Joint Manifesto – Practical Policies for a Just and Resilient Built Environment
Along with a coalition of civil society organizations, NGOs, trade unions, local governments, and business representatives, Bellona Europa calls for ...
Publication
Authors: Platform for Electro-mobility
Publisher: Bellona Europa
Publication
The Platform for Electro-mobility is an alliance of organisations from across industries and transport modes representing producers, infrastructure managers, operators and users of transport means as well as cities and civil society. It shares a vision of electro-mobility for surface transport delivered through multiple modes including electric bikes, cars and vans, trucks, buses, rail and other public transport. The Platform has been created to drive forward this transformation.
As a founding member of the platform, Bellona is a contributing author to this recommendations paper on ‘Decarbonising Transport through Electro-mobility’ which provides an overview of existing barriers and suggests solutions for fostering the large-scale electro-mobility uptake in Europe. The paper was launched at the platform’s inaugural event which took place on 21 April 2016 in Brussels.
Electro-mobility can play a key role in delivering the EU Transport White Paper objectives to halve emissions in urban centres by 2050; attain zero-emission urban logistics by 2030; and ban conventionally-fuelled cars from cities by 2050. Only electrification of transport in conjunction with broader sustainable transport principles provides such wide ranging benefits, which multiply when coupled with low-carbon generation of electricity connected through smart grids. The Energy Union’s aim to “to break oil dependency and to decarbonise transport, especially for road (short and medium distance) and rail” when implemented in conjunction with broader sustainable transport principles, should make the shift to electro-mobility a cornerstone of Europe’s 2016 decarbonisation of transport strategy.
This paper outlines the key EU and other actions needed to create a single market for electro-mobility and enable the Union to become a “leader in e-mobility” generating growth and jobs. The upcoming European Commission Communication on the Decarbonisation of Transport provides the ideal opportunity to make detailed proposals in the areas identified above to help deliver these objectives.