A global high shift scenario. The potential for dramatically increasing bicycle and e-bike use in citites around the world, with estimated energy, CO2, and cost impacts.

Mason, Jacob/Fulton, Lew/McDonald, Zane
Lade...
Vorschaubild

Datum

2015

item.page.journal-title

item.page.journal-issn

item.page.volume-title

Herausgeber

Sprache (Orlis.pc)

US

Erscheinungsort

New York

Sprache

ISSN

ZDB-ID

Standort

Dokumenttyp (zusätzl.)

EDOC

Zusammenfassung

Cycling plays a major role in personal mobility around the world, but it could play a much bigger role. Given the convenience, health benefits, and affordability of bicycles, they could provide a far greater proportion of urban passenger transportation, helping reduce energy use and CO2 emissions worldwide.1 This report presents a new look at the future of cycling for urban transportation (rather than recreation), and the potential contribution it could make to mobility as well as sustainability. The results show that a world with a dramatic increase in cycling could save society US$24 trillion cumulatively between 2015 and 2050, and cut CO2 emissions from urban passenger transport by nearly 11 percent in 2050 compared to a High Shift scenario without a strong cycling emphasis.

item.page.description

Schlagwörter

Zeitschrift

Ausgabe

Erscheinungsvermerk/Umfang

Seiten

41 S.

Zitierform

Stichwörter

Serie/Report Nr.

Sammlungen