|
|
|
||
PRESS RELEASE 2nd August 2006
DEPARTMENT FOR TRANSPORT FAILING ON CLIMATE CHANGE
Measures such as enforcing or reducing speed limits and smarter choices would bring major reductions in carbon emissions [6].
The Governments estimate of the increase in carbon emissions from its road-building programme of 0.1MtC by 2010 is a top-down estimate and no guide at all to the actual likely increase [7].
The report concludes that the Department for Transport must develop a more robust and more transparent approach to monitoring the carbon impacts of its policies and proposals, particularly major road-building proposals. The environmental groups are calling for the Department for Transport to play a full and active part in reducing carbon emissions and to make climate change its number one priority.
Friends of the Earths Senior Transport Campaigner Tony Bosworth said:
The Department for Transport is losing the battle against climate change,
and unless it changes its policies, it will continue to fail. Transport Secretary
Douglas Alexander must make action on global warming his main priority. And
the Government must back growing calls for a climate law to make successive
governments responsible for annual cuts in carbon dioxide."
Stephen Joseph, Executive Director of Transport 2000 said:
Transports contribution to climate change is growing but this
report shows that the Department for Transport is not tackling it with any urgency
or priority. It is pinning its hope on policies which look set to fail. The
Government must now find the political will to put in place policies to change
how we travel
Rebecca Lush, Coordinator of Road Block said:
The Government is pressing ahead with a massive road-building programme
despite not knowing the climate change impact of many of the roads. Road-building
is fuelling the traffic growth that is increasing CO2 emissions. It is not the
answer to our transport problems or to tackling climate change
Don Mathew, Policy Advisor at Sustrans said:
"We don't need large-scale schemes to cut transport's contribution to
climate change. Sustrans is demonstrating all the time that small, smart, cheap
interventions that encourage people to cycle, walk and use public transport
more reduce car travel and bring the corresponding benefits of reduced CO2 and
congestion, and increased levels of healthy active travel."
Melanie Edmunds, Transport Policy Officer at RSPB said:
Climate change will have a huge impact on wildlife in Britain and around
the world. If we want to avoid the worst impacts, then the Department for Transport
has to raise its game significantly and do a lot more to cut emissions.
ENDS
SOME TRAFFIC FACTS AND FIGURES
NOTES:
[1] Driving up carbon dioxide emissions from road transport:
an analysis of current Government projections. Copies of the report are
available from Friends of the Earths website at
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/briefings/driving_up_co2_emissions.pdf
[2] The report was commissioned by Friends of the Earth, Transport 2000, Road Block, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, and Sustrans.
[3] This is based on analysis of data supplied in responses to Parliamentary Questions. Government guidance states that the climate impact of road proposals does not need to be assessed until after the decision in principle to build the road has been taken.
[4] This figure is based on figures used by DEFRA for the economic value of carbon dioxide emissions, discounted back to the base year of 2002 at a rate of 3.5% per annum, in accordance with current Treasury practice.
[5] The European Union reached a voluntary agreement with car manufacturers in the 1990s to reduce average emissions from new cars sold to 140 grammes of carbon dioxide per kilometre (g/km CO2). However latest figures show that average emissions for new cars sold in the UK in 2005 were 169.4 g/km CO2 and that, at current rates of progress, the 2008 target will not be reached until the early 2020s.
[6] Information from a Department for Transport model analysing the impact of changes in vehicle speeds on emissions shows that rigorous enforcement of the 70mph speed limit would reduce carbon emissions from road transport by 1MtC a year.
[7] The estimate of 0.1MtC was made by Lords Transport spokesman Lord Davies in March 2005. The 2004 White Paper The Future of Transport planned an extra 1400 lane km of roadspace on Highways Agency roads by 2010, an increase of 900 lane km from the 2000 Plan.