Motorization Management for Development : An Integrated Approach to Improving Vehicles for Sustainable Mobility

Across the developing world, countries are experiencing rapid growth in urbanization and motorization. While high motorization rates potentially meant hat more people will be able to claim the benefits of improved accessibility to goods and services as a consequence of enhanced mobility, there are questions about the sustainability of this future. Will countries be able to build and maintain infrastructure to accommodate increasing numbers of vehicles? Will the increasing number of vehicles and their characteristics support attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Will they put in jeopardy countries’ ability to meet their climate commitments under their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)? From a development impact standpoint, the nature of a country’s motor vehicle stock and how it grows affects three key and tangible outcomes. First, the quality of the motor vehicle stock affects road safety outcomes—that is, the number of people killed or seriously injured in motor vehicle crashes. The characteristics of vehicles and their fitness or roadworthiness can affect fatality and serious injury outcomes. Second, the quality of the motor vehicle fleet affects air quality, particularly in cities. Motor vehicles are a key source of harmful air pollution, including carbon monoxide (CO), fine particulates (PM2.5), sulfur oxides (SOx), and ozone precursors (oxides of nitrogen and various hydrocarbons), and the amount of these pollutants they emit is directly related to how the vehicle was built and how well it is maintained. Finally, the profile of the vehicle fleet—what is the size and weight of vehicles in the fleet, how big are their engines, what kind of power control technology do they use, and how did their manufacturers engineer the technology of the vehicle to balance power with efficiency—affects the (fossil) fuel consumption of the vehicle stock as a whole, and, consequently, the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions profile of the road transport sector. This report presents the World Bank’s Motorization Management (MM) framework, which is intended to support client countries in the development of policies and measures aimed at managing vehicle stocks in a proactive, phased, and systematic manner to make them safer, cleaner, and more fuel efficient. The MM framework reflects a series of policy considerations and programs that can be implemented to improve the quality of fuels and vehicles in a country’s stock.

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Main Authors: Gorham, Roger, Bose, Dipan, Cordeiro, Maria, Darido, Georges, Koupal, John, Krishnan, Raman, Neki, Kazuyuki, Qiu, Yin
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:AUTOMOBILE POLLUTION, AIR POLLUTION, WORLD BANK MOTORIZATION MANAGEMENT (MM) FRAMEWORK, CLIMATE COMMITMENT, NATIONALLY DETERMINED CONTRIBUTIONS (NDC'S), ROAD SAFETY, TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDG), MOTORIZATION, URBANIZATION, MOTORIZATION MANGEMENT, INCENTIVES FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES, ELECTRIC VEHICLE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099645006172219760/P1731880a0ad070ff0a6cf01b424e24ed04
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37589
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spelling dig-okr-10986375892022-06-30T15:18:30Z Motorization Management for Development : An Integrated Approach to Improving Vehicles for Sustainable Mobility Gorham, Roger Bose, Dipan Cordeiro, Maria Darido, Georges Koupal, John Krishnan, Raman Neki, Kazuyuki Qiu, Yin AUTOMOBILE POLLUTION AIR POLLUTION WORLD BANK MOTORIZATION MANAGEMENT (MM) FRAMEWORK CLIMATE COMMITMENT NATIONALLY DETERMINED CONTRIBUTIONS (NDC'S) ROAD SAFETY TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDG) MOTORIZATION URBANIZATION MOTORIZATION MANGEMENT INCENTIVES FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES ELECTRIC VEHICLE Across the developing world, countries are experiencing rapid growth in urbanization and motorization. While high motorization rates potentially meant hat more people will be able to claim the benefits of improved accessibility to goods and services as a consequence of enhanced mobility, there are questions about the sustainability of this future. Will countries be able to build and maintain infrastructure to accommodate increasing numbers of vehicles? Will the increasing number of vehicles and their characteristics support attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Will they put in jeopardy countries’ ability to meet their climate commitments under their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)? From a development impact standpoint, the nature of a country’s motor vehicle stock and how it grows affects three key and tangible outcomes. First, the quality of the motor vehicle stock affects road safety outcomes—that is, the number of people killed or seriously injured in motor vehicle crashes. The characteristics of vehicles and their fitness or roadworthiness can affect fatality and serious injury outcomes. Second, the quality of the motor vehicle fleet affects air quality, particularly in cities. Motor vehicles are a key source of harmful air pollution, including carbon monoxide (CO), fine particulates (PM2.5), sulfur oxides (SOx), and ozone precursors (oxides of nitrogen and various hydrocarbons), and the amount of these pollutants they emit is directly related to how the vehicle was built and how well it is maintained. Finally, the profile of the vehicle fleet—what is the size and weight of vehicles in the fleet, how big are their engines, what kind of power control technology do they use, and how did their manufacturers engineer the technology of the vehicle to balance power with efficiency—affects the (fossil) fuel consumption of the vehicle stock as a whole, and, consequently, the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions profile of the road transport sector. This report presents the World Bank’s Motorization Management (MM) framework, which is intended to support client countries in the development of policies and measures aimed at managing vehicle stocks in a proactive, phased, and systematic manner to make them safer, cleaner, and more fuel efficient. The MM framework reflects a series of policy considerations and programs that can be implemented to improve the quality of fuels and vehicles in a country’s stock. 2022-06-23T16:59:04Z 2022-06-23T16:59:04Z 2022 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099645006172219760/P1731880a0ad070ff0a6cf01b424e24ed04 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37589 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Working Paper
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic AUTOMOBILE POLLUTION
AIR POLLUTION
WORLD BANK MOTORIZATION MANAGEMENT (MM) FRAMEWORK
CLIMATE COMMITMENT
NATIONALLY DETERMINED CONTRIBUTIONS (NDC'S)
ROAD SAFETY
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDG)
MOTORIZATION
URBANIZATION
MOTORIZATION MANGEMENT
INCENTIVES FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES
ELECTRIC VEHICLE
AUTOMOBILE POLLUTION
AIR POLLUTION
WORLD BANK MOTORIZATION MANAGEMENT (MM) FRAMEWORK
CLIMATE COMMITMENT
NATIONALLY DETERMINED CONTRIBUTIONS (NDC'S)
ROAD SAFETY
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDG)
MOTORIZATION
URBANIZATION
MOTORIZATION MANGEMENT
INCENTIVES FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES
ELECTRIC VEHICLE
spellingShingle AUTOMOBILE POLLUTION
AIR POLLUTION
WORLD BANK MOTORIZATION MANAGEMENT (MM) FRAMEWORK
CLIMATE COMMITMENT
NATIONALLY DETERMINED CONTRIBUTIONS (NDC'S)
ROAD SAFETY
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDG)
MOTORIZATION
URBANIZATION
MOTORIZATION MANGEMENT
INCENTIVES FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES
ELECTRIC VEHICLE
AUTOMOBILE POLLUTION
AIR POLLUTION
WORLD BANK MOTORIZATION MANAGEMENT (MM) FRAMEWORK
CLIMATE COMMITMENT
NATIONALLY DETERMINED CONTRIBUTIONS (NDC'S)
ROAD SAFETY
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDG)
MOTORIZATION
URBANIZATION
MOTORIZATION MANGEMENT
INCENTIVES FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES
ELECTRIC VEHICLE
Gorham, Roger
Bose, Dipan
Cordeiro, Maria
Darido, Georges
Koupal, John
Krishnan, Raman
Neki, Kazuyuki
Qiu, Yin
Motorization Management for Development : An Integrated Approach to Improving Vehicles for Sustainable Mobility
description Across the developing world, countries are experiencing rapid growth in urbanization and motorization. While high motorization rates potentially meant hat more people will be able to claim the benefits of improved accessibility to goods and services as a consequence of enhanced mobility, there are questions about the sustainability of this future. Will countries be able to build and maintain infrastructure to accommodate increasing numbers of vehicles? Will the increasing number of vehicles and their characteristics support attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Will they put in jeopardy countries’ ability to meet their climate commitments under their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)? From a development impact standpoint, the nature of a country’s motor vehicle stock and how it grows affects three key and tangible outcomes. First, the quality of the motor vehicle stock affects road safety outcomes—that is, the number of people killed or seriously injured in motor vehicle crashes. The characteristics of vehicles and their fitness or roadworthiness can affect fatality and serious injury outcomes. Second, the quality of the motor vehicle fleet affects air quality, particularly in cities. Motor vehicles are a key source of harmful air pollution, including carbon monoxide (CO), fine particulates (PM2.5), sulfur oxides (SOx), and ozone precursors (oxides of nitrogen and various hydrocarbons), and the amount of these pollutants they emit is directly related to how the vehicle was built and how well it is maintained. Finally, the profile of the vehicle fleet—what is the size and weight of vehicles in the fleet, how big are their engines, what kind of power control technology do they use, and how did their manufacturers engineer the technology of the vehicle to balance power with efficiency—affects the (fossil) fuel consumption of the vehicle stock as a whole, and, consequently, the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions profile of the road transport sector. This report presents the World Bank’s Motorization Management (MM) framework, which is intended to support client countries in the development of policies and measures aimed at managing vehicle stocks in a proactive, phased, and systematic manner to make them safer, cleaner, and more fuel efficient. The MM framework reflects a series of policy considerations and programs that can be implemented to improve the quality of fuels and vehicles in a country’s stock.
format Working Paper
topic_facet AUTOMOBILE POLLUTION
AIR POLLUTION
WORLD BANK MOTORIZATION MANAGEMENT (MM) FRAMEWORK
CLIMATE COMMITMENT
NATIONALLY DETERMINED CONTRIBUTIONS (NDC'S)
ROAD SAFETY
TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDG)
MOTORIZATION
URBANIZATION
MOTORIZATION MANGEMENT
INCENTIVES FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES
ELECTRIC VEHICLE
author Gorham, Roger
Bose, Dipan
Cordeiro, Maria
Darido, Georges
Koupal, John
Krishnan, Raman
Neki, Kazuyuki
Qiu, Yin
author_facet Gorham, Roger
Bose, Dipan
Cordeiro, Maria
Darido, Georges
Koupal, John
Krishnan, Raman
Neki, Kazuyuki
Qiu, Yin
author_sort Gorham, Roger
title Motorization Management for Development : An Integrated Approach to Improving Vehicles for Sustainable Mobility
title_short Motorization Management for Development : An Integrated Approach to Improving Vehicles for Sustainable Mobility
title_full Motorization Management for Development : An Integrated Approach to Improving Vehicles for Sustainable Mobility
title_fullStr Motorization Management for Development : An Integrated Approach to Improving Vehicles for Sustainable Mobility
title_full_unstemmed Motorization Management for Development : An Integrated Approach to Improving Vehicles for Sustainable Mobility
title_sort motorization management for development : an integrated approach to improving vehicles for sustainable mobility
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099645006172219760/P1731880a0ad070ff0a6cf01b424e24ed04
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37589
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AT cordeiromaria motorizationmanagementfordevelopmentanintegratedapproachtoimprovingvehiclesforsustainablemobility
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AT koupaljohn motorizationmanagementfordevelopmentanintegratedapproachtoimprovingvehiclesforsustainablemobility
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