1. Inclusive climate resilient transport challenges in Africa.
- Author
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Cinderby, Steve, Haq, Gary, Opiyo, Romanus, Muhoza, Cassilde, Ngabirano, Amanda, Wasike, Yusuf, Mwamba, Daniel, and Cambridge, Howard
- Subjects
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GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *CONSCIOUSNESS raising , *LOW-income countries , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *CITIES & towns , *DELPHI method , *COUNTRIES - Abstract
Delivering sustainable and inclusive low-carbon transport is a critical to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Yet transport infrastructure is vulnerable to the effects of climate change in low-income countries in Africa. This paper explores the status of inclusive mobility and climate-resilient transportation in Africa, focusing on the perceptions and importance amongst key stakeholders, their incorporation into existing practices, and the priority given to making transport more inclusive and climate resilient. A nested scale approach was used that included an online continental survey of 136 respondents from 17 African countries; 2 country-level Focus Group Discussions in Uganda and Zambia; and city-level semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders in Lusaka and Kampala using the Delphi method. In addition, an online spatial questionnaire (Maptionnaire) was used to locate where infrastructure improvements were needed, and two city workshops held in Lusaka and Kampala. Providing more active travel infrastructure was a priority for both government and non-governmental groups. This is not connected to climate resilience but to immediate priorities of road safety and health. Our surveys highlighted that climate resilience and inclusive mobility policies are in place, but poor implementation and lack of transparency were undermining outcomes. Upgrading existing infrastructure was more cost-effective and workable than developing new robust alternatives. Lack of knowledge exchange was limiting agencies efforts to tackle this growing challenge. The paper underscores the need to raise awareness of relevant options to improve the climate resilience of transport infrastructure and expand accessible mobility solutions to tackle issues of inclusion and equity in African cities. • African transport policy & planning processes needs a fundamental shift to develop sustainable, equitable and resilient transport infrastructure. • African decision makers lack of climate risks to transport infrastructure knowledge is undermining efforts to increase resilience. • Expanding active travel infrastructure is a priority for African city planners but is not connected to climate resilience. • Upgrading existing transport infrastructure is seen as more cost-effective than developing new robust alternatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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