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Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions from 9 billion people TURNING THE RIGHT CORNER TOWARDS A LOW-EMISSION TRANSPORT SECTOR Berlin 27-28 September 2012

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Page 1: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy

ITF Transport Outlook

Transforming Transportation

Washington DC

26 January 2012

Transport Outlook 2050

CO2 Emissions from 9 billion people

TURNING THE RIGHT CORNER

TOWARDS A LOW-EMISSION TRANSPORT SECTOR

Berlin

27-28 September 2012

Page 2: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global passenger transport activity 2010 – 2050 Index of pkm (2010 = 100)

2

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

OECD

2010

2015

2020

2025

2030

2035

2040

2045

2050

50

100

150

200

250

•Economy returns to pre-crisis output trends•Policy priority to private ownership and use accommodation

•No return to pre-crisis output trends •Private demand management and further development of public transport supply

Page 3: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global passenger transport activity 2010 – 2050 Index of pkm (2010 = 100)

3

Non-OECD

2010

2015

2020

2025

2030

2035

2040

2045

2050

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

•Economy returns to pre-crisis levels

•Rapid urbanization while policies enable following OECD private vehicle ownership patterns

•No return to pre-crisis output trends

•Rapid urbanization is defined by active private demand management, land use policy and development of public transport

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

Page 4: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global passenger transport activity 2010-2050

• Growth is expected to be much higher outside the OECD leading to total passenger transport flows around 3.6 times as large in 2050 as in 2010

• This assumes that car ownership and use follow historical patterns observed in OECD Europe / Japan

• Discouraging car ownership and use reduces mobility growth and also diverts mobility to two-wheelers and to public transport.

• Our “low car ownership” scenario indicates that outside the OECD two-wheeler use allows mobility to develop as quickly as in the “high car ownership” scenario at moderate income levels.

4

Page 5: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global freight transport activity, 2010 – 2050, baseline and decouplingIndex of tkm (2010 = 100)

5

2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 205050

100

150

200

250

OECD

• Economy returns to pre-crisis trends

• Transport intensity of GDP equal to unity

• Economy returns to pre-crisis trends

• Decoupling of surface freight from GDP

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

Page 6: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global freight transport activity, 2010 – 2050, baseline and decouplingIndex of tkm (2010 = 100)

6

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 205050

150

250

350

450

550

Non-OECD• Economy returns to

pre-crisis trends • Transport intensity

of GDP equal to unity

• Economy returns to pre-crisis trends

• Decoupling of surface freight from GDP

Page 7: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Freight transport activity 2010-2050

• Global freight tonne-km to rise 2–4 times by 2050

• Low scenario: Decoupling of tonne-km from GDP growth

– Rapid dematerialisation

– Active policies to dampen freight transport growth

• High scenario: GDP growth returns to pre-crisis trends and remains transport intensive with unitary elasticity

– Evidence from OECD countries supports high freight transport intensity of GDP

• Developing countries may be embarking on a relatively freight intensive growth path, this upside risk is reflected in the high scenarios

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Page 8: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Shift in centre of gravity from OECD to non-OECD countries (baseline scenarios)

8

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

OECD48%

non-OECD52%

Passenger mobility (pkm) 2010

OECD29%

non-OECD71%

Passenger mobility (pkm) 2010

OECD28%

non-OECD72%

Surface freight (tkm) Baseline, 2050

OECD47%

non-OECD53%

Surface freight (tkm), 2010

Page 9: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

High Scenarios

• Best interpreted as where demand “would like to go”

• Realistic? Policy intervention?– Urbanisation policies might slow growth of car ownership and

use

– High energy prices would suppress growth

– …..

• But high scenarios far from impossible

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Page 10: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

CO2 emissions from passenger mobility

• CO2 emissions rise less quickly than mobility through fuel economy improvement and technological change

• In the OECD, the CO2-saving effect of technological change is

sufficiently large that emissions from passenger transport stabilize or even decline despite the transport volume growth of around 30%

• Outside the OECD, the fast growth of mobility and the switch to more

CO2-intensive modes imply a large increase in emissions that is only

mildly tempered by technological change. The increase is expected to be between 1.5 and 3 times 2010 levels

10

Page 11: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global CO2 emissions from total private mobility index (2010 = 100)

11

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

OECD Non-OECD

2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 205050

100

150

200

250

2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 20500

100

200

300

400

500

Page 12: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

CO2 emissions from freight transport

• CO2 emissions rise less quickly than mobility through fuel economy

improvements and these improvements are larger in the OECD than outside the OECD

• Due to expected changes in the commodity mix outside the OECD,

CO2 projections in the high scenario may be conservative given the

possibility of an increasing share of road freight

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Page 13: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global CO2 emissions from total freight mobility index (2010 = 100)

13

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 20500

100

200

300

400

500

Non-OECD

2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 205050

100

150

200

250

300

OECD

Page 14: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global CO2 emissions from transport

• Globally CO2 emissions from transport are expected to be 1.5 to 2.5

times higher by 2050 compared to 2010 values

• In the OECD, stronger growth in demand for freight transport mitigates some of the technological improvements in private mobility in terms of emissions

• Outside the OECD stronger growth in both passenger and freight mobility together with less technological change puts additional pressure on global emissions

• In total emissions from transport are to rise by a factor of 2.4 to 4.5 outside the OECD

14

Page 15: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global CO2 emissions from transport, index (2010 = 100)

15

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

GDP recovery, high car ownership and GDP intensity of freight transport equal to unity

GDP recovery, low car ownership and decoupling of freight transport from GDP

2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 20500

100

200

300

Page 16: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global CO2 emissions from transport, by transport mode for passenger and freight, metric-tonnes of CO2 equivalent

16

2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 20500

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

14000

World

LDV truckstwo wheelers busair rail (passenger and freight)

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

Page 17: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Passenger Modal Split by region, 2010 and 2050 baseline scenario, p-km (%)

17

OECD Non-OECD

Source: International Transport Forum calculations using IEA MoMo version 2012.

Light-duty Vehicles

2w Air Rail Bus0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

Light-duty Vehicles

2w Air Rail Bus0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

2010

2050

Page 18: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Global CO2 emissions from light duty vehicles

•Maximisation of cost effective fuel economy improvement around the world–GFEI target: 8 l/100km for new fleet in 2008 4 l/100km in

2030; & for whole fleet in 2050

– through continued progress with car emissions standards would stabilise emissions

• Impressive but not enough to for IPCC 450ppm CO2 limit

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Page 19: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

19

New Car CO2 Emissions Regulations

Page 20: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

An example on Urban development and car use policies

Motorization Rates in Shanghai and Beijing in Relation to GDP per Capita

20

Page 21: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Effective Policies for Lower Emissions from Transport

• Vehicle and fuel Technology - fuel economy (ICE) and low carbon energy vectors

• Improved Public Transport service through ITS

• Urban land use and car use– Just like transport generates emissions, inadequate land use

generates excessive transport

– Regulation & Prices on ownership, access and parking

• Prices in general reflecting use of resources (costs) as well as value for users and for society

• Coordinated Use of Multiple Instruments– Technology + integrated planning + regulation & prices

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Page 22: Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy ITF Transport Outlook Transforming Transportation Washington DC 26 January 2012 Transport Outlook 2050 CO 2 Emissions

Plenary 2: Towards a Green Economy

ITF Transport Outlook

Transforming Transportation

Washington DC

26 January 2012

Thank you

Jose Viegas,

Secretary General