Climate change, air quality and energy challenges: the role of urban transport policies and countermeasures in developing countries and emerging economies
Transport is an integral component of sustaining livelihoods: without efficient urban transport mankind would not survive and develop and nor would economies. Yet, despite the immense benefits that transport enables, such as access to jobs, markets, education, and consumer goods and services via global supply chains, the transport sector generates substantial dis-benefits.
These include dependence on non-renewable energy, greenhouse gas emissions, local pollutions, road accidents and inequalities of access. Such dis-benefits clearly demonstrate that the transport sector is currently unsustainable economically, environmentally and socially. The way we transport people and goods must be radically changed. Many cities in the world have already started implementing effective policies and countermeasures that seek to avoid and reduce the usage of energy intensive motorised modes.
These also bring improvements in accessibility, and hence increased options and opportunities of mobility. Applicable practices and suitable transferrable lessons are addressed in this conference under the following three Sub Themes:
- Problems and Externalities of Transport
- Policies and Countermeasures for motorised and non-motorised transport
- Policies and Countermeasures for urban freight movement
Abstracts should be submitted online starting 15th of December 2013 and ending on 1st of March 2014 and should be no longer than 250 words in English or French, including: - Sub theme, - Title, - Author(s) name(s) and affiliation(s), - Corresponding author name and e-mail address,- Objective,- Methodology, - Expected conclusions of the proposed paper.