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{{semorg-toolbox | {{semorg-toolbox | ||
|name= | |name=Tree Budget Graz | ||
|description=Baumbudget Graz is an innovative financing model introduced by the City of Graz to systematically fund the planting and maintenance of urban trees. It draws from three sources: compensation fees collected under the city's tree protection ordinance (which requires replanting or financial compensation when trees are removed), voluntary tree sponsorships open to individuals and companies, and project-specific budget approvals by the city council. Together, these streams create a dedicated financial pool that ensures greening efforts are not dependent on a single, uncertain budget line. | |description=Baumbudget Graz is an innovative financing model introduced by the City of Graz to systematically fund the planting and maintenance of urban trees. It draws from three sources: compensation fees collected under the city's tree protection ordinance (which requires replanting or financial compensation when trees are removed), voluntary tree sponsorships open to individuals and companies, and project-specific budget approvals by the city council. Together, these streams create a dedicated financial pool that ensures greening efforts are not dependent on a single, uncertain budget line. | ||
|hypothesis=Lack of Funding | |hypothesis=Lack of Funding | ||
Latest revision as of 15:04, 3 June 2026
Baumbudget Graz is an innovative financing model introduced by the City of Graz to systematically fund the planting and maintenance of urban trees. It draws from three sources: compensation fees collected under the city's tree protection ordinance (which requires replanting or financial compensation when trees are removed), voluntary tree sponsorships open to individuals and companies, and project-specific budget approvals by the city council. Together, these streams create a dedicated financial pool that ensures greening efforts are not dependent on a single, uncertain budget line.
Lack of Funding
Municipalities often struggle to prioritize tree planting when budgets are tight and responsibilities are fragmented. The Baumbudget directly addresses this lock-in by institutionalizing multiple, complementary revenue streams, making funding for greening more resilient and less vulnerable to political or fiscal fluctuations.
institutional
Economic investments
TML2
very high
high
city-wide
no
general public, city administration, city politicians, private companies
Action
german