Schroders has today announced the launch of its Sustainable European Cities Index[1] where Amsterdam claimed the coveted top spot, closely followed by London and Paris. The leading scores are underpinned by the cities' robust response to tackling climate change.

The proprietary Schroders Sustainable Cities Index is based on sustainability profiles of European cities with population in excess of one million people. It highlights the cities that are delivering on their environmental targets in accordance to the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals.

The 59 cities in the Index are ranked on 13 equally weighted environmental policies. These cover areas such as renewable energy consumption targets, cleaner public transport, public electric vehicle charging stations, single use plastics, air quality, climate plans, carbon neutrality targets and waste policy.

Hugo Machin, Portfolio Manager and Co-Head of Global Cities, Schroders, commented:

'Both Amsterdam and Paris scored well on their ambitious 2050 targets for 100% of energy to come from renewable sources. In this category, London lagged somewhat with a target of 15% by 2030. This was lower than the EU's renewable energy directive, which aims for 27% of final energy consumption from renewables by 2030 and which was used as an indication of best practice to guide the scoring in this category.'

'The Index is important because it ranks the European cities that will provide their inhabitants with a high quality of life, whilst minimising environmental impact.

'This is in accordance with the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal 11. The index shows which cities are implementing policies which will help the transformation to a low carbon future. It also shows areas where elected representatives fall short in minimising environmental impact.'

Amsterdam, London and Paris received similar scores across the policy categories largely underpinned by the cities' comprehensive climate plans. Moreover, the top spots in the index were dominated by western and northern European cities, with northern European cities falling almost exclusively in the top quartile. Eastern European cities were mainly ranked towards the lower end of the Index except for Prague and Sofia.

UK regional city Leeds came in at 16th place on the Index, ahead of some of its bigger European peers, such as Brussels which was ranked 18th. Leeds scored well across all policy categories with a comprehensive Net Zero Carbon Roadmap and a clean air strategy for the city and also has a robust waste reduction strategy.

See the top 20 cities in the index here.

[1] The Schroders Sustainable Cities Index has been constructed using research of city-level policies. The research was reliant on the level of disclosure provided by city councils, and therefore, there may be policies in place that Schroders research team is not aware of.

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Schroders plc published this content on 26 July 2021 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 26 July 2021 11:57:10 UTC.