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Independence Day 2023 | Vision@2047: Will India have sustainable urban transport?

Karnataka-based HS Sudhira, director of Gubbi Labs, says, by 2047, nearly half of the country's population will live in urban areas. This calls for separate focus on non-million-plus cities and an urban transport policy that is sustainable, equitable and resilient to climate-change disasters.

August 14, 2023 / 14:09 IST
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HS Sudhira, director of Gubbi Labs, a Bangalore-based research collective, believes that by 2047, nearly half of the country's population will live in urban areas and with the challenges posed by climate change, urban transportation will shift to Electric Vehicles completely.

Sci-fi movies and series are fascinating. Whether they admit or not, almost every sci-fi movie junkie is obsessed with travel — be it teleportation in the Star Trek series or whizzing around parallel universes and through time in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It’s another matter that commuters frequently stuck in traffic jams, say for example at Bangalore’s infamous Silk Board junction, also obsess about it!

Consider these numbers: India’s road network grew by over 30 per cent in the last decade, but vehicle registrations grew by at least three times; in June 2023, over 3.27 lakh cars were sold across the country. India has a network of 6.7 million km of roads and is placed around 115th in the world in terms of per capital length. But the most dismaying: on average, an Indian motorist wastes close to eight days in an Indian metro stuck in traffic jams.

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This despite the fact that over the last decade India grew its road network faster than ever before, seen rapid expansion of public transport, introduction of better vehicles and more electric vehicles. However, there are signs that the next 25 years will possibly not just progress but also be qualitatively better.

“By around 2047, nearly half of the country's population will be living in the urban areas. And about half of them would be living in only the top 100 cities (by population). That implies another half of the urban population or about 25 per cent of the country's population will be in smaller towns and cities. Given the demographic divide, urban transport is poised to set the direction for urban agenda,” says HS Sudhira, director of Gubbi Labs (a research collective) and who holds a doctorate in Urban Planning and Governance from Bangalore’s Indian Institute of Science.