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14 - Transportation in Developing Nations: Managing the Institutional and Technological Transition to a Low-Emissions Future

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2010

Irving M. Mintzer
Affiliation:
Stockholm Environment Institute
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Summary

Editor's Introduction

The world is caught in a seemingly insolvable dilemma. On one hand, in both industrialized and developing countries, consumers are increasingly demanding mobility—both for themselves and for goods from far away. The most convenient, and in many cases most desired solution is transport by motor vehicles. But as Jayant Sathaye and Michael Walsh note in this chapter, increasing motor vehicle use inevitably leads to a range of air pollutant emissions to the atmosphere —along with congestion and inefficient use of fuel. These in turn exacerbate both environmental and economic problems. As developing countries become more urbanized and increasingly dependent on cars and trucks, they will confront the linked problems of heavy traffic, urban pollution, high accident rates and low vehicle efficiencies. These developments suggest to Sathaye and Walsh that there is a growing need for new and more sustainable transportation strategies.

Unfortunately, the trend is in the opposite direction. Sathaye and Walsh document how desires for mobility in developing countries have already brought forth a conventional vehicle fleet that is dependent on liquid fuels — principally oil. Expanding industrial markets spur demands for motorized freight transport. As economies grow, freight transport traditionally shifts modes —from rail to roads and air. The gradual movement away from non-motorized transport—which depended on animal carts, bicycles, and people on foot—toward increasing reliance on cars, buses, and trucks has led to multipurpose use of roads with consequent increases in congestion, risks of collisions, and decreases in fuel efficiency.

Type
Chapter
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Confronting Climate Change
Risks, Implications and Responses
, pp. 195 - 216
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1992

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