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Browsing by Subject "Lahti"

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  • Nieminen, Elina (2022)
    The legislation of the Paris Agreement obliges Finland to pursue actions that keep the global average temperature rise below 2°C and aim to limit the average temperature rise to 1.5°C. The current Finnish government has aligned the national goal of carbon neutrality by 2035. The role of municipalities in promoting or compensating carbon sinks has not yet been defined, although municipalities play an important role as a platform for climate work at local and regional levels. However, it is already known that the Finnish National Climate Act, which is being reformed at this moment, will be subject to an obligation to produce their own climate programs at municipal, regional or provincial level. Environmental competence and environmental development have been important in Lahti for several decades already. The City of Lahti has set its target for carbon neutrality for 2025 and it includes targets for reducing, compensating, and increasing carbon sinks. This work focused on the examination of carbon sequestration and sinks in an urban environment in Lahti, in the example area of approximately 82 hectares, through which a wider understanding of the city's potential to grow coal stocks and sinks in a tight urban structure within different land use classes and different ground cover between them. Based on the Finnish Environment Agency's CORINE land cover classification, the current potential of carbon sequestration for urban land use classes were calculated in this work and the actions to increase carbon sequestration capacity were identified. The work examined the availability of the finished spatial data and to supplement incomplete information, existing literature on the topic was used, as well as other existing spatial records of the city of Lahti and previously made surveys. The largest carbon sink was observed in forest areas, of which in mixed forests representing the largest forest type in the area. Through the calculations and literature carbon sinks and stocks in residential areas were also found to be significant in terms of vegetation, as well as in terms of soil based on the literature review. In planting street and park trees for the purpose of increasing the carbon sink, the most important thing was found to be the long lifetime of trees and securing it. Growing of carbon sinks is most effective in areas where carbon sequestration is already at a high level but increasing vegetation cover in all urban land covers will increase the carbon sink in the long run. One major conclusion of the work was that Lahti's current method of determining carbon sinks and stocks has been inadequate at least for the determining them in built areas, and future measures to maintain, preserve and increase carbon stocks and sinks would not be seen by the same calculation method in the computing. In general, the research data and methods are still largely based on observations and results from the operational processes of natural ecosystems, and these are utilized in urban planning, construction, and maintenance of urban green areas. An incomplete knowledge of the ecological processes in urban areas is a problem that produced challenges in this work as well. More research data is needed on carbon sinks in urban land use classes to gain a more secure understanding of carbon sinks and stocks, although the common importance of vegetation in urban areas is already clear. Although the work focused on carbon in an urban environment, it is necessary to remember the diversity of the urban environment and the other ecosystem services it produces. Land use planning, as well as the management of green spaces in the urban environment, can enhance both the size of carbon storages and sinks and biodiversity and they do not have to be entirely separate from each other.
  • Luotonen, Ari (2020)
    The aim of this study is to clarify where socio-economic well-being and socio-economic deprivation accumulates on municipal level in the region of Päijät-Häme between years 2000-2016. In addition to this, purpose is also explore accumulation of socioeconomic well-being and disadvantage on detail 250 m x 250 m- areal level in Lahti and Hollola during years 2004, 2009 and 2016. Map-analysis on municipal level are done during years 2000, 2005, 2010 and 2016. This study carried out partly as order by the regional council of Päijät-Häme, where the results of this study are used to needs of regional planning. Established theories of segregation and general factors which are influencing on it are providing background for the results of this study. Materials of this study are consisted of statistical data of both Finnish institute for health and welfare (THL) and Statistics Finland (StatFin). This study is empirical and methods that have been used are GIS-analysis and statistical principal component analysis. As results this study showed that on municipal level socio-economic disadvantage as form of low incomes accumulated in municipality of Hartola, while socio-economic well-being as form of higher percentage of persons with university degree, higher income level and lower rate of unemployment accumulated in municipality of Hollola. Based on the analysis of 250 m x 250 m- areal level socio-economically disadvantaged people in Lahti city tended to segregate more than socio-economically well-off, which wasn’t similar with research results from Europe and United States. This study discovered that between 2004-2016 the share of socio-economically disadvantaged people in Lahti and Hollola increased, and in Lahti this increase was significant. In Lahti the increase of the share of socio-economically well-off people was slight during same time period, while in Hollola the share of socio-economically well-off people decreased a bit. Based on map analysis about Lahti and Hollola, the locations of socio-economically disadvantaged population 250 m x 250 m- neighborhood areal units and strong-level areal appearance of socio-economically disadvantaged population dimension were not the same. In Lahti for socio-economically well-off population the locations of neighborhood areal units and strong-level areal appearance of socio-economically well-off population dimension were equal, but in Hollola that was not the case. Observations of the socio-economically well-off and disadvantaged population dimensions, which were analysed by principal component analysis showed up that in Lahti during years 2004 and 2009 the socio-economically disadvantaged population dimension was after all socio-economically priviledged by high percentage of people with university degree education level, which was the case also in Hollola during year 2016.