BAKU, Azerbaijan, May 16. The 13th session of
the World Urban Forum (WUF13), to be held in Baku from May 17
through May 22, would be the moment to build the political
consensus needed to carry New Urban Agenda forward, said UN-Habitat
Executive Director Anaclaudia Rossbach, speaking to Trend on the sidelines of the
ITF Summit in Leipzig.


"Ministers are coming together, and there will be a summary of
their discussions that we hope will be fed into the political
discussions in New York. The stakeholders are also coming together,
and there will be a call to action from Baku that is expected to be
fed into those discussions as well," she added.


Rossbach described the upcoming World Urban Forum in Baku as a
critical political staging post ahead of the July midterm review of
the New Urban Agenda at the United Nations in New York. She said
the co-facilitators of that review process would travel to Baku in
person — a signal of the meeting's weight in the global urban
policy calendar.


"The President of the General Assembly indicated Poland and
Norway as co-facilitators — they are going to be with us in Baku.
And I believe also from the ministers, a lot of inputs will be
absorbed in the process of thinking and reflecting: what are the
priorities for the next ten years? What is it that we can do for
the next ten years?" she said.


She explained that the New Urban Agenda, now marking its tenth
anniversary, still has a decade to run — and that Baku would be the
moment to build the political consensus needed to carry it
forward.


"We need to build a consensus, a strong coalition to deal with
the challenges of the New Urban Agenda for the next ten years. And
this is where this conference fits in," she emphasized.


On Azerbaijan specifically, Rossbach confirmed that UN-Habitat
is already actively engaged with the country, with a team and an
office in Baku assisting the government on urban planning —
including the country's large-scale reconstruction of its recovered
territories.


"We have a team, we have an office in Baku, and we are working
with the government, actually assisting on urban planning and
planning this urban transformation. And indeed, there are
interesting stories there in Baku itself — the story of the urban
transformation of the White City, and so on," she revealed.


Rossbach explained the unusual format of the World Urban Forum
itself. She said it was designed by the General Assembly as a
stakeholder engagement mechanism — and has grown into the second
largest conference in the UN system, with some 400 partner-led
events.


"It's a place where stakeholders come and provide inputs to our
work, to our agenda. The majority of the events are partner-led.
All the discussions we are going to have are in-depth practices —
we share practices together, training, developing capacities, the
exhibition. Everything is around housing," she stated.


She said the overarching theme of housing was not chosen
arbitrarily. UN-Habitat's new strategic plan for 2026–2029 is built
around what she called a global housing crisis — spanning access to
housing and land, basic services, and the transformation of
informal settlements — and has been endorsed by 105 member
states.


"Cities are the front lines of many, many challenges that we
face. We still have Africa and Southeast Asia urbanizing at a very
accelerated pace. Two billion people are coming to cities — cities
that are lacking a lot of infrastructure."


Asked why she had chosen to appear at a transport-focused
summit, Rossbach argued that urban mobility and housing are
inseparable systems, and that failing to plan them together
produces dysfunction in both.







"Transportation, urban mobility is an intrinsic part of that.
Because sometimes transportation goes ahead of housing, sometimes
housing goes ahead of transportation — and it doesn't work. We
cannot expect to have sustainable mobility if we don't plan right,"
she added.


She reserved particular urgency for informal settlements, home
to roughly one billion people worldwide, calling their persistence
"unacceptable" given that the tools and knowledge to upgrade them
already exist.


"It's unacceptable that having the know-how to improve slums, to
integrate slums in the city, we still have the prevalence of very
precarious living conditions around the world. We see that as an
emergency agenda to be tackled within the global housing crisis,"
Rossbach said.


Rossbach also linked informality directly to climate
vulnerability, noting that residents of informal settlements are
the first to suffer from climate-related disasters — and are
routinely left out of urban planning visions, often because they
are not even mapped.


"They are usually excluded of the picture, excluded of the
vision, because many times they are not even mapped. So there is a
strong effort needed on this front as well," she outlined.


On informal transport — raised by a participant drawing on
experience in cities like Manila — she described a growing trend,
particularly in Latin America, of cities formally recognizing
community-led transport solutions that had developed
organically.


"There are so many examples of cities, or communities, that have
developed their own means of transportation and were then
recognized by the mayors as public policy. There's a trend of
designing policies, master plans and transportation policies that
build on what's there — connecting informal to formal means of
transportation," she said.


On urban sprawl, she identified housing itself as its primary
driver — land prices pushing social housing to city peripheries,
self-built homes expanding into peri-urban areas, gated communities
fragmenting the urban fabric — and called for a cultural shift
toward densification.


"If you look at urban sprawl, housing is actually the main
cause. The New Urban Agenda talks about compact cities, and I
believe there are many cities now, many countries, that are
incorporating densification in their national urban policies —
transport-oriented models like the state of Massachusetts, Japan,
Latin American cities. It is a challenge because it requires also a
cultural acceptance — that we need to intensify and maximize
recycling of the built environment," she highlighted.


She closed by framing the crisis in its broadest terms: a global
emergency of affordability that demands comprehensive national
strategies tailored to every segment of society.


"It's actually a crisis of affordability, and countries are
developing different strategies to deal with that. National
strategies cannot be universal because you don't have the resources
— but at least they can be comprehensive, and they should be
designed for all segments of society," Rossbach concluded.