KL ranks seventh for most sustainable city to live in Asia Pacific

Date:2015/02/14

KUALA LUMPUR: Kuala Lumpur ranks seventh in Asia-Pacific and second in Southeast Asia after Singapore in the inaugural Sustainable Cities Index by Arcadis, an Amsterdam-based global natural and built asset design and consultancy firm.

“Sustainability and development are closely connected. It is important for KL city to transform into one of Asia’s new financial hubs. It will also need to focus on other areas such as people and social welfare,” said Arcadis corporate development director Girish Ramachandran in a statement recently.

“Over the next few decades, KL will face greater stress to improve areas such as health, education and quality of life as well as developments in transport networks, water supply and waste collection systems.”

The index indicated that Kuala Lumpur performs best in terms of low property costs and good work-life balance. However, the city scores lower in terms of inequality and literacy.

According to the index, Kuala Lumpur ranks 26th out of the 50 cities studied. Kuala Lumpur performed slightly better in terms of profit section, scoring 3% less than London and 8% less than Seoul, which is Asia’s leading sustainable city.

Seoul leads in sustainability in Asia Pacific, taking seventh place in the global top 10, followed by Hong Kong (8th) and Singapore (10th) in the recent Arcadis Sustainable Cities Index.

 



  • Keywords:


Celebrity Interview


Exclusive News

Real estate investors look to Southeast Asia
2017-01-11
〔THE CHINA POST〕 TAIPEI, Taiwan -- Facing a low-performing local real estate market, Taiwanese investors are reportedly putting their money abroad in up-and-coming development properties throughout Southeast Asia. Two large international real estate firms hosted separate press conferences on Tuesday to analyze the latest trend in real estate purchases. According to Executive Director David Chin (泰啟松) of Asia Pacific International Property, the firm, which specializes in real estate transactions in the Asia-Pacific region, made nearly NT$7.3 billion in sales.