Difference between revisions of "Action towards Climate Friendly Transport"
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• Component 4 is led by MOVIN’ON’s and UITP’s membership by establishing global dialogue arenas with the private sector to connect key mobility stakeholders and to structure collaborative dialogue and help accelerate measurable action. | • Component 4 is led by MOVIN’ON’s and UITP’s membership by establishing global dialogue arenas with the private sector to connect key mobility stakeholders and to structure collaborative dialogue and help accelerate measurable action. | ||
|Participants companies number=0 | |Participants companies number=0 | ||
− | |Participants business organisations number= | + | |Participants business organisations number=5 |
|Participants business organisations names=EV100 (United Kingdom), UITP (Belgium), UIC (France), MOVIN'ON (France), EV100 (UK) | |Participants business organisations names=EV100 (United Kingdom), UITP (Belgium), UIC (France), MOVIN'ON (France), EV100 (UK) | ||
|Participants research and educational organisations number=0 | |Participants research and educational organisations number=0 | ||
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|Participants governmental actors names=BMZ - Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development(Germany), Sustainable Mobility for All (USA), SLoCaT Secretariat (China) | |Participants governmental actors names=BMZ - Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development(Germany), Sustainable Mobility for All (USA), SLoCaT Secretariat (China) | ||
|Participants regional actors number=0 | |Participants regional actors number=0 | ||
− | |Participants municipal actors number= | + | |Participants municipal actors number=47 |
− | |Participants municipal actors names=Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), Auckland (New Zealand), Banjarmasin (Indonesia), Barcelona (Spain), Birmingham ( | + | |Participants municipal actors names=Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), Auckland (New Zealand), Banjarmasin (Indonesia), Barcelona (Spain), Birmingham (United Kingdom), Bogota (Colombia), Cape Town (South Africa), Cairo (Egypt), Chennai (India), Copenhagen (Denmark), Dar Es Salaam (Tanzania), Fortaleza (Brazil), Greater Manchester (United Kingdom), Guadalajara (Mexico), Heidelberg (Germany), Hoi An (Viet Nam), Honolulu (USA), Jinja (Uganda), Kochi (India), Lagos (Nigeria), London (United Kingdom), Los Angeles (USA), Medellin (Colombia), Mexico City (Mexico), Milan (Italy), Nairobi (Kenya), Oslo (Norway), Oxford (UK), Paris (France), Porto (Portugal), Quito (Ecuador), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Rome (Italy), Santa Monica (USA), Santiago (Chile), Sao Paulo (Brazil), Seattle (USA), Seoul (South Korea), Singra (Bangladesh), Tokyo (Japan), Trujillo (Peru), Vancouver (Canada), Warsaw (Poland), West Hollywood (USA), Windhoek (Namibia), Rotterdam (The Netherlands), Zhytomyr (Ukraine). |
|Participants intergovernmental organisations number=1 | |Participants intergovernmental organisations number=1 | ||
|Participants intergovernmental organisations names=UN Habitat (Kenya) | |Participants intergovernmental organisations names=UN Habitat (Kenya) | ||
− | |Participants financial institutions number= | + | |Participants financial institutions number=3 |
|Participants financial institutions names=ADB (Phillippines), CAF (Venezuela), KfW (Germany), | |Participants financial institutions names=ADB (Phillippines), CAF (Venezuela), KfW (Germany), | ||
|Participants other members number=0 | |Participants other members number=0 | ||
− | |Participants supporting partners number= | + | |Participants supporting partners number=1 |
|Participants supporting partners names=TUMI (Germany) | |Participants supporting partners names=TUMI (Germany) | ||
|Number of members= | |Number of members= |
Revision as of 09:56, 14 November 2019
General
Name of initiative | Action towards Climate-Friendly Transport (ACT) |
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LPAA initiative | No |
NAZCA Initiative | No |
Website address | www.transformative-mobility.org/news/do-you-act-iact |
Related initiatives | |
Starting year | 2019 |
End year | |
Secretariat | Maruxa Cardama, Secretary General, Partnership on Sustainable, Low Carbon Transport (SLoCaT), e-mail: maruxa.cardama@slocatpartnership.org
Daniel Moser, Hea of Management, Transformative Urban Mobility Initiative (TUMI), e-mail: daniel.moser@giz.de |
Organisational structure | https://www.transformative-mobility.org/news/do-you-act-iact
You can join ACT at: info@transformative-mobility.org |
Geographical coverage | Global |
Name of lead organisation | Action towards Climate-Friendly Transport (ACT) |
Type of lead organisation | Network/Consortium/Partnership |
Location/Nationality of lead organisation | Germany |
Description
Description | Climate stabilization requires a decarbonized transport sector. The Action towards Climate Friendly Transport (ACT) initiative works towards this objective by following a holistic sustainable transport approach that reflects the Avoid-Shift-Improve (A-S-I) framework. |
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Objectives | Accelerate the development and deployment of zero emission vehicles by 2030. Establish a multi-region platform for e-bus deployment in 500 cities by 2025, particularly in the Global South. |
Activities | • Component 1 is led by the Transformative Urban Mobility Initiative (TUMI) and the Sustainable Mobility for All Partnership (SUM4All) and aims to connect innovative approaches at a global scale with integrated long-term planning and policy-making processes at the city level in developing and emerging countries.
• Component 2 is led by GIZ and WRI to support, in policy dialogue with governments and mayors, an enabling environment for mass rollout of electric busses. • Component 3 is led by the Transport Decarbonisation Alliance (TDA), EV100 and CALSTART/Drive to Zero and will support the creation of a mass market for zero-emission freight vehicles by increasing their global demand through commitments made by governments, cities and private companies. • Component 4 is led by MOVIN’ON’s and UITP’s membership by establishing global dialogue arenas with the private sector to connect key mobility stakeholders and to structure collaborative dialogue and help accelerate measurable action. |
One or two success stories achieved |
Monitoring and Impacts
Function of initiative | Implementation | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Activity of initiative | Goal setting (ex-ante) | ||||
Indicators |
Goal setting (ex-ante) — Stakeholders who have committed to the goals
| ||||
Goals | I. Improving the access of people and goods around the world to affordable, clean, safe and reliable mobility in order to improve individual development opportunities,
II. Advancing the mass roll-out of zero emission vehicles to aid decarbonisation of the transport sector, improving energy efficiency and reducing greenhouse gas emissions of urban transport systems, III. Aiming towards the integration of a wide field of actors including national and subnational governments and their networks, financiers and international development cooperation actors as well as the private sector and civil society to work with unified forces to adress sustainable urban mobility challenges. IV. Strengthening the political, legal and institutional frameworks, V. Reducing the adverse health and poverty-driving impacts of air pollution due to urban transport and road accidents. | ||||
Comments on indicators and goals | e-bus deployment in 500 cities by 2025 | ||||
How will goals be achieved | |||||
Have you changed or strenghtened your goals | |||||
Progress towards the goals | |||||
How are you tracking progress of your initiative | |||||
Available reporting |
Participants
Participants | Number | Names |
---|---|---|
Members | 64 | |
Companies | 0 | |
Business organisations | 5 | EV100 (United Kingdom), UITP (Belgium), UIC (France), MOVIN'ON (France), EV100 (UK) |
Research and educational organisations | 0 | |
Non-governmental organisations | 5 | GIZ (Germany), C40 (United Kingdom), ICLEI (Germany), WRI (USA), ITDP (USA) |
National states | 0 | |
Governmental actors | 3 | BMZ - Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development(Germany), Sustainable Mobility for All (USA), SLoCaT Secretariat (China) |
Regional / state / county actors | 0 | |
City / municipal actors | 47 | Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), Auckland (New Zealand), Banjarmasin (Indonesia), Barcelona (Spain), Birmingham (United Kingdom), Bogota (Colombia), Cape Town (South Africa), Cairo (Egypt), Chennai (India), Copenhagen (Denmark), Dar Es Salaam (Tanzania), Fortaleza (Brazil), Greater Manchester (United Kingdom), Guadalajara (Mexico), Heidelberg (Germany), Hoi An (Viet Nam), Honolulu (USA), Jinja (Uganda), Kochi (India), Lagos (Nigeria), London (United Kingdom), Los Angeles (USA), Medellin (Colombia), Mexico City (Mexico), Milan (Italy), Nairobi (Kenya), Oslo (Norway), Oxford (UK), Paris (France), Porto (Portugal), Quito (Ecuador), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Rome (Italy), Santa Monica (USA), Santiago (Chile), Sao Paulo (Brazil), Seattle (USA), Seoul (South Korea), Singra (Bangladesh), Tokyo (Japan), Trujillo (Peru), Vancouver (Canada), Warsaw (Poland), West Hollywood (USA), Windhoek (Namibia), Rotterdam (The Netherlands), Zhytomyr (Ukraine). |
Intergovernmental organisations | 1 | UN Habitat (Kenya) |
Financial Institutions | 3 | ADB (Phillippines), CAF (Venezuela), KfW (Germany) |
Faith based organisations | 0 | |
Other members | 0 | |
Supporting partners | 1 | TUMI (Germany) |
Number of members in the years | | |
Have only national states as participators | No |
Theme
Transport | Agriculture | Forestry | Business | Financial institutions | Buildings | Industry | Waste | Cities and subnational governments | Short Term Pollutants | International maritime transport | Energy Supply | Fluorinated gases | Energy efficiency | Renewable energy | Supply chain emission reductions | Adaptation | Other | Resilience | Innovation | Energy Access and Efficiency | Private Finance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
Not only have national states as participators