to build windmills in the 90's and it gave Vestas and other Danish windmill company's lot of experience long time before other country's even heard the world renewable energy, and now it employs 17.000 people ( that is a lot in danish context). and the same with our heating system, we made that in the 80/90s, because of the high oil prices, so now it is pretty much our grabrage that warms us. facebook just opened a datacenter in Odense where the extra heat is going to the central heating system instead of going to the air. so everything is about reusing as much as you can

  • @Alkomp75
    @Alkomp75 Před 4 lety +20

    A city is not only the pipes , the buildings , the bikes , the waterways , the parks......above all , a city is its PEOPLE

  • @Ninjaeule97
    @Ninjaeule97 Před 4 lety +126

    Great video but there is a mistake in it. Carbon neutral doesn't mean that you preduce as much renewable energy as you have dirty energy, it means for every ton of CO2 you release you capture the same amout. Otherwise you could preduce 10GW of renewable energy which doesn't emit any carbon but still preduce 10GW using dirty energy which let's say emits 1000tons of CO2, which isn't net zero. You would need to capture these 1000tons of CO2 for example by planting trees or extracting CO2 where it is preduced and pumping it underground, only then you are really net zero.

    • @kristoffersparegodt420
      @kristoffersparegodt420 Před 4 lety +7

      Mario Toller. We need to make this the top comment

    • @DR34DL0RDD43DRA
      @DR34DL0RDD43DRA Před 4 lety +6

      Yep, I was thinking the same thing ! Thanks for the comment.

    • @cabritorico9691
      @cabritorico9691 Před 4 lety +4

      THANK YOU I saw that and I was like no fucking way that has gotta be fake

    • @wisperingiron3646
      @wisperingiron3646 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah. The idea of a carbon neutral city is kind of bs. I think that the improvements are important, but it is also a sort of green washing

    • @melanieyu894
      @melanieyu894 Před 2 lety

      Honestly yeah I was so confused I thought I got it wrong.

  • @Hussein_Nur
    @Hussein_Nur Před 4 lety +87

    Everyone wants what Copenhagen wants, there is just a lack of politicians like their mayor.

    • @MKiller5
      @MKiller5 Před 4 lety +6

      But as he said; that's up to the people living there, they have "chosen" a green mayor.

    • @Hussein_Nur
      @Hussein_Nur Před 4 lety +16

      @@MKiller5 exactly. But politicians dont usually do as they say. Its why politics is despised. Its full of deception. The citizens of Copenhagen are lucky that they have a mayor who sees himself solely as a representative o the public and not his pocket and self interest. :)

    • @a.westenholz4032
      @a.westenholz4032 Před 4 lety +4

      Politics in Denmark are generally a bit different in that one could say there is far more integrity as the norm. Which means that people end up trusting the system and society, and wanting to pay the high taxes that contribute to making solutions like this possible.

    • @ElectronicCalifornia
      @ElectronicCalifornia Před 4 lety +3

      People elect their mayors. Just like Americans voted for Trump who claims Climate Change is a hoax, but Americans voted for him anyway!

    • @MartinManscher
      @MartinManscher Před 2 lety

      The mayor resigned in a MeToo scandal the year after, so we may not want too many of his kind 😉

  • @SponzifyMee
    @SponzifyMee Před 4 lety +121

    Oh no... here come the 'HI I AM FROM DENMARK' people..
    For helvede

    • @Abbetmaan
      @Abbetmaan Před 4 lety +6

      Danskere i en nøddeskal

    • @JoohingDenSeje
      @JoohingDenSeje Před 4 lety +2

      Wow jeg er fra danmark og det her gør mig så stolt altså ejjj

    • @navnellernoget6014
      @navnellernoget6014 Před 4 lety +3

      SponzifyMee hvis du laver en video om Danmark, ja så gør dig parat til at 90% af kommentarerne er skrevet af danskere 😂

    • @azmike1956
      @azmike1956 Před 4 lety

      You're right, here I am!😆

  • @ryanbotha7256
    @ryanbotha7256 Před 4 lety +80

    These videos are always incredible, but this one really knocks it out the park.
    This serves as such an inspiration and light into what's possible. I live in a developing country at the moment, and something like this would prove massively useful and beneficial. It's making me think how I could start something similar and propose it to the cities in my country.
    Thank you guys

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +3

      Ryan Botha thanks so much! Glad you liked the video and that it inspired you. Let us know if you do end up pursuing those goals in your own country, we love sharing the cool stuff our subscribers are working on!

    • @martinrotvig
      @martinrotvig Před 4 lety +6

      The key to achieving stuff like this, is dealing with corruption. Denmark is the least corrupt nation in the world, which in return results in our population generally trusting the government and each other.

  • @lactllzol
    @lactllzol Před 4 lety +42

    This is such a good news, recently I have only seen news about terrible environmental impact. This gives hope to humanity that there are people who really try to do something to save the planet.
    Thank you for all the people that contribute their part in making this world a little bit better

    • @rachelgreenberg2573
      @rachelgreenberg2573 Před 4 lety +1

      thank goodness there is at least one example in the world of a group of humans acting smart. For me, as an American, the environmentally aware Copenhagen is almost beyond belief, and VERY refreshing.

  • @danielecostantini5757
    @danielecostantini5757 Před 3 lety +8

    I live here and I could not agree more with this beautiful portrait of cph. We moved from São Paulo, so quite a different scenario for me, my wife and our kids. we all cycle everyday, everywhere. it is full of green spaces. people are nice and friendly. Copenhagen is sustainable also because offers top-notch public educational and healthcare systems. The whole picture makes it clear why danish are always at the top of happiness ranking. they enjoy life in a high quality ecosystem. well done copenhageners ! and thanks Freethink for such a beautiful recap :)

  • @dhanipersaud6227
    @dhanipersaud6227 Před 4 lety +7

    Doesn't Copenhagen burn garbage to make power? They just opened a new garbage incinerator that generates electricity a few years ago. I think this video even briefly shows the plant.

    • @irrelevance3859
      @irrelevance3859 Před 3 lety

      Wow I've never heard of anywhere doing that

    • @dhanipersaud6227
      @dhanipersaud6227 Před 3 lety

      @@irrelevance3859 they just put a ski run on top of the plant that burns waste to make power czcams.com/video/IxDqBgWm2AA/video.html

    • @FranFerioli
      @FranFerioli Před 28 dny

      Yes, and there's an artificial ski slope on the incinerator. It's called CopenHill.

  • @susandaniel8075
    @susandaniel8075 Před 4 lety +2

    A great short video showing what needs to be done everyone!

  • @Prakhart4
    @Prakhart4 Před 4 lety +1

    Where the f was this channel i love it.. i came through CZcams adv. Nice channel keep it up..✌️

  • @priyapriyadarshini3146
    @priyapriyadarshini3146 Před 3 lety +2

    so informative and inspiring. Keep up the good work guys!

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 3 lety +2

      So glad you like it, thanks for watching!

  • @joanarodrigues2011
    @joanarodrigues2011 Před 4 lety +16

    I live in Copenhagen and I agree that is has come a long way! And it is def very green in comparison to most cities in the world. But there are 2 factors that play a major advantage.
    Population in Copenhagen is around 600 thousand people. And the city is very flat which makes it very easy to bike everywhere.
    I think that other cities around Europe that have way more population and are not so easy to bike have a much harder time in becoming more sustainable.
    But the Danish mentally def plays a role in the success of the city, and people that move here (just like me) get very inspired to become more sustainable.
    One problem that I still see in Denmark is the extreme use of plastic. For example most veggies in most supermarkets are wrapped up in plastic. And then when I get home after shopping I have so much plastic that I put in the recycling bin. But I would prefer not to have to use that plastic at all! So if Denmark manages to use less plastic they would be for sure a true sustainable country! ☺️

    • @anthropoceneclimatechange245
      @anthropoceneclimatechange245 Před rokem

      When did you immigrate into the country? Are you from the United States?

    • @FranFerioli
      @FranFerioli Před 28 dny

      There are many ways of doing it. For example, Austria has mountains, more difficult to bike, but a lot of hydropower.

  • @equiz
    @equiz Před 4 lety

    At what time is it coming the second episode??? :)

  • @ipamaj1gt
    @ipamaj1gt Před 4 lety +44

    I live in Denmark and I can tell you guys even 60, 70, 80 and 90 years old people use a bike instead of a car.

    • @lukasny8676
      @lukasny8676 Před 4 lety +2

      @300bpm first of all is it at bad thing that gas is expensive of it makes people bike instead? And secondly gas prices are the same outside the city, but people drive more there because the distances are to great

    • @ankjaer123
      @ankjaer123 Před 4 lety

      @300bpm Gas isn't $10 a gallon, it's more like $6 a gallon

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +2

      Inspiring!

    • @ipamaj1gt
      @ipamaj1gt Před 4 lety +2

      lukas ny lol it’s a lie it’s not $10. It’s just people want to bike because they’re not lazy and of course we want to be more green ;)

    • @dhanipersaud6227
      @dhanipersaud6227 Před 4 lety +2

      Most people ride bikes in Denmark because of taxation on cars/driving.

  • @leonardowynnwidodo9704
    @leonardowynnwidodo9704 Před 11 měsíci

    I’m planning a trip to Copenhagen as part of a study tour next week. We’ll be going to a couple of companies, studying genomes and medical sciences, as well as visiting the University of Copenhagen. I’d love to see what this city has in store.

  • @niklaswulff2474
    @niklaswulff2474 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey thanks for the nice video! Around 1:05 you say "carbon neutrality is about creating more renewable energy than dirty energy" - but that doesnt make energy supply carbon neutral. You can either completely get rid of CO2-intensive electricity and heat production by switching to 100% to renewable energy (with respective need for flexibility options) or you have to implement negative emission techs such as Biomass CCS (sorta a third category making it dirty-clean-cleaning :)). BTW, Renewable energy itself has some (even though significantly smaller) life cycle emissions for production of panels/turbines, construction and disassembly (just saying..).

  • @jeanclaudejunior
    @jeanclaudejunior Před 4 lety +6

    Makes me love denmark even more. Did you know that the Danes bought most Organic and home made products than any other in the world?

  • @marianbolen940
    @marianbolen940 Před 3 lety

    Thank you. Good job!

  • @headtripindustries-aminor5657

    i really like your Faroe Islands, congrats!

  • @Surrey360
    @Surrey360 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for this

  • @lorendaappel-eeson2265
    @lorendaappel-eeson2265 Před 3 lety +2

    We are grateful for your wonderful example

    • @Mike-ox8sq
      @Mike-ox8sq Před 2 lety

      Thank you! Please copy/paste.

  • @anneleizabal5601
    @anneleizabal5601 Před 4 lety

    The future that I see with this video is incredible!! All they are thinking is amazing, many things will change because the city will be more eco-friendly with the ecosystem, we can reduce the pollution and increase our life's quality. We know there still big steps but if this is possible in the future the next generations will be very grateful.

  • @jeremyramirez5465
    @jeremyramirez5465 Před 3 lety

    Loved this!

  • @wonderfulwenna2710
    @wonderfulwenna2710 Před 4 lety

    Good Video👍

  • @grandbaycentral5741
    @grandbaycentral5741 Před 3 lety

    Beautiful country, nice people, genuine culture, and Green people

  • @alvegutt42
    @alvegutt42 Před rokem

    i grew up in norway and most people till this day are really fit, i see it all over scandinavia, biking for transportation and sports for leisure is common

  • @melissagorgeous16
    @melissagorgeous16 Před rokem +1

    Luv it. Subscribed already.

  • @estebanvalladares8259

    excellent video!

  • @yeetdketed6196
    @yeetdketed6196 Před 3 lety +2

    Just commenting so more people can see this wonderful message

  • @christianlundbie3404
    @christianlundbie3404 Před 4 lety +1

    Damn their assence are soo strong

  • @kasiagx3183
    @kasiagx3183 Před 10 měsíci

    Very interesting!

  • @bikeep.official
    @bikeep.official Před rokem

    Really Interesting Video - Copenhagen sets a high bar for us to follow!

  • @GdolphinRemembers
    @GdolphinRemembers Před 3 lety

    This makes me feel happy

  • @jfvs1988
    @jfvs1988 Před 3 lety

    great video

  • @alabamaslammer2222
    @alabamaslammer2222 Před 4 lety +11

    It takes a village, right?
    The people of Copenhagen are progressive and "social-democratic" in their mindset and chose to elect a "liberal" council.
    Investment and political willpower is needed and CPH is leading the way.
    Nice channel btw. I'm glad I stumbled into it :-)

  • @ichsanalhafiz6465
    @ichsanalhafiz6465 Před 4 lety

    Hopefully one day can go there

  • @gislaw6109
    @gislaw6109 Před 2 lety

    I hope we can use this kind of method in some way to restore our cities and make it more sustainable

  • @3lluminatiii
    @3lluminatiii Před 2 lety +1

    Wooow. That's *so impressive.* 🤩 They turned a highly contaminated body of water so clean, they can swim in it.
    Oh, this reminds me of a video I saw about how human hair cleans oil spills in water pretty efficiently. Also, I've seen some cities using bio-filters, with a combination of plants that help filter water and bacterias to help eat the wastes away.
    There's so many fascinating things people are coming up with.

  • @anacarolinaoliveira7126

    Amazing!!

  • @kedoka6603
    @kedoka6603 Před rokem +1

    Thanks!

  • @prabasroadnottaken
    @prabasroadnottaken Před rokem +1

    If the city is small, it’s feasible. For metropolis level cities, the effort and cost needed is larger.

  • @2011hib
    @2011hib Před 4 lety

    Awesome 👏

  • @lyssasletters3232
    @lyssasletters3232 Před 3 lety

    Love this!

  • @tanzeel7ify
    @tanzeel7ify Před 4 lety +8

    The mayor looks like Kevin Magnussen from Haas F1 team

  • @marlbankian
    @marlbankian Před 3 lety

    Excellent !

  • @harshvatwani2202
    @harshvatwani2202 Před 4 lety +5

    I guess the best way to control city pollution/ go green is to limit our population or put a cap on it. We should also make sure that we should avoid any wastage of food, electricity, water and all the other things that require burning of fossil fuels. I don't mean to just stop using fossil fuels, but just having a thought before wasting it. For example just think before dumping your leftover food in bin bags that how long it takes to grow some food, how much efforts are put in growing it, how much fuels are burnt to deliver it to your doorstep. Just be mindful before wasting anything.

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +2

      Good points! It's very easy to waste things without a thought because so much of the supply chain is out of sight for us, but these things add up to the high levels of fossil fuels used today. The good news is that it's also very easy to stop the waste once we are conscious of it.

  • @nikolinepaulsen5882
    @nikolinepaulsen5882 Před 4 lety +5

    Go Copenhagen!

  • @saranbhatia8809
    @saranbhatia8809 Před rokem

    Way to go 👍

  • @designbycorrea
    @designbycorrea Před 3 lety +4

    Good job, Copenhagen! It's so disappointing to think that such progress may never ever happen here in my country, but it's always good to hear good news like this! Can't wait for 2025 and see your progress!

  • @nthperson
    @nthperson Před 2 lety

    Copenhagen can take the next step toward real sustainability by moving to a location rent as revenue source of the public revenue required to pay for public goods and services. This will remove the profit from speculation in land and provide a strong financial incentive for owners of land to bring the land they hold to its highest, best use -- or sell to someone who will.

  • @guillermojarne2803
    @guillermojarne2803 Před 3 lety

    Awesome!

  • @sebastianmundy
    @sebastianmundy Před 2 lety +1

    Wow! I didn’t know that their Airports and ports were closing down!
    You can’t (or it would be difficult) to be carbon neutral as long as their still open

  • @shahzadaslam384
    @shahzadaslam384 Před 2 lety

    Well done Copenhagen, such an example for the world i wish my big city can also transform into carbon free zone

  • @Helg1002
    @Helg1002 Před 2 lety +1

    what does phrase "how do we grow cities sustainably" mean?

  • @AtypicalPaul
    @AtypicalPaul Před 4 lety +1

    Wow awesome

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety

      Glad you liked it, thanks for watching!

  • @ninjaslash52_98
    @ninjaslash52_98 Před 4 lety

    I’m curious if there are bike pileups

  • @Kiyarose3999
    @Kiyarose3999 Před 3 lety

    Cities are an integral part of the highly centralised system that is at the root of our problems! ✊🏽🌎🌻

  • @mathiass1999
    @mathiass1999 Před 2 lety

    What a place to live

  • @olivias3986
    @olivias3986 Před 4 lety +4

    We love denmark

  • @placeholdername0000
    @placeholdername0000 Před 4 lety +1

    Neat

  • @user-xx1ex9hb6l
    @user-xx1ex9hb6l Před rokem

    Nice

  • @senritsujumpsuit6021
    @senritsujumpsuit6021 Před 2 lety

    How do I make my home a tiny edition of that city

  • @LucidFL
    @LucidFL Před 4 lety +10

    Why so few views wtf youtube

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +1

      It's picking up! Thanks for the positive vibes :)

  • @giuseppenativo2123
    @giuseppenativo2123 Před 4 lety +1

    Sorry, but where could I find this other content about the cities of the future that is nominated at the end of the video. thank you very much.

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks for asking! This is actually the first video in the series but we have more on the way.

  • @carolinebray82
    @carolinebray82 Před 8 měsíci

    This is amazing, I feel so sad living in the USA where people just throw trash everywhere

  • @han7959
    @han7959 Před 4 lety

    I didnt see separated trash bins in CP when I was in Denmark.

    • @nessus47
      @nessus47 Před 4 lety +1

      They are not normally used in public spaces, but are common in connection with private housing, both flats and houses. There are bins for plastic, glass, cardboard, paper, organic waste, batteries and different household waste. This is sorted on a daily basis and much of it is reused😊

  • @abelp40
    @abelp40 Před 4 lety +1

    We need this all in the United States. Californians where you at?

  • @samuelcalderon3032
    @samuelcalderon3032 Před 4 lety +1

    I live here in Copenhagen

  • @RagnaR3xa
    @RagnaR3xa Před 3 lety +1

    If ever the government decides to roll these changes back, I only hope the citizens can rise up and stand against those changes. This is too good to let go of.

    • @Mike-ox8sq
      @Mike-ox8sq Před 2 lety +2

      Not a chance! We Danes believe in science. You seem enlightened, but lets make a fast recap.
      Glaciologist drilling icecores in Greenland have, by analyzing airbubbles captured in the ice, established that we the last 500.000 years have had a pretty stable carbon PPM at 220. Besides Carbon also things like acidity, pollen counts, Vulcanic ash count and identification etc. can be measured. Since the ice sheet have been build up over time, layer by layer, year by year, we go back in time the deeper we go. So we have a YEAR BY YEAR documentation of the global climate 500.000 back or 10 times the periode, since man left Africa. There has been a few peaks at 280 PPM that all have been connected to high global Vulcanic activity. Since around the beginning of the industrial revolution PPM has exploded. We are now (2021) at 416 PPM, close to double the amount we have seen last 500.000 year. Just to set the amount of 500.000 years in context, man left Africa around 60.000 years ago.
      The Kingdom of Denmark have approved access to nations that have wanted to do own glaciology studies and many nations have. Denmark, USA and Canada forexample all have a full set of cores and can thus give you key data of our climate, year by year, 500K years back.
      We have a global problem and we, as mankind, created that problem, and if we dont solve it very fast, we eventually will pollute ourselves out of a home.
      Lets look at some science reality.
      Country 2015 per Capita carbon dioxide emissions from fuel combustion (metric tons)
      United States 15.53 (now over 16. Americans the absolut most polluting nationals on earth)
      Russia 10.19
      China 6.59
      India 1.58
      Source. US Government. (epa dot com)
      These numbers actually to low since aviation are excluded. Americans flying more per Capita than others, making reality even grimmer. Ask yourself WHY so many Americans, that are the highest emitting nationals on this planet, are not even aware of this fact! The money invested in keeping so many Americans in the dark about own emissions are HUGE, and it has worked. The basics of climate change that I learned in basic school 40 years ago are still not basic knowledge for to many in US.
      The whole world signed the Paris Climate agreement and Trump/USA´s decision to leave did not temp any other to follow suit...The last 4 years USA have internally been divisive as ever in modern time. The short recap for US last 4 years looked like this from where I stood.
      VERY first day Trump was in office, while USA was talking about crowd sizes, he fired the head of EPA and replaced him with a former oil CEO! He took USA out of the Paris agreement, while his nation was the biggest polluter per citizen. Trump removed caps on Methane in US. Methane are 22,5 stronger than CO2 as a greenhouse gas. He opened up for an explosion of fracking in US. Fracking are the proces where you pump chemical acid under pressure into your underground to dissolve slate stone! Fracking has, besides the CO2 emission, been proven to cause earthquakes. Chemical acid and/or the gasses have already begun to be detected many places in US. Trump gave permission to a state subsidized pipeline from Alaska that should transport the oil coming out from the further oilsand exploration he gave permission to. Oilsand are the most energy intensive and ground disrupting known way to get oil. It takes 7 liters of oil to produce 10!!! It leaves the ground sterilized since it involves cooking the sand on site! Oilsand and fracking are the two most stupid, dangerous and CO2 emitting processes! He could have raised lasting off shore windmills but chose to do this in the middle of a global climate crisis where others shuts down coalmines/coalplants and now some even stop oil exploration in their nations. Trump has been a disaster for the climate efforts and for US credibility.
      ( I am sure Putin are happy, not many have devoted time to try to get him to clean up his acts lately, so the trick (also in this sense) worked for him.
      I have a very hard time imagine USA move forward in a unified way before it has been proven in court of law that Trump belongs at Guantanamo )
      IF a policy are UNsustainable for us all and can be replaced by one that ARE SUSTAINABLE and we dont act on it and CHANGE, well, then Darwinism will take us out! The truth are that USA are way behind the curve, sticking to old technology when the world are changing are not doing US, businesses, population, economy, any favors.
      BUT, back to your expressed fear we might get "bad" politicians trying to overthrow our progress...Dont worry, we understand the science and if anything we are horrified collectively when looking at way to many countries in this world, not least US that under Trump have accelerated emissions while others have begun serious investing in living up to their pledge to the Paris agreement. There are other points inside the deal but the main headline that guide the rest basically are that all countries have to make a 50% reduction of greenhouse gasses (like CO2 and Methane) measured from 1990 level, before 2050.
      I am happy and proud to tell you that it is ALL of Danes, not just the Copenhageners that are keen on ACTING. It is no longer a left/right issue as it still seems to be some places. Nearly all are onboard and while US mocked the rest of the world by going cracy in fracking and oilsand exploration the Danish parlament, in late 2019, approved in parlament with 167 for, out of 179, to voluntarily, nationwide, reduce CO2 emissions with 70% from 1990 level before 2030!!! That is just 9 years from now!
      Inside the same decision the Danish parlament also have agreed that Denmark are NOT allowing themselves to buy CO2 quotas to deliver the result "on paper". It has to be a genuine and real reduction. So its a massive improvement and what the climate and the global population needs that ALL countries do. THAT is how you TAKE RESPONSIBILITY!
      On top of that, Denmark have oil in its underground and they have, approved in parlament a few months ago. Valid immediately, to also decide to stop their planned oilsector explorations and have decided that any oil in their underground are going to be "stored CO2 that never will be released". We will keep current oil platforms (under the Paris agreement) but have decided to decommission platforms, either as they get to old or the wells they have under them run dry. Denmarks change away from fossile fuels have been focused on land and off shore windmills. Off shore windmill parks are large scale where they are going. The overall vision are to eventually export both green sustainable electricity and green hydrogen made by electricity from the windmills.
      Hydrogen can be made into a gas or a liquid. As a liquid it is optimal for transport. 1 liter of liquid hydrogen contains more energy than 450 liters of refined gasoline. Imagine 1 hydrogen gas tank ship (with a hydrogen engine ofc. ) replacing more than 400 oil tankers!
      We know have had 3 decades of experience with off shore windmill parks and now have evolved that concept to whole new level. Off shore energy islands as hub for mega windmill parks and hydrogen production. And that is one of the ways we plan to live up to the political decision described earlier. Check this out for some more info.
      czcams.com/video/2GC3VcB0gLY/video.html
      You can now own a hydrogen car in Denmark and tank hydrogen for it. That are a much better longterm sustainable solution than batterycars, since they dont crave huge amounts of rare earth minerals and the polluting process of recycling old batteries also can be avoided.
      SO...please dont be nervous for us, or any rouge politicians HERE, we seem to be worldleading in transforming a democratic modern industrialized nation into a democratic modern SUSTAINABLE industrialized nation.
      When it comes to climate debate and climate action I think many in US are very information starved. Very few countries that emit in the higher end, have not already made plans to live up to their promises when they signed the Paris climate agreement.
      Lets make a fast recap. The world have agreed on how emissions should be defined, and what are covered. Thus CO2 emission-calculations around the world, for now around 15 years have been streamlined. Basically , now when USA again have signed, the entire worlds countries are covered. Not one country followed US out of the agreement when Trump tore his copy. The entire world, all citizens in all countries are thus now covered. If all just focus on what they need to DO we can get this going fast. USA´s actual emissions are STILL rising.
      I hope you understand I wrote this long piece because I wanted to give you some science facts that others you know might benefit from (?) Please show it to any you know that have not grasped our global dire situation. And off course also to make certain you understand we will never go back on this, as you see, since the clip was made, we have speed our transformation UP!
      I think more should say as I (and nearly all Danes)
      I dont wanna SPEND our taxpayermoney on fixing the endless and increasing symptoms (climate refugees, flooding, draught, cropfailures, a dead ocean, hurricanes etc. etc. I wanna INVEST in curing the patient (zero emission sustainable living and production).
      Best regards

    • @b.v.nielsen8714
      @b.v.nielsen8714 Před 2 lety

      If the danish government tried, they would be told to p.o. This is a local thing, and the administrators, are elected every four years. So if THEY decides to roll it back, they'll probably be looking for employment elsewhere, after the next election.

  • @carolinepowell3297
    @carolinepowell3297 Před 4 lety +1

    This actually gives me a little hope...if more cities try to be like Copenhagen we could have a better future. I think a big difference between Copenhagen and American cities is that the people of Copenhagen are a lot more passionate about doing better than Americans.

    • @veronicajensen7690
      @veronicajensen7690 Před 3 lety +1

      the reason most people bike in Copenhagen, is there are very few parking spaces !!!, plus public transportation is expensive , and last but not least, a lot of danes like to get the exercise done while transporting themselves to or from work-it's practical and saves time-it's only a small group who does it due to the environment

  • @philipfriis
    @philipfriis Před 4 lety +9

    I live there. It’s great. Not more to say.

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety

      EMPIRIUM straight from the horses’s mouth, as we say!

    • @79ped
      @79ped Před 4 lety +3

      @@freethink full stop ! One thing is to love Copenhagen, another thing is to be a fan of the way they change the city.
      I love my city, but I hate - with a passion - what Frank Jensen have done to the Capital ! There's A LOT of things you don't see. This is just his "green pride", that he's not even responsible for. It's just propaganda.
      Straight from the horses mouth

    • @TBG-Youtube
      @TBG-Youtube Před 3 lety +1

      @@79ped Tell us more, it's interesting

  • @Morten_Nielsen1979
    @Morten_Nielsen1979 Před 4 lety +8

    It's good that 70% of the world population will live in big cities. Then we only need all big cities to do like Copenhagen is doing.

  • @stanley3317
    @stanley3317 Před 4 lety

    Geography is great

  • @bonnie2057
    @bonnie2057 Před 2 lety

    i think that the fact that they care about denmark and dont care about the money makes them great if we could do that here in usa things would change and we could be right there with them in the fight against climate change

  • @Salardsanz
    @Salardsanz Před 2 lety

    Well my teacher showed me this video and I love Copenhagen

  • @offriso5357
    @offriso5357 Před 3 lety +1

    In The Netherlands we have more bikes than people

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 3 lety

      That's really cool. Hope more countries begin to follow the example; it works so well at improving transportation, emissions and quality of life it's fairly surprising more haven't. Paris and Seville have been making strides, though: www.theguardian.com/cities/2015/jan/28/seville-cycling-capital-southern-europe-bike-lanes

  • @ninjaslash52_98
    @ninjaslash52_98 Před 4 lety +1

    I knew a girl from Copenhagen...

  • @novola1972
    @novola1972 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow, I noticed how clear was the water in the canals while in Copenhagen. Biking in the winter could be tough though....

    • @TomaszDK
      @TomaszDK Před 4 lety +3

      As we say in Denmark, "There is no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothing."

    • @kariminalo979
      @kariminalo979 Před 3 lety

      @@TomaszDK We say the exact same thing in Sweden haha.

    • @TheMarcusNyberg
      @TheMarcusNyberg Před 3 lety

      you just use special wheels. also they do a good just to get away the snow fast. Atleast here in Stockholm, cant imagine them being worse.

  • @teemo8247
    @teemo8247 Před rokem

    As a swede, I think that Stockholm should take notes

  • @MartinManscher
    @MartinManscher Před 2 lety

    The mayor featured resigned in a MeToo scandal the year after, having been really creepy to a significant number of women for the past 30 years

  • @sanskarvashishtha3112
    @sanskarvashishtha3112 Před 2 lety

    District connected heating and cooling systems is such a great idea!

  • @bridmcgrath3606
    @bridmcgrath3606 Před 3 lety +1

    I love that smart people are thinking of inavative ways to help the planet.

  • @irinasolomina1800
    @irinasolomina1800 Před 3 lety

    cool.

  • @rakchityonzan2806
    @rakchityonzan2806 Před 4 lety +10

    Okay i need to move there😁😁

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety +1

      It's a great place on a number of levels :)

    • @dosomething3
      @dosomething3 Před 4 lety

      Rakchit Yonzan ok. What are you waiting for? I’ll pay for your ticket.

    • @steptoforward9067
      @steptoforward9067 Před 4 lety

      Assaf Wodeslavsky 😂✌️

  • @theWazimu
    @theWazimu Před 4 lety +1

    Dane here, i would love denmark to be like this!

    • @79ped
      @79ped Před 4 lety

      Yeah, but it's not reality. Frank Jensen destroyed Copenhagen, but that's not what he want to talk about.

  • @bluerose4978
    @bluerose4978 Před 4 lety

    Nice...stack em and pack em. Does everyone have to live in the city...a little too claustrophobic. You need more green spaces that will help reduce carbon as well.

    • @nessus47
      @nessus47 Před 4 lety +1

      There are plenty of parks and open spaces in Copenhagen. It is a fairly green city, also in that way☺

  • @ir4386
    @ir4386 Před rokem

    Why do we have so many greedy people stopping this type innovation in America 🇺🇸

  • @satyamchoudharypardhan8172

    First carbon negative capital city is thimpu in bhutan. 🇧🇹Bhutan is a country situated in south Asia near 🇮🇳India

  • @gabriellehumphreys1179

    You got to admire them, a progressive society.

  • @miguele.antonetti9999
    @miguele.antonetti9999 Před 4 lety +3

    Bravo, Copenhagen!

  • @heidieid2263
    @heidieid2263 Před 3 lety

    Sød lille cykel historie men 'G-overvågning i det her område"... Hm🤔 From surveillance to co-creativity/Co-lead from inner 'Gps'.

  • @maxbas2018
    @maxbas2018 Před 2 lety

    Sorry, but the german video title is a pain in the ass in terms of grammar. Correctly it would be "Die nachhaltige Stadt der Zukunft: Kopenhagen, Dänemark" could you please correct it

  • @colindevoe8713
    @colindevoe8713 Před 4 lety +6

    I think I'm going to move to Copenhagen

    • @freethink
      @freethink  Před 4 lety

      Colin DeVoe bring a bike!

    • @Alkomp75
      @Alkomp75 Před 4 lety +1

      Just don't decide based only on this video

    • @mathilde8710
      @mathilde8710 Před 4 lety

      you're more than welcome !!

  • @markpitts9537
    @markpitts9537 Před 4 lety

    Will this work in Beijing, New Delhi, and Lahore?