Giulio Mattioli Profile picture
May 26 18 tweets 6 min read Read on X
How far we've come. A few years ago "transport poverty" was just a niche academic concept.

Last week, the EU has published its recommendations on how to tackle transport poverty, along with a helpful data dashboard

THREAD with my first impressions transport.ec.europa.eu/news-events/ne…Image
The reason why "transport poverty" is suddenly getting attention is ETS 2, which is expected to increase motor fuel prices a lot from 2027, and the associated "Social Climate Fund" which aims at supporting groups that are vulnerable to such price increases. Image
The Commission outlines a number of eligible measures which Member States can include in their SCF plans to tackle transport poverty Image
The Commission has also put forward a definition of transport poverty with 3/4 dimensions: Affordability, Availability, Accessibility and Adequacy.

(little self-congratulatory note here that these dimensions were inspired by a paper we wrote in 2016) Image
The Commission is recommending to Member States to introduce "social leasing schemes" to (as far as I understand) help lower-income households afford electric vehicles, following the example of France Image
At the same time the Commission recommends prioritizing more sustainable transport modes and reducing car dependency Image
The Comission emphasises the need for indicators to identify vulnerable groups, as the first step in a "strategic approach for combatting and preventing transport poverty" Image
Image
The Annexes provide examples of indicators for the various dimensions of transport poverty, based on another recent report (linked below)

(second self-congratulatory note as some of these indicators are inspired by my publications) Image
But probably the most interesting thing is the "Transport Poverty Hub" - a data dashboard where indicators of accessibility and transport poverty can be visualised for the whole of the EU Image
(note that you need EU Login credentials to access the dashboard but don't let that discourage you - anyone can get access credentials you just need to register)
The Dashboard basically lets you map indicators of accessibility / travel time to different destinations (opportunities/people, primary schools, health care) by different transport modes (walking, cycling, public transport and driving) to identify where access is difficult Image
Note that there was no comparable EU-wide data basis on this to date - and in many countries not even national or regional statistics, so this is a huge step forward.
The indicators are estimated at a 1*1km grid resolution, so I can for example visualize accessibility to primary schools by public transport in and around Dortmund where I live... Image
...but they can also be aggregated at a higher level, so I can see for example how average accessibility to primary schools by public transport compares across municipalities in the region where I live... Image
...or across different European regions (at NUTS 3 / 2 / 1 level) Image
And for each indicator, several thresholds can be set , including an "accessibility poverty gap" that is meant to measure how bad the problem is overall Image
From what I hear this is a first version of the Dashboard and it will be improved with more data and possibly more indicators in the future. Overall great work congratulations!
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More from @giulio_mattioli

Jul 4
The German Education Ministry is apparently considering introducing quotas for children with "migration background" in schools.

Under the German definition, this would include my Italian-German, UK-born, 3-language speaking child. zeit.de/politik/deutsc…Image
As the article explains, this proposal may well be unconstitutional Image
And in breach of international agreements that Germany subscribes to Image
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Jun 20
Since Israel attacked Iran, German media outlets & journalists of all political persuasions have started questioning international law and or heralding a new age where the law of the strongest applies in international relationships.

A thread to which I will keep adding / 1
2. The ex editor of Bild, now at far-right website NIUS
3. Colum in center-left daily Süddeutsche Zeitung
Read 12 tweets
Feb 2
We recently published the first study to investigate the determinants of air travel behaviour with panel data.

In practice: what factors explain why someone flies more or less a few years later?

THREAD on the main findings link.springer.com/article/10.100…Image
We first review existing cross-sectional evidence on the deteminants of air travel - summarised in this table (which the reviewers didn't like so didn't make it into the final paper :) ) Image
Why it's interesting to use panel data?

1. How travel behaviour changes over the life course is interesting in and of itself

2. It provides better evidence of causality than cross-sectional data

3. Shows which groups & trends are driving rapid growth in air travel
Read 14 tweets
Nov 6, 2024
Having grown up in Berlusconi's Italy, I can feel it in my bones that when they win the first time, it's tough, but when they win *again*, after all they've demonstrated, *that's* the really hard one to take
When it happens the first time, you can think "This is an aberration, this was a tantrum, people don't really stand behind this, this is not who we are". The second time around really brings home that yes, this is what many of "us" are & stand for.
But in a way, it cures you from populism. No there is no innocent, well-intentioned mass of people who have been misled. We live in liberal democracies with a lot of people who fundamentally reject key principles of liberal democracy.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 18, 2024
Aviation accounts for 3.5% of climate change impact, and it's one of the sectors where emissions are increasingly most rapidly.

But where do aviation emissions come from?

The answer is in this new paper led by Frédéric Dobruszkes - THREAD doi.org/10.1016/j.jtra…Image
[Little pedantic note before we start. For various good reasons the analysis in this paper refers to "fuel burnt", not CO2 emissions. But there is an almost perfect equivalence between the two so it doesn't matter in the end]
More than half of flights globally (54.5%) are over distances of less than 1,000km. The kind of flights you could imagined substituting with trains

The problem is that these flights account for *just 17.9% of fuel burnt*. Why? Because they're short
Read 20 tweets

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