Skip to content
Government QLD, Transport Automotive

EMBARGOED – Stuck in traffic: Two-thirds of Brisbane residents are missing out on public transport

The Climate Council 3 mins read

EMBARGOED

12.01AM, MONDAY 8TH JULY 2024

 

Stuck in traffic: Two-thirds of Brisbane residents are missing out on public transport

 

NEW CLIMATE COUNCIL ANALYSIS has found over 1.5 million people living in Brisbane don’t have access to frequent, all-day public transport, leaving them stuck using polluting and expensive cars for most of their trips. Brisbane ranks the worst out of Australia’s five largest capital cities for access to frequent, convenient and reliable public transport.

 

The minimum level of public transport service required to get people out of cars runs every 15 minutes between 7am-7pm and within 800 metres of our homes. Climate Council’s new report, ‘Next Stop Suburbia: Making Shared Transport Work for Everyone in Aussie Cities’ shows two-thirds of people living in Brisbane don’t have access to this level of service. Some of the biggest service gaps for Brisbane are in suburbs like the Hills District, Browns Plains, and Beenleigh. 

Climate Council Head of Policy and Advocacy, Dr Jennifer Rayner, said: “At the moment, only one in five people in Brisbane use shared and active transport to get to work. That’s because too many communities are being left in the lurch and unable to access services that meet their needs.

“With a step-up in investment from all levels of government, we can transform a car-dependent city like Brisbane to give more people a better choice of fast, convenient and reliable clean transport options. People travelling anywhere across Brisbane, at any time throughout the day, should be able to simply ‘turn up and go’ from point A to B.

“To get us out of our expensive, polluting cars, governments need to centre shared and active transport in all transport and land use planning. This includes new investments that enable the uptake of shared and active transport, like better-connected footpaths and walkways, and improving the quality and frequency of public transport services. Smart urban planning will also deliver more housing near existing transport routes.”

“Big-ticket items like the Cross River Rail are important, but sometimes simple investments like better buses and bike paths in the suburbs can make the biggest and fastest difference. Improved transport infrastructure will slash climate pollution from transport while also cutting the cost of living, making our streets safer and less congested, and cleaning up our air.”  

Climate Councillor and public health physician, Dr Kate Charlesworth, said: “Clogged city roads are a familiar sight but we need smarter, healthier transport solutions than simply building more roads, which just adds to our congestion and climate pollution problems. We should all be able to breathe clean air and spend time outdoors without worrying about harmful pollution entering our lungs.

“Particulate pollution from cars has adverse effects on our hearts and lungs, on pregnant women and children. It’s also estimated to be responsible for more than 11,000 premature deaths in Australian adults. We can prevent these harms by delivering better shared and active transport options so more people can leave the car at home.

“We have everything we need right now to make our transport system cleaner and better. For the sake of our health, governments should step up investment that helps more people in Brisbane use shared and active transport more often.”

ENDS


About us:

The Climate Council is Australia’s leading community-funded climate change communications organisation. We provide authoritative, expert and evidence-based advice on climate change to journalists, policymakers, and the wider Australian community. For further information, go to: climatecouncil.org.au or follow us on social media: facebook.com/climatecouncil and twitter.com/climatecouncil


Contact details:

For interviews please contact Zerene Catacutan on 0438 972 260, zerene.catacutan@climatecouncil.org.au, or Jemimah Taylor Jemimah Taylor on 0478 924 425, jemimah.taylor@climatemediacentre.org.au 

Media

More from this category

  • Transport Automotive
  • 27/12/2024
  • 06:43
Electric Vehicle Council

EV charging etiquette key as more electric cars hit roads this summer

The Electric Vehicle Council has issued advice on charging etiquette this summer holiday as a record number of EVs hit the roads. Nearly one in ten new car sales are electric vehicles (BEVs and PHEVs), with more than 100,000 added to our roads this year. To keep up with growing demand, the number of locations offering fast and ultra-fast chargers has nearly doubled in a year, reaching 1,059 locations nationwide with over 1,849 high-power public chargers. Electric Vehicle Council, Head of Legal, Policy and Advocacy, Aman Gaur said: “Australians love a summer road trip, and more of them than ever…

  • Government Federal, Transport Automotive
  • 20/12/2024
  • 10:20
The Climate Council

New year, new gear: New Vehicle Efficiency Standard revs off the starting line at the stroke of midnight

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FRIDAY 20TH DECEMBER 2024 New year, new gear: New Vehicle Efficiency Standard revs off the starting line at the stroke of midnight The Albanese Government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES) that will come into effect on January 1 will see cleaner and cheaper to run cars sold in Australia, cutting climate pollution produced by new cars by more than half. The policy is a huge win for our climate, our health and our hip-pockets, preventing 20 million tonnes of climate pollution by 2030. For more than two decades, uptake of low- and zero-emissions vehicles was held back…

  • Contains:
  • Transport Automotive
  • 19/12/2024
  • 18:11
Thales

Thales to Enhance Vehicle Access With Reliable and Secure Contactless Solutions

Car industry players can rely on Thales to provide digital and physical solutions that improve car access experiences, while ensuring data security. Thales’s offer…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.