IEA shows benefits of improved energy efficiency of urban transport systems
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20 Ιουλ 2013
Policies that improve the energy
efficiency of urban transport systems could help save as much as USD 70
trillion in spending on vehicles, fuel and transportation infrastructure
between now and 2050, according to a new report from the International Energy Agency.
The report, A Tale of Renewed Cities,
draws on examples from more than 30 cities across the globe to show how
to improve transport efficiency through better urban planning and
travel demand management. Extra benefits include lower greenhouse-gas
emissions and higher quality of life.
The report comes at a critical time:
More than half of the world’s population already lives in cities, many
of which suffer from traffic jams and overcrowded roads that cost
hundreds of billions of dollars in lost fuel and time and that harm
environmental quality, health and safety.
“As the share of the world’s population
living in cities grows to nearly 70 percent by 2050 and energy
consumption for transport in cities is expected to double, the need for
efficient, affordable, safe and high-capacity transport solutions will
become more acute,” said IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven as
she presented the report. “Urgent steps to improve the efficiency of
urban transport systems are needed not only for energy security reasons,
but also to mitigate the numerous negative climate, noise, air
pollution, congestion and economic impacts of rising urban transport
volumes.”
She urged policy makers to take a
systems perspective and a long-term view to address the challenges.
“Governments must think beyond individual technologies and electoral
cycles, and consider how to build – and how to renew – cities that will
accommodate and transport nearly 6.3 billion people by 2050. We must
plan infrastructure, logistics and energy systems now that make sense
today and over the coming decades,” she said.
Among the three broad categories of
policies recommended in the report are those that allow travel to be
avoided, those that shift travel to more efficient modes, and those that
improve the efficiency of vehicle and fuel technologies. The report
notes that if fully implemented across the transportation sector, this
“avoid, shift and improve” approach could save up to USD 70 trillion in
terms of lower spending on oil, roadway infrastructure and vehicles.
The report offers three case studies –
Belgrade, Seoul and New York City -- to show how those cities have
already improved their transport systems. It notes, for example, that
within the first six months of refurbishing its urban rail system,
Belgrade tripled passenger levels. When Seoul pushed through reforms
that no longer rewarded bus operators for carrying more people,
ridership, speed and safety all increased. And New York City shaved 11
minutes off travel times within a year of introducing express bus
services, while at the same time attracting more passengers.
A Tale of Renewed Cities, which was supported by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development,
sets forth a pathway outlining the essential steps and milestones for
policy development and implementation to transform cities by improving
urban transport systems. The pathway is divided into four sections that
present the necessary planning and actions for supporting development,
financing, implementation and evaluation of policies to improve the
energy efficiency of urban transport systems.
To assist planners and policy makers in
addressing many common issues and challenges, the pathway also provides a
list of policy references and practitioner's guides that are noted
throughout the report and on the IEA Policy Pathway Series webpage.
To download the report, please click here.
To read comments by Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven and others at the report's launch, please click here.
To see the slides from the report's launch, please click here.
To download the archive of the webinar for the report's launch, please click here.
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