Climate-friendly technology solutions and alternatives to private vehicle ownership
were unveiled at the 2018 United Nations
Climate Change Conference (
COP24), when international delegates met to discuss progress made towards the sustainability commitments of the
Paris Agreement.
One of the most widely anticipated presentations on the agenda was the
Driving Change Together Partnership for Electromobility,
prepared by Poland and the UK. All delegates were invited to declare
support for this new initiative, which promotes e-mobility and clean
travel.
Stakeholders also discussed the need for a long-term renewable transport
strategy and ways to help policy-makers prioritise safety,
sustainability and international cooperation.
Research: Global emissions
The
latest status report on global transport emissions has been published
by the Partnership on Sustainable Low-Carbon Transport (
SLoCaT).
The report reveals that transport was the largest growing emissions sector in 40 countries between 2000 and 2016,
with road transport the largest contributor to global carbon dioxide
emissions (accounting for three-quarters of transport emissions in
2015).
SLoCaT attributes the increase in transport emissions to a dramatic rise
in private car ownership and surface freight activity – particularly in
non-OECD countries.
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