Skip to main content

The biggest challenge to sustainable mobility? People's behaviour

Discussion between Kapsch TrafficCom and academics throws up thoughts on new solutions
By Adam Hill April 8, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Alfredo Escribá: important to approach influencing transport users "from a scientific direction" (© Kapsch TrafficCom)

The biggest challenge for sustainable mobility lies in changing the behaviour of people, according to a panel discussion between academics and ITS firms.

The event marked the unveiling of a new research post, funded by Kapsch TrafficCom, at Comillas Pontifical University in Spain: the Chair for Smart and Sustainable Mobility has been set up to analyse the challenges of research for sustainable mobility - and propose cutting-edge policy designs. 

Kapsch and the university want to foster a close-knit academic-industrial partnership to develop new solutions.

Alfredo Escribá, CTO of KapschTrafficCom, said demand management - rather than road capacity supply - is one of the key solutions to mobility problems.

Influencing transport users has to be approached "from a scientific direction" with proper experiments and analysis, he added.

This might include using artificial intelligence to aid decision-making, said Antonio Muñoz, director of Comillas ICAI.

"The most important thing is to change some behaviours and suggest technological or infrastructure improvements that make it easier, because that is the most complex part," said Irene Álvarez de Miranda, from Ingerop T3.

"The decarbonisation of mobility does not only depend on changing energy sources or being more efficient, but also on changing distances. The real smart city must work with its resources, not only develop new technologies."

Ibon Galarraga, CEO of Metroeconómica, said: "It is a mistake to want to design one policy when several are needed."

In addition, how acceptable people find levels of taxation, such as charging fees to drive into cities, "is important for behaviour", said María Eugenia López-Lambas of the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • IBTTA seeks transportation innovation
    December 16, 2016
    IBTTA’s Patrick Jones contemplates the need for, sources of and constraints on transportation innovation. For years now, visionary thinkers and doers in the highway transportation community have been laser-focused on the role of innovation in addressing the most pressing mobility challenges.
  • Foundation funds research for informed campaigning
    April 29, 2015
    ITS International talks to Professor Stephen Glaister, director of the transport research and lobbying organisation, the RAC Foundation. It is through the eyes of an economist that Professor Stephen Glaister, emeritus professor of transport and infrastructure at Imperial College London and director of the RAC Foundation, views current and future transport problems. Having spent 30 years at the London School of Economics and another 10 at Imperial, the move to the RAC Foundation was a radical departure from
  • Suppliers reshape to provide tolling and traffic management expertise
    August 2, 2013
    Jason Barnes examines the trend towards single source supply of complete tolling and traffic management solutions with some senior tolling industry figures. Only a few years back, the major tolling system suppliers were aggressively positioning themselves as one-stop shops for tolling solutions and operations. No sooner has that little flurry of innovation settled than another trend has emerged – tolling companies wanting to become major ITS suppliers as well. Various tolling company seniors have in recent
  • ITSA’s Shailen Bhatt looks to the future
    March 6, 2018
    The new boss of ITS America is fizzing with ideas. Shailen Bhatt talks to Adam Hill about the need to rebrand the ITS industry, how technology can leverage tax dollars – and where the Star Wars universe fits in to his philosophy. Shailen Bhatt has a big job on his hands. The CEO and president of the Intelligent Transportation Society of America is the second to hold the post in two years following the resignation last July of his predecessor Regina Hopper. It has not been the easiest time for the