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SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTINTERAGENCY REPORT I SECOND GLOBAL SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT CONFERENCECHAPTERI ntroduction: The importance of SUSTAINABLE transport for the 2030 Agenda and the Paris Agreement SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT INTERAGENCY REPORT SECOND GLOBAL SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT CONFERENCENOTE This interagency report on SUSTAINABLE transport was prepared as a background document for the second Global SUSTAINABLE Transport Conference, taking place from 14 to 16 October 2021 in Beijing, China (hybrid format)1. It was prepared by the Conference Secretariat, the united nations Department of economic and Social Affairs (DESA), in close collaboration with other UN agencies, including the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the International Labour Organization (ILO), the International Maritime Organi

and Development (UNCTAD), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), United Nations Economic ... emissions by region (2010-2019) 10 Figure 5: Percentage of ports reporting extreme weather events (2019) 11

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Transcription of SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

1 SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTINTERAGENCY REPORT I SECOND GLOBAL SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT CONFERENCECHAPTERI ntroduction: The importance of SUSTAINABLE transport for the 2030 Agenda and the Paris Agreement SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT INTERAGENCY REPORT SECOND GLOBAL SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT CONFERENCENOTE This interagency report on SUSTAINABLE transport was prepared as a background document for the second Global SUSTAINABLE Transport Conference, taking place from 14 to 16 October 2021 in Beijing, China (hybrid format)1. It was prepared by the Conference Secretariat, the united nations Department of economic and Social Affairs (DESA), in close collaboration with other UN agencies, including the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the International Labour Organization (ILO), the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the united nations Conference on Trade and DEVELOPMENT (UNCTAD), the united nations DEVELOPMENT Programme (UNDP), the united nations economic commission for europe ( unece ), the united nations Environment Programme (UNEP)

2 , united nations economic and Social commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP), the united nations economic and Social commission for Western Asia (UNESCWA), the united nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat), the united nations Industrial DEVELOPMENT Organization (UNIDO), the united nations Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States (UN-OHRLLS), the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), the World Health Organization (WHO), and the World CITATION united nations . SUSTAINABLE transport, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT .

3 Interagency report for second Global SUSTAINABLE Transport Conference. Ms. Kathryn Platzer. DESIGN & GRAPHICSMr. Camilo J. 2021 united nations All rights reserved united nations publication issued by the Department of economic and Social Affairs Reprinted 2021 ContentsINTERAGENCY REPORT SECOND GLOBAL SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT CONFERENCEIFOREWORD IVCHAPTER II 14 SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT: PROGRESS AND CHALLENGES 1. STATUS UPDATE THE 14 SDGS, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC 2. CHALLENGES TO 23 ACHIEVING SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT A FORWARD-LOOKING ANALYSIS 3.

4 COUNTRIES IN 30 SPECIAL SITUATIONS 4. REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT 365. LEAVING NO ONE BEHIND 37 CHAPTER III 41 REALIZING SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT SOLUTIONS FOR ALL 1. IDENTIFYING 41 TRANSFORMATIVE PATHWAYS 2. APPLYING SCIENCE, 46 TECHNOLOGY, AND INNOVATION 3. STRENGTHENING 53 GOVERNANCE 4. IMPROVING FINANCING 605. DIRECTING CAPACITY- 66 BUILDING, TECHNOLOGY COOPERATION AND DATA 6. CHANGING THROUGH 68 INDIVIDUAL AND COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOUR ANNEXES 721. ANNEX 1: 72 MULTI-STAKEHOLDER INITIATIVES AND OTHER SOURCES OF SUPPORT FOR ACHIEVING SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT OBJECTIVES 2.

5 ANNEX 2: 77 OVERVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL TRANSPORT-RELATED CONVENTIONS, REGULATIONS AND AGREEMENTS 3. ANNEX 3: 83 OVERVIEW OF SELECTED TRANSPORT AND CLIMATE CHANGE-RELATED COMMITMENTS4. ANNEX 4: 86 LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS CHAPTER IV 69 WAY FORWARD CHAPTER I 2 THE IMPORTANCE OF SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT FOR THE 2030 AGENDA AND THE PARIS AGREEMENT 1. SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT: 2 AN INCREASING MOMENTUM FOR ACTION 2. ATTAINING THE SDGS 6 THROUGH SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT 3. CLIMATE CHANGE 8 MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION 4. A DIVERSITY OF 11 STAKEHOLDERS AND INITIATIVES EXECUTIVE SUMMARY VISUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IIBOXES Box 1: Poverty reduction through improved rural connectivity 3 Box 2: Poverty reduction through subsidized public transport 3 Box 3: Positive economic and social impact of road rehabilitation 3 Box 4: Climate extremes and supply chain disruptions: Flooding in Thailand 11 Box 5: Examples of inter-ministerial and multi-level collaboration 12 Box 6: Interagency cooperation: Addressing various SDGs through 12 SUSTAINABLE transport measures Box 7.

6 The Single African Air Transport Market (SAATM) 31 Box 8: The Northern Corridor Transport Network 33 Box 9: Samoa s road network vulnerability assessment and Climate 35 Resilient Road Strategy Box 10: Women in Maritime programme 38 Box 11: Transport in international climate change discussions 44 Box 12: Shipping and climate action 45 Box 13: Aviation and climate action 45 Box 14: Towards low-sulfur fuels 46 Box 15: The SOLUTIONSPLus project: Integrating urban electric mobility solutions 47 Box 16: UN Environment s Electric Mobility Programme 47 Box 17: Maritime autonomous surface ships 48 Box 18: Truck platooning system in Singapore 51 Box 19: Integrated planning at the local level: UN-Habitat-supported 57 SUSTAINABLE Urban Mobility Plan (SUMP) for Ruiru, Kenya Box 20: Environmentally SUSTAINABLE Transport (EST) Forum: An emerging platform 59 for advancing transport policy towards achieving the SDGs in AsiaBox 21: Green bonds 60 Box 22: Public financing during COVID-19 pandemic 62 Box 23.

7 Credit ratings of cities 64 INTERAGENCY REPORT SECOND GLOBAL SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT CONFERENCEIIIFIGURESTABLES Figure 1: Percentage of voluntary national reviews connecting transport 7 with different SDGs (2021) Figure 2: CO2 emissions by sector (2018) 9 Figure 3: Transport sector CO2 emissions by mode (2000-2018) 9 Figure 4: Global transport CO2 emissions by region (2010-2019) 10 Figure 5: Percentage of ports reporting extreme weather events (2019) 11 Figure 6: Distribution of deaths by road user type and region (2018) 16 Figure 7: Road traffic mortality by region (2019) 17 Figure 8: Global annual port and air traffic (2000-2019) 18 Figure 9: Proportion of urban population with convenient access 19 to public transport (2021)Figure 10: Reduction in CO2 emissions in 2020 relative to 2019 levels 22 Figure 11: World merchandise trade volume and real GDP at market 25 exchange rates (2008-2018) Figure 12: International tourist arrivals and tourism receipts (2000-2019) 25 Figure 13: Material efficiency strategies in the product lifecycle 29 Figure 14.

8 Comparative lifecycle GHG emissions over ten-year lifetime 43 of an average mid-size car by powertrain (2018) Figure 15: Allocation of proceeds from climate bonds (2019) 60 Figure 16: Overall loans and grants dispersed for transport by multilateral 66 DEVELOPMENT banks (2012-2021)Table 1: SUSTAINABLE transport-related SDG targets and indicators 15 ForewordSUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IVThe clock is ticking on our 2030 timeline to achieve the SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT Goals (SDGs), and to meet the objectives of the Paris Climate Change Agreement.

9 Years of progress towards eradicating poverty, ending hunger, empowering women, strengthening education and improving public health have been set back by the COVID-19 pandemic. At the same time, climate change continues inexorably: global average temperatures in 2020 were C above pre-industrial levels, inching perilously close to the desired limit of years into the UN Decade of Action for the SDGs, we must recognize that accelerated progress is needed simultaneously across multiple goals and targets. We must therefore make a focused, global effort in areas where there are deep, systemic links across the economic , social, and environmental dimensions of SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT .

10 One of these crucial areas is SUSTAINABLE its importance, the united nations General Assembly called for a second Global SUSTAINABLE Transport Conference, which is taking place in Beijing, China, over 14-16 October 2021 due to the pandemic, about a year and a half later than originally the first SUSTAINABLE transport Conference, held five years ago in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, there has been an increasing appreciation of the importance of SUSTAINABLE transport in a world linked ever closer by globalization and digitalization.


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