MPs slam government for ‘disappointingly slow’ progress on active travel

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The Government is not on track to meet objectives to increase rates of active travel by 2025, according to MPs on a select committee.

The report calls for local authorities to get greater certainty about the funding available for active travel

In a report published today, the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) warned of “disappointingly slow” progress on work to spur active travel, including cycling and walking, by 2025.

While objectives include a doubling of cycling rates, and a 6-percentage point increase in the proportion of children walking to school, there has been no sustained increase in cycling rates, and fewer children now walk to school than when targets were set.

The report said funding cuts made this year by the Department for Transport (DfT) could hold back objectives. In March 2023, the DfT announced a £233m reduction in dedicated active travel funding up to April 2025.

The report also warns that the Government has not done enough to understand the impact and benefits of the £2.3bn in taxpayers’ money it has spent on active travel infrastructure between 2016 and 2021.

“Too little” is known about the quality of the infrastructure that has been built and MPs say the DfT has an incomplete understanding of what has been built because the majority of schemes have cost less than the amount required to monitor or evaluate them.

The select committee is calling on the DfT to lay out its plans to evaluate active travel interventions by December.

The report also urges for local authorities to be provided with greater certainty about the funding available for active travel to enable them to invest in and deliver long-term, ambitious active travel interventions.

DfT has also not yet taken essential steps to properly integrate active travel into the public transport network, for example enabling people to safely walk to bus stops or take their bike on the bus. The PAC is concerned that a lack of available or secure bike parking, or safe paths, may discourage people from cycling or walking part of a journey.

Dame Meg Hillier MP, chair of the Committee, said: “The Government itself estimates that every pound invested in active travel reaps around £4.30 in benefits, in health, in air quality, in decarbonisation. If true, these are significant levels of potential value for taxpayers’ money to be realised. But close monitoring is required to understand what works and why in active travel investment, and coherence and stability of funding is crucial should these schemes be given a chance to succeed. Our inquiry found these sadly lacking.

“The Government’s executive agency Active Travel England is off to a good start, but needs firm backing for it to maintain momentum. Local authorities also require closer working and support to deliver successful schemes. Billions in taxpayers’ money appears to have been parachuted in by DfT on active travel without its impact properly tracked. Without the evidence-based, collaborative and holistic approach now needed, the Government’s ambitions in this area are likely to continue to go into reverse gear.”

To access the PAC report, click here.

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Natalie Middleton

Natalie has worked as a fleet journalist for over 20 years, previously as assistant editor on the former Company Car magazine before joining Fleet World in 2006. Prior to this, she worked on a range of B2B titles, including Insurance Age and Insurance Day.