27/09/23View in Browser

Car Wars: The EPP strikes back

By Sean Goulding Carroll | @Sean_G_Carroll

Cities across Europe are increasingly challenging the dominance of automobiles by restricting their access to urban centres. But as a recent campaign decrying automotive bans by the centre-right EPP group shows, the issue risks descending into a left-vs-right culture war clash.

After decades in which our cities were transformed to accommodate private mobility in response to rising car sales, the tide seems to be turning.

Local leaders from Paris to Dublin, Milan to Brussels, are increasingly restricting cars, reimagining urban spaces as places to gather, not just transit through. 

The move to curtail car access is partly being done on environmental grounds, particularly to combat the harmful air pollution from petrol and diesel cars, but also to reallocate space for alternative means of getting from A to B.

City planners strive to move people in the most efficient manner possible within a constrained area. Unsurprisingly, cars are not the best means to do so: They rarely carry more than two persons at a time.

Instead, footpaths are being widened, cycle lanes installed, and public transport offerings beefed up – all at the expense of room previously reserved for driving.

The benefits of going car-free in crowded city centres may seem obvious – less pollution, reduced noise, and less danger of being struck and maimed by a rapidly moving box of steel (an issue the shift to electric vehicles won’t solve, by the way).

But as the movement to restrict cars from city streets gains momentum and political credibility, those opposed to the transformation are increasingly vocal.

 

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Photo of the day
Ethnic Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh arrive a Red Cross registration centre in Goris, Armenia, 26 September 2023.

Azerbaijan on 19 September 2023 launched a brief military offensive on the contested region of Nagorno-Karabakh, a breakaway enclave that is home to some 120,000 ethnic Armenians. Following a ceasefire agreed on 20 September 2023, Azerbaijan opened all checkpoints with Armenia for the unimpeded exit of civilians from the disputed territory. The Armenian government announced the evacuation of more than 19,000 local residents from Nagorno-Karabakh, and a humanitarian center has been set up in the village of Kornidzor near the so-called Lachin corridor, the main route between Armenia and the breakaway region. Russian peacekeepers escorted convoys with civilians leaving Nagorno-Karabakh for Armenia, the Russian defense ministry said. EPA-EFE/Narek Aleksanyan
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The Roundup

As EU institutions prepare to negotiate the proposed revision of the 2021-2027 Multiannual Financial Framework (MFF), experts and lawmakers urge Brussels to rethink the overall EU budget framework to ensure it better responds to spending needs in the long term.

Nuclear power will play a crucial role in Europe’s transition to carbon-free, secure energy production, according to Poland’s secretary of state for strategic energy infrastructure.

Britain has given the go-ahead for one of its biggest new oil and gas projects in years, Equinor’s North Sea Rosebank field, saying energy security was the priority despite opposition from environmentalists.

While heavy-duty vehicle manufacturers will shed thousands of workers in the shift to zero-emission offerings, these job losses will be more than compensated through new positions in the growing energy and infrastructure sectors, a new study has found.

The Australian Minister for Resources and Northern Australia Madeleine King argued on Tuesday for more European investments into the Australian critical minerals sector, criticising the EU’s insistence on banning dual pricing in the free trade negotiations between the EU and Australia.

Slovakia’s three-time prime minister Robert Fico has a chance to return to power in a closely fought early election on Saturday (30 September), raising the prospect the central European country may drop its staunch support of neighbouring Ukraine.

Don’t miss this week’s Green Brief: Hydrogen: A reality check; and the Health Brief: As one health file closes, another opens.

Look out for…

  • European Health Forum Gastein 2023 Tuesday-Friday.
  • Athens Democracy Forum Wednesday-Thursday.
  • Informal meeting of General Affairs Council Wednesday-Thursday.
  • Justice and Home Affairs Council meets on Thursday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Nathalie Weatherald]

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