Travel Behaviour Reconsidered in an Era of Decarbonisation
Abstract
The transport system is central to our lives as our means to travel, but also has major impact on our environment. This has become most salient in recent years through its contribution to climate change. However, this perspective has only had a minor impact on the conventional economic analysis and modelling of transport investments, creating a dissonance between the traditional objectives of investment and the strategic need to reduce carbon emissions to Net Zero by 2050. Travel Behaviour Reconsidered in an Era of Decarbonisation argues that our transport networks are mature, and the objective should be to improve operational efficiency. Over the past half century, large public expenditures in roads and railways were justified by an analytic approach to the benefits of investment, primarily the value of the time saved through faster travel, to both business and non-business users of the networks. However, average travel time has not changed over this period. People have taken the benefit of faster travel as better access to people, places, activities and services, with the ensuing enhanced opportunities and choices. This book argues that the basis of orthodox transport economic analysis has been misconceived and a fresh perspective on economic analysis is now needed.
Keywords
Travel behaviour; Transport economics; Transport modelling; Transport decarbonisation; Covid pandemic; Car dependence; Transport technologies; Electric vehicles; Transport investment; Road traffic congestionDOI
10.14324/111.9781800087163ISBN
9781800087163, 9781800087170, 9781800087187, 9781800087194, 9781800087163Publisher
UCL PressPublisher website
https://www.uclpress.co.uk/Publication date and place
London, 2024Classification
Transport industries
Environment, transport and planning law: general
Transport planning and policy