Title: Context: trends
1Context trends
- Growth in car travel and traffic (27 car 1952 to
85 2004) - Growth in journey length (4.7 6.9 miles
1973-2003) - Reduced vehicle occupancy (1.64-1.59 1985-2003)
- Changing journeys more school and work journeys
by car - Changing costs bus and rail fares up 35
1980-2003, motoring down 9 - Declining bus use (outside London)
2Results
- Physical activity decline in walking and cycling
contributing to increased obesity - Congestion increasing and spreading in time and
place, with economic consequences - Environment transport is the fastest growing
source of greenhouse gases, and also source of
local air quality and noise problems despite
technical improvements. Community severance and
intrusion is also an issue. - Casualties Children from the lowest social class
are five times more likely to die in road crashes
than those from the highest social class
3Air Quality improvements but..
4Car-based development
5Landscape and biodiversity
- Car dependent development
- Landscape impacts
- Loss of habitats and biodiversity to transport
development
6Social exclusion
- Work 2 out of 5 jobseekers say lack of transport
is a barrier to getting a job - Learning 6 of 16-24 year olds turn down
training or education because of transport
difficulties - Health 1.4m people a year do without healthcare
or miss appointments because of transport
problems - Food 16 of people without cars find access to
supermarkets difficult - Friends and family 18 of people without cars
find seeing friends and family difficult
7And there is climate change
- Real and serious Biggest threat we face PM,
D Cameron etc - Concentrations of carbon dioxide 280ppm (1750)-
373ppm (2002) - Consensus that irreversible change may occur
beyond 550ppm but could be much lower - Scientific consensus that climate change is real
and is caused by human activity and that it will
result in potentially catastrophic impacts for
people and the planet
8Consequences
- Much higher temperatures (with health
consequences) - Changing rainfall patterns more floods and
erosion - Melting glaciers and sea level rise
- More infectious diseases
- Significant extinction of species and habitats
- No lawns!
9 Transport is implicated
- Transport accounts for 24 of UK carbon
emissions, set to be 30 by 2030 (and this
excludes international aviation and shipping) - Freight carbon dioxide emissions grew 48
1990-2002 - Aviation climate change effects worldwide could
increase by 300-1000 1992-2050
10Carbon dependency cant continue
- We will be living in a carbon constrained world
because - Policies to tackle climate change consensus on
need to cut greenhouse gas emissions by at least
60 by 2050 - Policies to increase security by reducing
reliance on imported oil from politically
unstable areas - Rising real oil prices with rising demand from
emerging economies and peaking in oil supply
11Peak oil
12..transport is at risk..
- Oil based transport will become
- Dearer generally
- Subject to supply shocks from weather or politics
- Fluctuating prices
- huge economic not just environmental issue
13..so past transport trends cant continue
- Trip lengthening (and all that goes with it)
- Car-based development
- Mode switch to car/lorry/air
14Technology will help but..
- Hybrid cars 1 of market now
- Biofuels might make 5 by 2010
- Hydrogen fuel cells are unlikely to be economic
before 2020
15National policy context
- Moves towards road user charging
- More local powers over bus services
- More housing development in SE/E
- Aviation expansion
16E of England plan
- Assembly recommended 120 transport schemes over
next 15 years - Highways Agency modelling these will not solve
congestion and CO2 from road transport will
increase by 40 10p/km road charge will do
better - Inquiry Panel recommended regional transport
objective to contribute to a reduction in
regions climate change emissions by reducing
traffic growth and ultimately achieving an
absolute reduction in traffic on the regions
road system
17For Colchester, or anywhere
- Not possible to have cheap unrestrained car use
- Need to reduce car dependence
- Manage car use and provide alternatives
18So what can practically be done?
- Frameworks
- Partnerships public services, transport
operators, neighbouring councils, voluntary
sector, business (Solent example) - Planning land use planning and service location
are critical to transport - Funding look at all budgets not just transport
- Vision for transport linked to economic
development, environment and community
19Action now smarter choices
- Workplace travel plans
- School travel plans
- Visitor travel (sports/leisure etc)
- Personal marketing
- Car clubs and car sharing
20What are travel plans?
- Combinations of measures to reduce
single-occupancy car commuting including - Car sharing (guaranteed taxi ride home, priority
car parking) - Subsidised public transport
- Cycle parking/showers/ changing area
- Better pedestrian access
- Car park management (charges/ priorities)
- Paying people not to drive to work
- Teleworking/remote working
21Travel plan examples
22Orange (Bristol)
of staff arriving as car-driver reduced from
92 to 80 (at Almondsbury Park), and then to 27
(at Temple Point).
- Key factors
- Location change
- Restricted parking, compensation
payments - Mode-specific
- improvements
23Derriford Hospital
In 1995, 90 staff arrived by car. Now only 54
have a parking permit.
- Key factors
- Major improvements to buses
- Parking restrictions and charges
- Car share scheme
24Maximum staff use of sustainable modes
- 53 public transport (Government Office for the
East Midlands) - 23 walking (University of Bristol)
- 21 cycling (Addenbrookes Hospital)
- 26 regularly car sharing (Egg)
- 47 registered / 31 sharing at least once a
week (Marks Spencer Financial
Services)
25Cambridgeshire Partnership
- 30,000 staff at TfW employers
- Driving alone to work down from from 57 to 48
in 3 years (reduction of 15.8) - Cycling and public transport most popular
alternatives
26School travel
- 30 plans studied achieved average 23 reduction
in car use with some over 50 - Walking buses for primary schools
- Safe walking and cycle routes see Kesgrave in
Ipswich - School buses over 50 of users in the pilots
were previously driven to school
27TravelSmart individual marketing
- Can cut car use by 12-14
- Used from Perth to Peterborough
Perth, Australia
28Car clubs
- Rent a car by the hour or day
- On the street where you live
- Often used with controlled parking
29Action now alternatives
- Walking
- Cycling
- Public transport
30Walking and cycling
- Safe routes
- Signing
- Cycle parking
31Quality public transport
- Information needs to be high quality and easily
available - Area-wide ticketing
- Marketing metro maps, branding etc
- Personal security CCTV, policing priority
- Good access to stops/stations
- Young peoples fares e.g. Youth Mover ticket
- Community rail partnerships
- Real time information and bus management
- Bus priority
- Above all treat public transport as a priority
network that decision-makers and car users might
want to use
32Quality public transport
- High quality waiting environments
- Park and ride as part of overall bus strategy
33Bus improvements
Less Traffic where People Live 2003
34Demand-responsive transport
35Managing traffic
- Give priority to most important/ efficient users
of road space - Streets for people - home zones, main roads
- Parking controls, charges, limits to spaces
- Excluding through traffic or types of traffic can
make cities more prosperous
36Home zones/20 mph
- Street redesign with environmental quality
- Low speeds
3720 mph in Hull
38Shared space
- Redesign roads as streets
- Removing signs, barriers etc
39New housing
- Problem
- Lots of car parking
- No local services
- Cul de sacs
- No walking and cycling routes
- Public transport as afterthought
40New housing
- Or solution
- High quality public transport from the start
- Car clubs
- Limits on car parking
- Cycling and walking routes
- Local services
- Street design for people not lorries
41Environment vs economy?
- Increased footfall as shopping environment
becomes more pleasant - Local environmental quality contributes to
economic prosperity
42Conclusion
- Transport trends are not sustainable they will
lead to increased congestion - No amount of road building or extra car parking
can cater for demand, and management (road
charging?) is inevitable - Climate change/oil depletion requires less car
dependence - It is possible to start now to deal with traffic
and transport - Smarter choice measures show it is possible to
influence travel behaviour - It is possible to improve alternatives to the car
so that people choose to use them
43Different routes to prosperity
- Vienna car use has fallen from 40 - 36, 30 of
journeys are now on foot or bike, 34 public
transport - Los Angeles 90 car, 10 rest