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Is this the end of the car?

The decline of driving in Britain may have reached a tipping point. At least that's the idea behind the theory of 'peak car'. Clint Witchalls finds out more

Pile-up: As populations move back into major cities such as Leeds,
Manchester and London, a 'new urbanism' is reducing the number
of young drivers and cars on the road

Pile-up: As populations move back into major cities such as Leeds, Manchester and London, a 'new urbanism' is reducing the number of young drivers and cars on the road

Something weird is happening," says Phil Goodwin, professor of transport policy at the University of the West of England. "Car use in Britain is on the decline, but no one is exactly sure why." Goodwin says we have reached "peak car". If he is right, this has important implications for how we design our towns and cities, and where public money gets allocated.

Goodwin has been building his argument for peak car in a series of articles in Local Transport Today. His evidence includes that fewer young people are learning to drive. Between 1992 and 2007, the number of 17- to 20-year-olds who held licences fell from 48 per cent to 38 per cent, and for 21- to 29-year-olds, the number fell from 75 per cent to 66 per cent. Also, there has been a decline in private transport's share of trips from 50 per cent in 1993 to 41 per cent in 2008. And, according to Lynn Sloman, director of Transport for Quality of Life, between 2004 and 2008, car trips per person went down by 9 per cent and car distance per person by 5 per cent.

Of course, this doesn't amount to incontrovertible evidence of the beginning of the end for cars – it could be a momentary blip, an aberration – but it would be foolish not to have this debate now, given the paucity of Government funds, and given the long planning horizon of most public works.

The Department for Transport (DfT) is working on the assumption that between 2003 and 2025 traffic across Britain will grow by 25 per cent and traffic in London will grow by 23 per cent.

"If the future is going to be on a different trajectory to the path predicted by the Department for Transport, then that has a very big impact on what types of infrastructure are invested in," says Sloman. Over the next few years, Sloman, Goodwin and the Institute for Public Policy Research will be poring over National Travel Survey data in order to "dissect the peak". They will analyse the national aggregate figures to try to understand who is reducing car-use, where it is happening and the types of trips that are being reduced.

The science fiction writer William Gibson said: "The future has arrived; it's just not evenly distributed." If one thing is clear from an initial analysis of the data, it's that the future has arrived in London.

"The picture for the whole of Britain has been quite stable since the mid-1990s, but London is a very interesting case," says David Metz, visiting professor at the centre for transport studies at University College London. Metz, a former chief scientist at the Department for Transport, explains that the population density of London has been going up, but the number of car trips per day has stayed steady. In other words, car journeys per person are falling. "This reached its peak in the early 1990s, has been declining ever since and it's projected to go on declining as the population keeps growing," says Metz.

It's not clear yet why London and a few other places are experiencing a fall in car-use, but a number of social trends, transport policies and technologies appear to be having a cumulative effect.

One seemingly obvious candidate to explain peak car is the rise of the internet, as the two phenomena began in the early 1990s. Before the internet, hardly anyone worked from home. Today, many people who have an office job work from home at least one day a week. If everyone works at home one day in five, that's a 20 per cent reduction in traffic. Only, it's not that straightforward. As Goodwin points out, commuting journeys are a good way of preventing cars from being used during working hours. When a car is at home, it's available for other members of the household to use. While the net effect is still positive, it isn't big enough to explain peak car. Internet shopping has also made a small dent but, again, not a big enough dent to explain the numbers.

Petrol prices have also had a modest impact. There is an inverse correlation between petrol prices and traffic – when petrol prices go up, traffic levels go down. But petrol will have to get a lot more expensive before people abandon their cars in significant numbers. "In the long run, people accommodate the rise in petrol prices by buying more economical cars," says UCL's Metz.

Metz and Goodwin believe that a movement called "new urbanism" may partly explain the drop in car-use in cities such as London. New urbanism – to cite the movement's website – promotes the creation and restoration of diverse, walkable [sic], compact, vibrant, mixed-use communities composed of the same components as conventional development, but assembled in a more integrated fashion, in the form of complete communities.

"There was a period of about 20 years when the population of London declined as people moved out to the country, to market towns," says Metz, "but that trend has gone into reverse over the past 20 years and you've got fashionable inner city areas, such as Hoxton and Shoreditch, the heart of digital enterprises. That is all quite helpful in terms of becoming less car-dependent, making more use of public transport, walking and cycling."

There is some evidence that this is happening in Leeds and Manchester, which experienced inner-city decline, leading to low-rent property, then occupied by artists and entrepreneurs. As mentioned before, fewer young people are learning to drive, possibly because of the cost of learning and the steep cost of motor insurance in that age group.

My daughter is 20 and lives in south London. Of her extended group of friends, only two have driver's licences. "Seeing how stressful driving can be is off-putting," she says. "Also, I know people who had a car but had to sell it because London's so expensive."

At the other end of the age spectrum, the elderly – the fastest-growing demographic in the UK – have a big incentive to abandon their cars: free bus passes.

Other transport policy is also having an effect. The introduction of controlled parking zones through most of London makes it all but impossible to find parking during the day, and the Congestion Charge zone has made it expensive to travel through central London. At the same time, there has been a strong investment in public transport – specifically rail travel.

"From a carbon perspective, it gives us some hope," says Sloman. "There has tended to be an assumption on the part of policymakers that it's just not possible to change people's travel behaviour to less carbon-intensive means of travel but, actually, if people are changing their travel behaviour already, perhaps we can support that kind of change in behaviour by going with the grain of what people want to do." When Goodwin looked at the charts of public transport use in the last century, he saw strong and rapid growth of rail, buses and trams, followed by an abrupt and precipitous drop.

There was a vicious cycle as cars came to prominence. Each increase in car-use accelerated more car-use, because the quality of public transport declined. New towns, such as Redditch, were designed specifically with drivers in mind. Increasing car-use had an effect on the way cities were laid out. Small, local destinations closed and were replaced by bigger, more distant ones. Shopping centres, schools and hospitals began to be located away from the centres, so people needed cars to access them.

The $60,000 question is: will the process work in reverse? Will we see a virtuous circle of declining car-use coupled with increasing use of greener modes of transport: our legs, bicycles, trams, trains and buses?

"If people are moving back into the inner cities and central areas, then you're getting people choosing to live in areas where the public transport tends to be better and the parking difficulties tend to be worse, and you could easily imagine a virtuous circle," says Goodwin.

Towns such as Groningen in the Netherlands, which embraced the new urbanism and paved over the town centre, have enjoyed an environmental and economic turnaround. Sixteen years ago, a six-lane motorway ran through the centre of the town. Today, 57 per cent of Groningen's denizens travel by bicycle – the highest proportion in the West – and the town has seen its rents climb as people clamour to live in this now sought-after place.

"The general view of transport is that mobility increases with income," says Metz. "As incomes grow, everyone travels more and historically this was the case up until the mid-1990s in Britain. However, there is emerging evidence here and in other countries that car use per capita has been flattening off. Growth has been coming to an end. And if that's true generally, it's quite important. It helps in terms of the impact of the transport sector on global warming."

If car-use per capita has peaked and is going to level off or decline, we can start to rethink and redesign our towns and cities so that they become more attractive; and that includes those new towns which were specifically designed with cars in mind.

"I don't see any reason for assuming that the car, considered as a metal box inherent to the physical movement of one or a small number of people, is going to be the way that societies organise themselves forever," says Goodwin. "Eating miles is not an end in itself; it's a means of participating in activities of one sort or another. And if there are other ways of participating that don't eat so many miles, what's not to like?"

  • Stevie_D
    (What happened to the other $4,000?) I know a much higher proportion of people in their 20s or early 30s who have chosen to live without a car, but who could afford to run one if they wanted to, than in older age groups. This includes people living in smaller towns as well as larger cities. I'm sure the cost of running a car, and particularly the cost of insurance, plays a factor for people at the younger end of that age bracket. The increased availability of cheap long-distance train travel is also an important change that has happened over recent years, making it much cheaper than the cost of driving in many cases. Maybe also the increasing social unacceptability of drink-driving has put younger people off - what's the point of driving to a night out if you can't get absolutely plastered? (Not my view, I hasten to add!)
  • Are there any figures for a drop in car use in other cities? Driving and parking in London is a nightmare, and always has been, but people can travel anywhere by tube, bus or bike. I don't live in London (we exist!), and when I visit i'd only drive as a last resort. It doesn't come as a surprise that less people are driving in London. However, believe it or not people own cars in that mysterious area outside the M25 too - has car use dropped there too? It doesn't feel like it..
  • Very thought-provoking piece. Seems to rule out the obvious causes for the drop - eg the recession.  As an advocate for a better childhood, I have long argued that car growth, whatever its other benefits, has been the single most damaging factor in shaping children's everyday lives over the last few decades. It is interesting to note that the countries that score highest on children's well-being - the Netherlands, the Nordic countries - are also much less car-dependent than the UK. As a Londoner who cares about what it's like to bring up children in the city, this article leaves me feeling positive about my city's future.
  • odopodoloctopus
    Baby boomers can't be changed, because there is so many of them: they get what they want in a tyranny of the majority. Housing costs factorially more in wage, nominal and real terms today for anyone who did not already own land before the mid 1990s i.e. mostly, the sub-boom generations. The extra cash that it costs those people is going to the land owners e.g. the baby boomers who bought the decent council houses and the rest of the housing stock to rent to people who don't have a right to buy at rents as high as they can get. This means lots of lovely lolly for the baby boomers to spend on cars, holidays, improving their own homes, pensions &c.  Meanwhile, the rest of us adjust by cutting out things like cars. It's okay, we still have fun, and if sugar coating the lower material wealth that has been chosen for us in order to please the whims of the baby boomers by calling it "new urbanism" (as though it's a free choice) helps baby boomers sleep at night then go for it.
  • Paying off student loans could be a factor.
  • google-eb2a56a4443d6e326fc328cf9031695f
     Durrrrr   at £2,000 ++ for insurance any young male driver and not much less for girls (soonj to go up if eu has its way)  ... seems pretty obvious, the rest is down to peer pressure / flock behaviour at its most powerful 17 to 30  ...   No ? 
  • It's obviously a combination of rocketing fuel costs and increasingly preposterous insurance premiums..
  • I do not drive because I do not need to. I hold a driver's license, but only use it as an ID card. Everywhere I need to get to I can by a mixture of public transport, walking and cycling, with the ever-so-occasional lift from friends or family. This includes journeys within large cities and to rural camp-sites. Driving may be too expensive for me; I do not know because I have never needed to find out. However, I suspect that there are lots of people who could afford to drive but prefer not to, just look at the London rush-hour.
  • google-ebb9ed49e6a9b5d18b94f2ff0e9d6361
    High insurance costs are what took my friend in Yorkshire off the road.  Young, but responsible, no accidents or traffic infractions. 
  • Downfader
     I think it depends on locality. Some areas are still developing as the population grows, and things like satnav traffic help draws people into new routes trying to avoid the jams.
  • altthought
    illegal drivers. 
  • FrancisKing
     I suspect that a large proportion of the decline in younger age groups is down to the cost of car insurance.
  •  What utter tripe! We are just in difficult economic times. When the government at last realises that it's losing money due to fuel taxes being to high and the insurers and garages catch n that they are losing revenue. It will carry on as normal. 
  • Oldgittom
    The future has arrived, indeed. The prob is, not so much uneven distribution but the luddite opposition of powerful vested interests - chief of these is the oil corps, who want to go on flogging gasoline to car users, & Big Construction, which wants to continue getting fat contracts to concrete countryside under motorways. The holders of Big Capital control government policies. Hence the tragic destruction of the rail network, beginning in the late 1950s. This invaluable transport resource was handed to us, virtually free, by the Victorians. 'Free' is not good business, so it was smashed up. The future exists now, a frail foetus in the womb of the present. That lovelier future can be born, or it will rot, & we will have no future.    OGT
  • SuitBoi
    If car use is going down, why does it still feel like traffic is going up? 
  • Oldgittom
    If only! Housebuilding was slowed by the financial crisis. The 'ribbon' developments of the pre-WWII period took place despite the slump years. Now, the government is loosening planning controls. Greenbelt & unspoilt rural land will be covered by more cul-de-sacs, I fear. After throwing away all those rail branch lines, & a chance to seriously decentralize sanely, I would not be at all surprised to see the public purse raided to build new rail routes. It's the sanity of the capitalistic lunatic asylum. A three-day workweek, like we had in the 1970s, would marvellously reduce fuel consumption, unemployment, & traffic jams. Alas, the 5-day week remains a deeply-embedded, cultural relic of the Victorian work ethic. Insular Britain is an antique shoppe, gathering dust like Ms Haversham, amidst ancient, ideological lumber.   OGT
  • The decline in road use is a bonus to construction companies.  Now they will be able to profit from replacing and updating the rail infrastructure.  However I suspect that since Marples day their influence on government has waned, otherwise our housebuilding would not have been allowed to stall. 
  •  The beginning of the end for the motor car? It has been pointed out by Aldous Huxley that the automobile was made in our image and one suspects that we will not give it up without a tussle. Peak Oil and population pressure will be its undoing.

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