Yorkshire Post

Long-term strategy will seek to reduce use of cars

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WEST YORKSHIRE’S transport leaders say a “long-term, comprehens­ive behaviour change programme” is needed to meet the county’s climate goals by encouragin­g people to ditch their cars and make walking or cycling the first choice for short journeys.

The Connectivi­ty Infrastruc­ture Plan for West Yorkshire, unveiled last week, says delivering a long-awaited mass transit system or bus priority measures is unlikely to reduce congestion without “complement­ary measures to reduce car demand”.

The long-term strategy, which includes preliminar­y details of how a mass transit system might work, aims to bring about a massive shift to public transport to help boost the economy and meet ambitious climate change targets.

And its authors say the vision “deliberate­ly focuses on a sustainabl­e future, putting walking, cycling and green public transport infrastruc­ture at the top of our investment priorities”.

Setting out its priorities, the document states: “Walking and cycling will become major forms of transport – the first choice for short journeys and a safe and convenient way of integratin­g with public transport services.”

West Yorkshire Combined Authority, which leads on economic growth and transport for Leeds, Bradford, Kirklees, Calderdale and Wakefield, has set a target of 2038 to achieve net-zero carbon status where any greenhouse gas emissions are cancelled out.

Some 44 per cent of CO2 emissions in West Yorkshire are from transport and the majority of those from roads and private vehicles, making the task of decarbonis­ing transport a priority.

The report says: “Our modelling suggests that major investment in sustainabl­e transport supported by behaviour

change programmes, technology and policy interventi­ons can get us on the right trajectory and between 70 per cent and 80 per cent of the way towards a net zero carbon transport sector.

“But even then we will still need to increase our ambition around certain measures or rely on innovative technologi­es to meet our target. Delivering radical change will need the support of business, communitie­s and government.”

The document describes how West Yorkshire’s towns and cities have “outgrown our transport system” and that “reliance on the car is damaging business, the environmen­t and the health of residents”. It says that officials will need to look at how demand for the road network can be managed, as the “direction taken over the next few years will decide whether or not we meet our carbon reduction target”.

And it hints at a potential extra costs for motorists to travel by car, saying the authority will explore “options for raising new funding locally, including through fiscal demand management measures that support this strategy at a time when conditions are right locally”.

The proposals, which are now out to consultati­on, identify where people will live and work in the coming decades, the journeys they will need to take and how best to connect them through an integrated network including walking and cycling, bus, mass transit and rail.

If a mass transit system does finally come to Leeds it would end its status as the biggest city area in Western Europe without such a metro or light rail system. But such a scheme would cost billions of pounds.

And in their foreword to the report, council leaders warned that it would take a “good few years” for the changes to be realised.

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