Transport - Mar 4
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
"The car is doomed," Monash University associate professor Damon Honnery said, discussing the findings of a soon-to-be-published research paper, Mitigating Greenhouse: Limited Time, Limited Options, written with Dr Patrick Moriarty. Federal and state governments should stop building new arterial roads, the two scientists from Monash University's department of mechanical and aerospace engineering argue. Instead, governments must focus on phasing out cars, improving the energy efficiency of public transport and making people use it, they argue. "Ultimately, we are going to have to move to a decentralised society where most people need to travel far less," Professor Honnery said. ... Dr Moriarty also believes there must be big reductions in air travel. "An overseas trip might become a once-in-a-lifetime experience rather than an annual event," he said. RACV public policy general manager Brian Negus said there needed to be a balanced approach to planning for future car use: "We need to improve the road system so you get more efficiency and less congestion." Aren't these somewhat contradictory aims? Isn't the "efficiency" of a road maximum in the period just prior to grid lock?
Darebin Council's new transport plan - the first in Melbourne to explicitly give priority to trams, pedestrians and cyclists on key roads - could lead to the removal of clearways on some routes in a bid to discourage drivers.
The copper wiring, believed to be stolen from a variety of locations including rail tracks, power stations and scrap metal depots, was destined for the Asian black market, police said. The bust is the culmination of a series of police taskforces set up after the copper thefts were identified as a major problem for Melbourne's public transport network.
The development of the Garden City, once teeming with walkers who leisurely ambled down the wide pavements in the evenings, has turned the simple act of crossing the road into a gamble. The BBMP, in its enthusiasm to provide motorists with hassle-free rides, has let pedestrian safety fall by the wayside. Flyovers, underpasses and one-ways have squeezed pedestrians out of the roads. Major infrastructure projects either eat up footpaths or shrink them so much that they are practically useless. |
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