Beijing’s Peak Car Transition: Hope for Emerging Cities in the 1.5 °C Agenda
Author(s) -
Yuan Gao,
Peter Newman
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
urban planning
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.646
H-Index - 12
ISSN - 2183-7635
DOI - 10.17645/up.v3i2.1246
Subject(s) - beijing , per capita , car ownership , government (linguistics) , china , business , emerging markets , geography , economic growth , economic geography , economy , transport engineering , public transport , economics , engineering , finance , sociology , population , demography , linguistics , philosophy , archaeology
Peak car has happened in most developed cities, but for the 1.5 °C agenda the world also needs emerging cities to go through this transition. Data on Beijing shows that it has reached peak car over the past decade. Evidence is provided for peak car in Beijing from traffic supply (freeway length per capita and parking bays per private car) and traffic demand (private car ownership, automobile modal split, and Vehicle Kilometres Travelled per capita). Most importantly the data show Beijing has reduced car use absolutely whilst its GDP has continued to grow. Significant growth in electric vehicles and bikes is also happening. Beijing’s transition is explained in terms of changing government policies and emerging cultural trends, with a focus on urban fabrics theory. The implications for other emerging cities are developed out of this case study. Beijing’s on-going issues with the car and oil will remain a challenge but the first important transition is well underway.
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