Covid-19 seen slowing city shift to green transport

Commuters choosing cars over mass transit due to the pandemic may reverse some green gains.

Covid-19 seen slowing city shift to green transport
People ride bikes underneath Union Jack flags and banners with a message reading "Thank you #ourheroes" as restrictions are eased following the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) in Regent Street, London, Britain, 12 July, 2020. Image: REUTERS/Henry Nicholls. 

Fears of the novel coronavirus are driving commuters off public transport and back to the car, researchers said on Wednesday, urging cities to respond quickly to changing habits and lure travellers to green options.

Cities face a pivotal moment as they build back from a pandemic that has reshaped work, life and travel, according to Wednesday’s “Mobility Futures” report, which surveyed 9,500 residents in 13 cities worldwide.

People feel more protected in their car than in public transport. 

Guillaume Saint, consumer research organisation Kantar 

He added that a shift to green travel would now be slower than thought. “We know that public transport is one of the solutions in order to avoid having too many jams, too much traffic, too much noise and pollution, driven by the automotives in the cities, so there is a big challenge here.”

The impacts of the pandemic will “fundamentally shape the future of urban mobility” said the report, which polled residents in big cities including New York, Chicago, Beijing, Mumbai and Paris.

Work-from-home policies and remote schooling led to a significant drop in urban journeys - a scenario likely to continue as many institutions embrace hybrid working, it found.

City dwellers also spent more time locally and looked to cut their human contact to reduce the spread of infection.

The share of journeys made by bike or on foot rose by 3 per cent on average during the pandemic, the report found, but that shift was far outweighed by a 5.6 per cent drop in the percentage of journeys by public transport and a 3.8 per cent rise in those by car.

Last year’s Mobility Futures report predicted that journeys made by green transport would overtake those by car by 2030.

While Saint said he expects the fall in public transport use to persist, he said cities have a one-off chance to transform.

Authorities can capitalise on a growing enthusiasm for biking and walking, while temporary bike lanes in some cities showed it was possible to nudge residents towards green choices.

“They can entice people back to public transport with flexible tariffs for part-time commuters, offering tickets that are valid on multiple types of transport, and making stations more bike-friendly,” said Saint. “Mayors need to heed the call of thousands of European urbanites who are crying out for more space for walking, cycling, public transport and greenery,” said Barbara Stoll from European environmental campaign group Transport & Environment.

“Although there is a shift back to driving, this is a crucial window of opportunity for policymakers to embrace the solutions that provide cleaner alternatives to polluting cars.”

This story was published with permission from Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women’s rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate.

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