“If you think green you move green”. This could be the slogan to summarize the goal this article tries to affirm. Green mobility should be a new way of thinking and living tending to state a new culture of moving. Making people aware of environmental and social impacts of unsustainable travel choice and educating people are the key of success for any sustanable policy. Starting from this consideration, this article selects and examimes some reports and documents that are particularly significant in research for greener ways of living. As shown in Ifort report on Usance of italian in mobility, car trips are always predominant over other ways of moving, even though an inclination towards the change in using the car has been pointed out. Transport is the fastest growing sector in term of energy use and it is also the sector producing about 300 million tonnes of CO2 per year in the cities. The European commitment to achieve at least a 20% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 calls for doing something about this situation. Somethings is happening at least at social level. People seem to be more conscious and disposed to modify their own lifestyle and, at same time, is less tolerant to the time scale and procedures of the executive class. This is “the social capital” capable of governing the change toward more livable cities. The experience of transition towns, for example, shows a “bottom up” solution based on the commitment to change the present development model strongly dependent on oil. The experiment involves about seven hundred cities around the world and is also expanding in Italy. It is a cultural movement that involves the community in accordance with local government. In the transition town model, the collective action plays both a significant and active role in identifying the possibility of addressing the environmental emergency that involves all the existing cities. Other examples discussed in this article refer to “bottom up” solutions to tackle climate change, in which the transport sector bears a heavy responsibility. These reports have all the same target - the urgency to respond to global climate change in urban centers- but different methodology to test how and how much is the commitment of govern and people to meet this challenge. What stands out is the awareness that current lifestyles must necessarily change in order to assure livability to the future generations. This article attempts to stimulate the attention of the scientific field about the possibilities that an in-depth study dealing with signals of changement may have.
Mobilità sostenibile e stili di vita / LA ROCCA, ROSA ANNA. - In: TEMA. - ISSN 1970-9870. - 4:(2011), pp. 29-42.
Mobilità sostenibile e stili di vita
LA ROCCA, ROSA ANNA
2011
Abstract
“If you think green you move green”. This could be the slogan to summarize the goal this article tries to affirm. Green mobility should be a new way of thinking and living tending to state a new culture of moving. Making people aware of environmental and social impacts of unsustainable travel choice and educating people are the key of success for any sustanable policy. Starting from this consideration, this article selects and examimes some reports and documents that are particularly significant in research for greener ways of living. As shown in Ifort report on Usance of italian in mobility, car trips are always predominant over other ways of moving, even though an inclination towards the change in using the car has been pointed out. Transport is the fastest growing sector in term of energy use and it is also the sector producing about 300 million tonnes of CO2 per year in the cities. The European commitment to achieve at least a 20% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 calls for doing something about this situation. Somethings is happening at least at social level. People seem to be more conscious and disposed to modify their own lifestyle and, at same time, is less tolerant to the time scale and procedures of the executive class. This is “the social capital” capable of governing the change toward more livable cities. The experience of transition towns, for example, shows a “bottom up” solution based on the commitment to change the present development model strongly dependent on oil. The experiment involves about seven hundred cities around the world and is also expanding in Italy. It is a cultural movement that involves the community in accordance with local government. In the transition town model, the collective action plays both a significant and active role in identifying the possibility of addressing the environmental emergency that involves all the existing cities. Other examples discussed in this article refer to “bottom up” solutions to tackle climate change, in which the transport sector bears a heavy responsibility. These reports have all the same target - the urgency to respond to global climate change in urban centers- but different methodology to test how and how much is the commitment of govern and people to meet this challenge. What stands out is the awareness that current lifestyles must necessarily change in order to assure livability to the future generations. This article attempts to stimulate the attention of the scientific field about the possibilities that an in-depth study dealing with signals of changement may have.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.