Major public policies for sustainable mobility

March 2024

The European Union is committed to achieving carbon neutrality by 2050, in line with the Paris agreements. For the transport and mobility sector, this means reducing greenhouse gas emissions by more than 90%. This has major implications in terms of public policy and governance for European states, regions and cities, which will all become players in this process. What stage has France’s national strategy reached?

At European level: major objectives and measures for sustainable mobility

The European Union is responsible for sustainable mobility as part of its environmental commitments. It signed the Paris Agreement as an entity, committing itself to act jointly with its Member States, accepting shared responsibility. Although it cannot act directly in terms of urban transport policy because of the principle of subsidiarity, it supports the efforts of national and local authorities by providing guidance, sharing experience and providing funding to encourage more sustainable mobility. The European Union’s focus on sustainable mobility is not limited to transport, but also covers energy policies, air quality, and economic, social and environmental cohesion. Over the years, a number of actions and measures have been put in place to promote the decarbonisation of mobility:

In 2020, the European Union published its strategy for sustainable and intelligent mobility:

2030 targets

▪ 30 million zero-emission vehicles on Europe’s roads

▪ Doubling of high-speed rail traffic

▪ Carbon neutrality of planned collective journeys of less than 500km

▪ Large-scale deployment of automated mobility

2050 targets

▪ Carbon neutrality of new cars, vans, buses and heavy commercial vehicles

▪ Commissioning of the Trans-European Multimodal Transport Network (TEN-T) equipped for sustainable and intelligent transport with high-speed connectivity.

b) At national level: the State, investor and partner of local authorities

Over the years, the French government has put in place a number of initiatives and measures to improve and decarbonise the range of transport services available in the country:

The National Low-Carbon Strategy (SNBC)

The National Low Carbon Strategy (SNBC) is France’s roadmap for reducing its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 2050. It concerns all sectors of activity and must be supported by everyone: citizens, local authorities and businesses. One of the key areas is the transport sector.

To this end, it outlines the following objectives:

This strategy is in line with the guidelines set out in the Mobility Act, which calls for massive investment in innovation to provide local authorities with new alternatives to the car. Local authorities have been invited to play an active role in setting up and co-financing these initiatives.

Its implementation is based on the following measures:

Sources