Title: Art Guzzetti, APTA Vice-President Policy
1Art Guzzetti, APTA Vice-President Policy Petra
Mollet, APTA Vice-President Strategy
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3Why?
- Create a long-term vision of public
transportations role in the fabric of our
nations surface transportation system over the
next several decades
4Process
- Visioning Task Force
- Open web dialogue with all APTA members
- 3 online webinars on key issues which will
shape the future - Listening sessions on draft vision
5Illustrating the APTA Vision for Public
Transportation in 2050
- A truly energy efficient, multi-modal,
environmentally sustainable transportation system
powers America
6Social and Demographic Trends Point to More
Transit
7Metropolitan Regions are Our New Economic Engines
8Transit Will Assume a Much More Prominent Role
- More better choicesevery urban area has a
top-notch transit system
One System Planned, Managed, Financed,
Interconnected
Tech-savvy generations embrace new ways of travel
Transit is the employer of choice (green workers
others)
9Transits Prominent Role
In 2050 every urban area is served by a high
quality, high capacity regional public
transportation system, and people in all areas
have some level of service
10A National Transportation Policy
20th Century Interstate Roads
21st Century Better choices, priming the pumps
of our economic engines
11New Organizations and Relationships
New regional institutions
A growing private sector role
Transit organizations as mobility managers
12The Increased Prominence of Public Transportation
will Benefit America
- - reduced greenhouse gas emission
- - reduced petroleum use
- - economic growth and global competitors
- - quality of life in our community
- - connect people with their jobs, livelihoods,
and society overall
13However, in 2009
- Surface transportation system is a mess
America needs a new direction
14The Good News Ridership Growth Outpaces VMT and
Population Growth (1995-2008)
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15- With proper investment what could public
transportation do?
16Slow, Steady Increase in Ridership (5.5
Annually)
By 2050, save more than 48.1 billion gallons of
fuel per yearmore than the amount of gasoline
refined from the oil imported from OPEC
countries By 2050, cut annual carbon emissions
by 449.2 million metric tons, over one-third the
carbon emissions from the gasoline used for
transportation today. Support 4.4 million jobs
annually
17Strong, Rapid Increase in Ridership(10
Annually)
- Save the U.S. 15.2 billion gallons of fuel per
year by 2020nearly equal the amount we import
from the Persian Gulf today -
- Cut carbon emissions by 141.9 million metric
tons per year by 2020, almost 8 percent of total
carbon emissions from the transportation sector -
- Support 7.4 million jobs annually
18What is Required? More Investment, Better
Planning
- Additional investment
- Annual capital and operating investment
- of 142 to 236 billion -1 to 1.6 percent of GDP
- (transportation-related goods and services
contribute to over 10.5 percent of GDP overall) - From a combination of federal, state, and local
public resources, as well as private investment - Integrate land-use with transportation policies
and planning
19What is Required? More Investment, Better
Planning
- Using ITS technology to get more out of each
mode/operate all modes as part of unified system - Better customer information
- Google Transit
- Price automobile and petroleum use to reflect its
true costs - Reallocate road space to encourage mode shift
- Change travel behavior through awareness-raising
20Other countries are investing
- Madrid has grown its public transit ridership by
70 percent in the last 20 years. - Spain is spending 1 percent of its GDP on new
rail infrastructure. - Shanghai plans to increase public transit trips
from 21 percent of modal share in 2000 to 35
percent in 2020. - France plans to double its high speed rail
network in the coming decade as part of the
effort to meet its carbon emission reduction goals