3.8 Article

Improving future travel demand projections: a pathway with an open science interdisciplinary approach

Journal

PROGRESS IN ENERGY
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2516-1083/ac86b5

Keywords

travel demand; mobility; long-term projections; travel demand forecasting

Categories

Funding

  1. The authors thank the reviewers for their suggestions that have significantly improved the quality of the paper. S Y acknowledges funding from Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research (Mistra). S Y, P F, Y L acknowledge funding from H2020 Eu
  2. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research (Mistra) [821124]
  3. H2020 European research programme [101003866]
  4. H2020 European research program [2016-1326]
  5. Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development Formas

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This paper highlights the challenges faced by governments in developing sustainable low-carbon transport systems and calls for greater collaboration in data and interdisciplinary research to provide more accurate transport demand projections and evidence-based solutions.
Transport accounts for 24% of global CO2 emissions from fossil fuels. Governments face challenges in developing feasible and equitable mitigation strategies to reduce energy consumption and manage the transition to low-carbon transport systems. To meet the local and global transport emission reduction targets, policymakers need more realistic/sophisticated future projections of transport demand to better understand the speed and depth of the actions required to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. In this paper, we argue that the lack of access to high-quality data on the current and historical travel demand and interdisciplinary research hinders transport planning and sustainable transitions toward low-carbon transport futures. We call for a greater interdisciplinary collaboration agenda across open data, data science, behaviour modelling, and policy analysis. These advancemets can reduce some of the major uncertainties and contribute to evidence-based solutions toward improving the sustainability performance of future transport systems. The paper also points to some needed efforts and directions to provide robust insights to policymakers. We provide examples of how these efforts could benefit from the International Transport Energy Modeling Open Data project and open science interdisciplinary collaborations.

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