Road to 1.5
How Urban Mobility Can Help Cities Limit Climate Change
Transport emissions are key to meeting The Paris Agreement goals
More than 700 cities globally have committed to meet The Paris
Agreement goals of halving their carbon emissions and limiting global warming to 1.5-degrees Celsius
by 2030. The task isn’t easy, and time is running out, but cities can make significant progress by focusing
greater attention on transport emissions, which account for about a third of their carbon footprint.
Cities must strike the right balance in how different modes – from mass transit to personal cars and cycling
– are used. And each city has its own unique set of variables, like infrastructure, geography, and
demographics.
New research from the Oliver Wyman Forum offers individualized solutions for major global cities to help
them meet their climate targets with sustainable mobility.
Projected Urban Mobility Warming Impact And Emissions at City-Level (2030)
[i]
Based on cities’ existing action plans
Temperature in °C, emissions in Megatons of Carbon Dioxide Equivalent (MtCO2e)
0°C
1.5°C
2°C
3°C
––– Target 1.5°C
Our approach prioritizes not only sustainability, but controls for factors like accessibility,
affordability, investment costs, convenience, and efficiency. We used sophisticated modelling,
introducing factors to account for different scenarios and the fact that people cannot change overnight.
Commuters who travel, say 10 miles, to their office cannot feasibly be asked to walk or bike instead of
driving.
And while every city needs a unique strategy, there are common threads that most should weave into their
plans, like electrifying fleets, reducing personal car usage, or promoting shared mobility.
Decreasing car use and gasoline vehicles can accomplish much of the task for cities, according to our
research. An increase in shared and active mobility, like bike-sharing and walking, and incentivizing public transit use can compensate for lower car use to some extent
and bring cities closer to their goal.
However, it’s close to impossible for some cities to achieve their Paris Agreement targets by 2030
without drastic measures like stark and sudden shifts in commuter behavior. The research examines where
those changes are needed and what they would have to be for each city.
But the scope of exactly how far those solutions will reach in lowering emissions varies widely
depending on how car-dependent or holistic a city’s mobility network is. That underscores the need for
individualized plans, even between cities grouped in the following categories.
Even cities with strong mobility networks need to adapt
These cities, like London, New York, and Paris, have ambitious climate action plans but will still fall
just short of closing their emissions gap, if no additional measures are introduced. They boast strong
public transport networks, and have more multimodality available, like ride-hailing and micromobility.
And yet, commuters still typically rely on traditional modes, like personal car use, because of gaps in
first- and last-mile transportation. Authorities for the leading cities need to commit to even further
action.
Take San Francisco, for example. It’s the leading city in our research – almost closing its mobility
emissions gap without employing any optimization scenarios. However, the Bay Area city falls just short
of reaching its global warming target based on city action plans despite an expected 20% decline in
carbon emissions by 2030. San Francisco is estimated to reach 1.6°C in 2030 with current city plans and
needs an additional 11% emissions drop on top of those plans to meet the Paris Agreement.
That small gap gives San Francisco a wide array of feasible options for city leaders to act on. Pursuing
more multimodality would be relatively simple, requiring solutions like more car-free areas and public
transit infrastructure, more electrification largely means accelerating the electrification of car and
bus fleets. The latter is already a goal in the city’s Electric Mobility Implementation Plan.
But modal shifts can only do so much in some cities. Take Hong Kong and Singapore, both boast top-tier
public transit systems but are reliant on carbon-intensive energy grids. Without sharp reductions of
energy emissions, Hong Kong and Singapore would need to reduce mobility demand by building denser
housing or a implementing a “15-minute city” urban planning design. Both cities should consider reducing
energy emissions and electrifying public and private transport.
Cities dependent on cars must confront their legacies
Commuters in sprawling cities, like Dubai and Los Angeles, rely heavily on personal cars. Trips are
often over long distances, and a lack of other transportation modes — namely, mass transit and
micromobility for first- and last-miles — makes it difficult to meet climate commitments.
Better public transit options can greatly help Los Angeles, for example, but the city is spread over a
wide area, which makes it challenging to provide services with enough station density. City officials
should explore increasing the appeal of buses with more affordable fares and more frequent and expansive
routes.
Los Angeles is far from closing its emissions gap, and the city’s current plans would only reduce
emissions by 9% by 2030, requiring an additional cut of 54% on top of those current commitments to meet
a 1.5-degree goal. And mobility demand in Los Angeles – a city notorious for its gridlock traffic – is
expected to grow by 8% by 2030, which puts it further from one of the city’s potential levers:
significantly reducing overall mobility demand. Los Angeles can reduce demand for personal car use by
limiting parking spaces and establishing congestion pricing and low-emission zones where only
clean-energy vehicles are allowed. Other methods for reducing travel demand include incentivizing hybrid
or remote work and building “15-minute city” concepts, in which necessities like healthcare, work, and
education are within a 15-minute walk or bike ride.
And while California banned the sale of new-gasoline-powered cars by 2035, Los Angeles needs to be more
proactive in phasing them out. More than 90% of distance traveled in Los Angeles was made by car in
2022, and roughly 90% of those vehicles are gasoline or diesel-powered. Aggressive pushes for
electrification will go a long way for a city with historically high levels of car ownership.
Cities in developing economies need investment to jumpstart sustainable mobility
Emerging cities, like Lagos, are typically located in developing countries with low government
investment in infrastructure, resulting in weak public transport networks and shared mobility support.
Both mobility demand and forecasted emissions are expected to increase by roughly 50% in Lagos by 2030,
meaning the Nigerian city would need to decrease its emissions by an additional 53% on top of current
commitments. That wide veer away from meeting Paris Agreement targets is mostly driven by the popularity
of gasoline-powered cars and buses.
Reducing that mobility demand isn’t a realistic option for Lagos given its rapid social and economic
growth. In theory, Lagos could invest heavily in decarbonizing its power grid and electrifying public
transport to meet the Paris Agreement target. This path would require not only domestic investment, but
billions of dollars in urgent and immediate international support as well.
Reaching a 1.5-degree target will take everyone
A sustainable future is still in reach but realizing that vision will require everyone to work together,
from mobility providers and governments to consumers. The Oliver Wyman Forum designed these modal mixes
to account for new technologies and solutions that enable more equitable, affordable, and sustainable
mobility – particularly for parts of our society that are heavily reliant on personal cars and
carbon-intensive power grids.
Commuters need to reflect on how they travel and what their carbon footprint is, and make greener
choices. City governments must double down on sustainable infrastructure and incentives to shift the
modal mix in line with their emissions targets, while providers work to unfold the full potential of
their services without cannibalizing ridership from public transport. With transit accounting for such a
large percentage of global emissions, cities must act now on their urban mobility networks.
City Overview
2030 Projected Temperature Increase (°C)
About Road to 1.5
This report was created to offer city governments a feasible blueprint to lower their carbon
footprint. With some estimates suggest that cities are responsible for 75% of global CO2e, and the transport sector
placed among the largest contributors, the weight of this research is clear. This report narrows its
focus to cities rather than national governments, given the size and severity of their carbon
footprints. Cities can also act with more agility than national governments – the former having more
control to enforce mobility policies within their jurisdiction than national governments and are
more intimately aware of their demographic makeup.
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