The paper challenges part of the sustainable transport literature. Sustainable transport plans often focus on reducing carbon emissions in a specific city, region or country, and this neglects two handicaps of strong unilateral action. The first is that climate is a global commons problem, so a strong binding international climate agreement is unlikely. The second is that a unilateral reduction of oil consumption may be partially, or even completely, offset by market responses – in some circumstances, cumulative emissions may even come earlier (the “green paradox”). When a coalition of the willing reduces oil use in the transport sector, this may delay rather than reduce total emissions. This requires rethinking climate policies for the tra...
Our aim in this article is to prove the connection of CO2 emission and climate change and to estimat...
The global rise of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and its potentially devastating consequences requi...
In 2015 the 17 United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 195 countries were develo...
This paper discusses a specific part of sustainable transport policy, namely policies to reduce gree...
The transport sector is currently the second largest emitter of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, whic...
In order for the world to stay within the safety threshold of a 2�C increase in average temperature ...
From the papers in this special issue it can be concluded that an environmentally sustainable t...
No sooner than later, the world will be living hell as a result of the transportation effects on our...
Transport is possibly the most problematic area with regard to achieving a low carbon society. It is...
There is widespread consensus that current climate policy for passenger transportation is insufficie...
A strategic land-use–transport interaction model is used to investigate the impacts of policies in ...
Today, numerous works conclude that transport seems to be completely coupled to economic and export/...
Many global transport sector decarbonisation studies assert that it is difficult for the transport s...
This paper addresses the role of highway transportation and its contribution to greenhouse gases. It...
On the pathway to climate neutrality, EU member states are obliged to submit national energy and cli...
Our aim in this article is to prove the connection of CO2 emission and climate change and to estimat...
The global rise of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and its potentially devastating consequences requi...
In 2015 the 17 United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 195 countries were develo...
This paper discusses a specific part of sustainable transport policy, namely policies to reduce gree...
The transport sector is currently the second largest emitter of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, whic...
In order for the world to stay within the safety threshold of a 2�C increase in average temperature ...
From the papers in this special issue it can be concluded that an environmentally sustainable t...
No sooner than later, the world will be living hell as a result of the transportation effects on our...
Transport is possibly the most problematic area with regard to achieving a low carbon society. It is...
There is widespread consensus that current climate policy for passenger transportation is insufficie...
A strategic land-use–transport interaction model is used to investigate the impacts of policies in ...
Today, numerous works conclude that transport seems to be completely coupled to economic and export/...
Many global transport sector decarbonisation studies assert that it is difficult for the transport s...
This paper addresses the role of highway transportation and its contribution to greenhouse gases. It...
On the pathway to climate neutrality, EU member states are obliged to submit national energy and cli...
Our aim in this article is to prove the connection of CO2 emission and climate change and to estimat...
The global rise of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and its potentially devastating consequences requi...
In 2015 the 17 United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 195 countries were develo...