Urban transport energy consumption Belgrade case study
Abstract
More than half of the global population now lives in towns and cities. At the same time, transport has become the highest single energy-consuming human activity. Hence, one of the major topics today is the reduction of urban transport demand and of energy consumption in cities. In this article we focused on the whole package of instruments that can reduce energy consumption and transport demand in Belgrade, a city that is currently at a major crossroad. Belgrade can prevent a dramatic increase in energy consumption and CO2 emissions (and mitigate the negative local environmental effects of traffic congestion, traffic accidents, and air pollution), only if it: (1) implements a more decisive strategy to limit private vehicles use while its level of car passenger km travelled is still relatively low, (2) does not try to solve its transport problems only by hying to build urban road infrastructure (bridges and ring roads), and (3) if it continues to provide priority movement for buses (a d...ominant form of public transport), while (4) at the same time developing urban rail systems (metro or light raid transit) with exclusive tracks, immune to the traffic congestion on urban streets.
Keywords:
urban transport / energy consumption / Belgrade / world metropolisesSource:
Thermal Science, 2015, 19, 6, 2079-2092Publisher:
- Univerzitet u Beogradu - Institut za nuklearne nauke Vinča, Beograd
Funding / projects:
DOI: 10.2298/TSCI141106039J
ISSN: 0354-9836
WoS: 000367565400020
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84957810786
Collections
Institution/Community
Geografski fakultetTY - CONF AU - Jovanović, Miomir PY - 2015 UR - https://gery.gef.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/664 AB - More than half of the global population now lives in towns and cities. At the same time, transport has become the highest single energy-consuming human activity. Hence, one of the major topics today is the reduction of urban transport demand and of energy consumption in cities. In this article we focused on the whole package of instruments that can reduce energy consumption and transport demand in Belgrade, a city that is currently at a major crossroad. Belgrade can prevent a dramatic increase in energy consumption and CO2 emissions (and mitigate the negative local environmental effects of traffic congestion, traffic accidents, and air pollution), only if it: (1) implements a more decisive strategy to limit private vehicles use while its level of car passenger km travelled is still relatively low, (2) does not try to solve its transport problems only by hying to build urban road infrastructure (bridges and ring roads), and (3) if it continues to provide priority movement for buses (a dominant form of public transport), while (4) at the same time developing urban rail systems (metro or light raid transit) with exclusive tracks, immune to the traffic congestion on urban streets. PB - Univerzitet u Beogradu - Institut za nuklearne nauke Vinča, Beograd C3 - Thermal Science T1 - Urban transport energy consumption Belgrade case study VL - 19 IS - 6 SP - 2079 EP - 2092 DO - 10.2298/TSCI141106039J UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_664 ER -
@conference{ author = "Jovanović, Miomir", year = "2015", abstract = "More than half of the global population now lives in towns and cities. At the same time, transport has become the highest single energy-consuming human activity. Hence, one of the major topics today is the reduction of urban transport demand and of energy consumption in cities. In this article we focused on the whole package of instruments that can reduce energy consumption and transport demand in Belgrade, a city that is currently at a major crossroad. Belgrade can prevent a dramatic increase in energy consumption and CO2 emissions (and mitigate the negative local environmental effects of traffic congestion, traffic accidents, and air pollution), only if it: (1) implements a more decisive strategy to limit private vehicles use while its level of car passenger km travelled is still relatively low, (2) does not try to solve its transport problems only by hying to build urban road infrastructure (bridges and ring roads), and (3) if it continues to provide priority movement for buses (a dominant form of public transport), while (4) at the same time developing urban rail systems (metro or light raid transit) with exclusive tracks, immune to the traffic congestion on urban streets.", publisher = "Univerzitet u Beogradu - Institut za nuklearne nauke Vinča, Beograd", journal = "Thermal Science", title = "Urban transport energy consumption Belgrade case study", volume = "19", number = "6", pages = "2079-2092", doi = "10.2298/TSCI141106039J", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_664" }
Jovanović, M.. (2015). Urban transport energy consumption Belgrade case study. in Thermal Science Univerzitet u Beogradu - Institut za nuklearne nauke Vinča, Beograd., 19(6), 2079-2092. https://doi.org/10.2298/TSCI141106039J https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_664
Jovanović M. Urban transport energy consumption Belgrade case study. in Thermal Science. 2015;19(6):2079-2092. doi:10.2298/TSCI141106039J https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_664 .
Jovanović, Miomir, "Urban transport energy consumption Belgrade case study" in Thermal Science, 19, no. 6 (2015):2079-2092, https://doi.org/10.2298/TSCI141106039J ., https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_gery_664 .