Skip to main content

ITF helping to plot the future of urban transport mobility

The 8th APEC Transport Ministers’ Meeting in Tokyo on 4-6 Septembersaw high-level discussions on how to enhance connectivity in the Asia-Pacific region through high-quality transport. As a guest, the International Transport Forum (ITF) was also heavily involved in the event, as Guy Woodford reports A transport Connectivity Map visualising Asia-Pacific’s ideal transport network in 2020, and a Quality Transport vision for the region encompassing convenience, safety, security, and sustainability, will b
December 2, 2013 Read time: 4 mins
José Viegas spoke at the 8th APEC Ministers Meeting. Pic courtsey of ITF
The 8th APEC Transport Ministers’ Meeting in Tokyo on 4-6 Septembersaw high-level discussions on how to enhance connectivity in the Asia-Pacific region through high-quality transport. As a guest, the International Transport Forum (ITF) was also heavily involved in the event, as Guy Woodford reports

A transport Connectivity Map visualising Asia-Pacific’s ideal transport network in 2020, and a Quality Transport vision for the region encompassing convenience, safety, security, and sustainability, will be developed by APEC Transport Ministers following discussions at the recent 8th APEC Transport Ministers’ Meeting in Tokyo.

In between establishing the two key visionary projects, the 1102 International Transport Forum’s (ITF) Secretary-General, José Viegas, joined ministers at the prestigious three-day  APEC event and reported on the ITF Summit on ‘Funding Transport’ held in Leipzig, Germany in May 2013. During his presentation to ministers titled Improving the Environment for Investment, Viegas stressed the importance of trust between public and private partners to ensure successful infrastructure projects, as well as the need to provide a steady number of projects to diversify large-scale project investment risk.

Viegas also highlighted McKinsey Global Institute figures showing a long-term transport infrastructure funding gap between developed and emerging economies. According to the MGI research, while developed economies averaged 1.5% and 1.3% of GDP for transport infrastructure spending in 1980 and 2008, emerging economies spent an average of 1.9% and 3.1% in the same comparable years.

Viegas noted that most governments now look to public private partnerships (PPP) to increase investment. This, he said, allowed governments to raise investment when public finances are tight, while also circumventing limits on public spending. “The record of PPP performance is mixed, their fiscal sustainability must be reinforced,” he said.

Referring again to differences between developed and emerging economies, Viegas pointed to how the 2332 World Bank sees a “$3-4 trillion” transport infrastructure funding gap in the developing world.

During the key Tokyo talks, Viegas held seven bilaterals, meeting with Minister Gerry Brownlee of New Zealand, the upcoming 2014/15 ITF presidency country, and Minister Maksim Sokolov of Russia. He also exchanged views with Senior Vice-Minister Hiroshi Kajiyama of Japan, US Deputy Secretary of Transport John Porcari, Vice-Minister Yeo Hyung-ku of Korea, Mexican Undersecretary of Transport Carlos F. Almada, and Andrew Wilson, Deputy Secretary of Infrastructure and Transport, Australia.

After attending the latest APEC Transport Ministers Meeting, Viegas travelled to The Hague, in The Netherlands, for the FIA Mobility Conference Week. During his presentation at the conference titled Urban Mobility at the crossroads: social megatrends, tech option, policy choices, Viegas said that the 50% of the world’s seven billion population currently urbanised, will increase to 80% of nine billion people urbanised in 40 years, creating huge pressure on urban mobility infrastructure.

Of current urban-based car use, he said, “Private cars are one of the most under-used form of capital, 90% of the time inactive; in most cities no more than 25% of cars are active at the same time. But flexibility and convenience can justify willingness to pay.”

Viegas pointed to a possible gradual shift from car ownership to car-based mobility based on vehicle sharing which could reduce costs and congestion, while also releasing public space for pedestrians and cyclists by having lower car parking needs. Viegas said that higher utilisation of fewer cars should allow for a swifter incorporation of new vehicle technology, leading to a faster reduction of environmental aggression.

The rise of autonomous cars, Viegas noted, could assist older citizens’ mobility, as they are no longer physically and mentally fit to drive, but still possess good self-awareness and crave independence. Viegas also suggested that autonomous cars could have an adverse economic impact on the taxi industry. A smaller middle class in many countries could, suggests Viegas, result in greater use of two-wheel motorised, assisted, or non-motorised vehicles.

“On urban mobility, multiple options are open, the future is not determined, but the policy choices we make will have strong consequences: on the distribution of access to jobs and social facilities; on the evolution of lifestyles; and on the evolution of cities themselves,” Viegas concluded.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ‘Dirtiest man on TV’ Mike Rowe joins Tech Talks line up
    March 6, 2017
    CONEXPO-CON/AGG 2017 announced that executive producer and host Mike Rowe, best known as the ‘dirtiest man on TV’ from the hit TV series Dirty Jobs, is a featured speaker at the show’s new Tech Talks forum.
  • IRF launches global road diagnostic initiative
    March 8, 2016
    Transportation decision-makers will soon benefit from a new comparative study on the cost-effectiveness of road programme delivery. This will be thanks to the launch of a global benchmarking initiative by the International Road Federation using a methodology developed by McKinsey & Co. Globally, US$1.4 trillion is invested every year on transportation assets — including $700 billion for roads - as the world’s economies develop and respond to emerging mobility patterns. Delivering these road programmes
  • A new event is preparing the asphalt industry for tomorrow’s world
    September 11, 2018
    An inaugural event for the European bitumen industry urged attendees to look to the future - Kristina Smith reports What will tomorrow’s roads look like? Will lanes be narrower, will the road charge vehicles as they drive on them, will they collect data, will they be self-cleaning and de-polluting? All these questions and more were pondered at a two-day conference in Berlin, entitled ‘Preparing the asphalt industry for the future’. It was the first such event for Eurasphalt & Eurobitume (E&E), and set a
  • Statistics important to assessment of transport projects
    April 13, 2012
    IRF Geneva's statistics guru, Cristian Gonzalez, explores the growing importance of data in public and private assessments of transport projects IRF's work on statistics is rarely in the limelight. It is, however, an essential component of the federation's key advocacy role on behalf of its members. Statistics are, indeed, a vital function of authoritative lobbying and knowledge sharing on the range of issues impacting our sector - from highlighting the persuasive economic business cases for investment in