4.7 Article

The urban governance of autonomous vehicles-In love with AVs or critical sustainability risks to future mobility transitions

Journal

CITIES
Volume 120, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cities.2021.103504

Keywords

Climate change; Urban governance; Autonomous vehicles; Smart cities; Sustainable mobilities paradigm; Sustainable development goals of cities

Categories

Funding

  1. Innovation Fund Denmark [8089-00013A]

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This paper critically examines the role of autonomous vehicles in urban planning, finding that current plans do not integrate with public transport or use renewable energy sources, potentially exacerbating emissions. Therefore, urban policy-making needs to challenge the existing techno-centric conception of autonomous vehicles to support sustainable development goals.
Increasingly guided by the use of ICT, the flow of humans and materials, smart cities and autonomous mobility amalgamate into a game changer in urban planning. This paper critically explores the role of autonomous (driverless) vehicles in plans for urban futures. By looking into the urban plans of 10 European capitals, we investigate the anticipated promises and hazards of autonomous vehicles. Theoretically, the paper draws upon critical urban mobilities studies that invite interlinking carbon reduction, smart cities and mobility planning. By examining these plans, the paper critically evaluates current urban planning for autonomous vehicles by asking whether one can identify any links to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals of sustainable cities and communities. A practice-based view on automation is then suggested as a pathway to promote a thorough sustainable mobility transition. It is concluded that none of the plans of the 10 capitals studied require AVs to integrate with public means of transport or to be fuelled by renewable energy sources. Hence, AVs are likely to individualise and intensify the existing automobility regime further and emissions are likely to increase, according to the comparative urban analysis. We therefore conclude that urban policy-making needs to contest the existing techno-centric conception of autonomous vehicles if these are to support the sustainable development goals of cities.

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