posted on 2024-09-10, 15:22authored byRita LambertRita Lambert, Carlos Escalante Estrada, Silvia de los Rios, Marion Verdiere, Wieser, Martin
<p dir="ltr">Access to dignified housing and energy are essential to reduce poverty and improve well-being. Dignified housing<br>is rooted in the belief that every person has the right to a decent and secure home where individuals and families can maintain a healthy quality of life. Globally, these concerns are expressed under two interrelated Sustainable Development Goals (SDG); namely SDG7- ‘ensure access to affordable, safe, sustainable and modern energy for all’- and SDG11 - ‘ensure sustainable cities and communities’. Despite these targets, access to energy and dignified housing is unequal in cities of the global South where rapid growth occurs through informal urbanisation. Low-income settlements in particular face challenging conditions as they are disproportionally af- fected by precarious housing, energy risks, inadequate andunreliable services, lack of affordability and access to financial services, tenure insecurity and exclusion from planning pro- cesses.</p>
Funding
GEMdev: Grounded Energy Modelling for equitable urban planning development in the global South