Skip to main content

Seamless transport - the need for connectivity and sustainability

At the beginning of August, 2011, Carole Coune took up her new role as Secretary General of the International Transport Forum at the OECD. Here, she tells ITS International of the challenges and opportunities the global sector faces. Transport is a growth industry. Despite the current financial crisis, the trend for transport is pointing upwards. Demand is mainly driven by global economic integration, a growing world population and rising incomes in emerging economies. As we head toward nine billion humans
January 24, 2012 Read time: 3 mins

At the beginning of August, 2011, Carole Coune took up her new role as Secretary General of the International Transport Forum at the OECD. Here, she tells ITS International of the challenges and opportunities the global sector faces

Transport is a growth industry. Despite the current financial crisis, the trend for transport is pointing upwards. Demand is mainly driven by global economic integration, a growing world population and rising incomes in emerging economies.

As we head toward nine billion humans by 2050, the challenge of providing the world population with their daily needs, with access to education, jobs and other activities, is being addressed by our transport system.

To succeed, transport is getting more and more efficient in moving people and goods. Access to mobility is becoming easier, and the use of transport services an increasingly positive experience.

The vision that encapsulates much of this is the idea of Seamless Transport. Seamless Transport is nothing less than the physical expression of today’s dominant mega-trend, connectivity. In the 21st century, ever more people connect seamlessly in cyberspace; it is for transport to strive for seamless connectivity on the ground, in the air, across oceans.

Seamless Transport is not least about the convergence of traditional infrastructure and the new digital universe. Electronic information pushes the envelope for connectivity into a new dimension. For policymakers, operators and transport users this creates exciting new options.

For all the promise, there are difficulties and pitfalls. Safety cannot be compromised.

International Transport Forum

The International Transport Forum at the OECD is a Paris-based intergovernmental organisation that acts as a global platform for transport policy issues.

It serves as a think tank for its 52 member countries and organises an annual summit, at which transport ministers debate strategic issues of the sector with business leaders, top academics and representatives of civil society.

The 2012 summit will be held in Leipzig, Germany on 2-4 May 2012. The theme will be ‘Seamless Transport: Making Connections’.

Efficiency may be put at risk by growing uncertainties and potential disruptions – extreme climate conditions, energy failures, social unrest, demand overload or the multiplication of transport operators, to name a few.

To give another example, harmonising the conditions for goods transport between the urban centres of the European Union and those beyond is a prerequisite for more seamlessness, in particular with a view to the growing traffic flows between Europe and Asia. Yet this requires in-depth understanding of the different markets and their evolution. Cooperation and coordinated policies remain the key issue for still more efficient cross-border operations.

Therefore, when Ministers from the 52 member countries of the 998 International Transport Forum meet for their annual summit with business leaders, experts and NGOs in Leipzig (Germany) on 2-4 May 2012, their mutual focus will be on ‘Seamless Transport: Making Connections’. Under the presidency of Japan, a country at the forefront of transport innovation, the sector’s key actors will test their new ideas and share their experiences, as part of a unique global opinion-forming exchange on the best ways to shape transport’s future.

It is my personal conviction that innovating for a globalised world in a sustainable way will remain at the top of transport’s agenda for the long term. And with well-calibrated policies we can go beyond narrow carbon-cutting objectives and make the greening of transport a showcase for how to generate economic growth in the long term all over the world.

Today, transport is a growth industry. We can make it a ‘Green Growth’ industry.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Countering congestion’s cost
    May 6, 2015
    A new report on the economic costs of traffic congestion predicts the problem will worsen significantly in future. Jon Masters reviews the figures and some suggested solutions. New figures on the rising economic and environmental costs of congestion have been published by the US traffic data specialist Inrix and the UK’s Centre for Economics & Business Research (Cebr). Their report finds the problem much bigger than previously thought.
  • Join us for the ITS World Congress All-Access digital event
    September 8, 2020
    Welcome to this first issue of ITS World Congress Innovation News, which helps kick off a dynamic virtual event series for the global ITS community.
  • General Motors CEO to kick off 21st ITS World Congress
    July 25, 2014
    The Intelligent Transportation Society of America (ITS America) today announces that General Motors CEO Mary Barra is to kick off the 21st World Congress on Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) on 7 September in Detroit, Michigan with an opening keynote speech that will address the changing transportation environment around the world as well as the rapidly evolving technology of connected, autonomous, and electric vehicles. “Connectivity may drive more positive change for customers than any other te
  • Need for harmonisation in ITS standards
    February 1, 2012
    As the calendar rolls over, and we hop from continent to continent and World Congress to World Congress, where Memoranda of Understanding and cooperation agreements are the headline news, it is easy for those not intimately involved to forget that standards definition is a well-nigh continual process. Significant progress has been made in recent months towards achieving the critical mass and economies of scale which are going to drive development and deployment in, amongst other things, cooperative infrastr