Cycling UK has called latest findings showing that cycling traffic dropped by 5 per cent from last year "depressing", blaming the UK Government's "flawed" decision to slash the active travel budget, despite lagging behind its modest target of doubling the number of cycling journeys by 2025.
The new statistics for cycling traffic were published by the Department for Transport (DfT) yesterday. The decrease in cycling levels in England comes after the government decided to cut the active travel budget in March this year, described as a "backward move" by the Walking and Cycling Alliance at the time.
However, a recent inquiry by the National Audit Office into active travel in England confirmed Cycling UK’s claims that the government’s investment in active travel fell far short of what was needed to meet the 2025 walking and cycling targets – even before ministers made further cuts in March.
> England’s active travel spend 5,000% less than Scotland’s after budget slash
Duncan Dollimore, head of campaigns at Cycling UK said: "These statistics should be wake up call for the government, which has already been told in crystal clear terms by the National Audit Office that it can’t meet its own targets without substantially increasing investment in active travel.
"Multiple government polices recognise the carbon reduction, public health, air pollution and economic benefits which flow from more people cycling and walking, particularly for short journeys. It’s therefore imperative that the government reflects on these figures, and urgently reverses the cuts in the Autumn Statement."
In July last year, the government announced that it will invest £3.78bn in active travel schemes until 2025 as part of its refreshed cycling and walking investment strategy.
Trudy Harrison, the minister formerly responsible for active travel, said that the increased funding was part of an "ambitious" strategy to ensure that half of all journeys in towns and cities will be walked or cycled by the end of the decade.
> Government’s second cycling and walking investment strategy outlines almost £4bn funding for active travel – and aims to double the number of cycling trips by 2025
However, following the cuts, Cycling UK joined its partners in the Walking and Cycling Alliance and more than 146 other organisations, including Campaign for Better Transport and Asthma + Lung UK, to write to the prime minister highlighting the disproportionate level of cuts to funding for cycling and walking infrastructure.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak also recently indicated a U-turn on his own government’s stated support for low traffic neighbourhoods, ironically one of the measures local authorities can implement to enable more people to walk and cycle safely, at a time when the government is slashing central funding because they are relatively cheap to introduce.
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14 comments
Are there any regional breakdowns for the data, because cycling in London still seems to be booming.
Eburtthebike,
Unfortunately, the voters being chased are grokmed into avoiding informative mefia like R4. Massaging prejudice is at the fore as is/was the case with our Brexit suicide.
Two things: why didn't you reply to my post? and WTH is grokmed?
I think it is groomed.
Kent police, police Scotland and other forces have horror stories to delve into. Cyclists send them huge amounts of evidence (for free). The police choose to do NOTHING.
I won't let my kids cycle on the road. It's a shitshow.
What's killing cycling enthusiasm is the routine killing of cyclists and getting away with it because the killer happens to be driving when carrying out the crime. I can't convince non cycling friends to go cycling with me because they say it's too risky to ride on the roads where there are too many builders speeding in white vans off their heads on cocaine and/or watching TikTok on their phones.
It would be good to have the option to vote for the UN in elections.
I'd take chatGPT if it was on the ballot.
There is no source I can see for the 5% drop but presuming its annual or 6 monthly its a bit disingenuous to blame a decision only made 5 months ago for it....I doubt all the schemes have even be cancelled at this point the way the machinery of Govt moves.
As much as I am a supporter of CUK - I hate stats being abused.
Good point, although Sunak and co weren't exactly ardent advocates before cutting the budget.
How desperately naive of Cycling UK to think that the current government give a shit about anything, least of all single digit % drop in active travel.
That was my first thought too, but actually it's worse: they do give a shit, just in the opposite cause. They think binning active travel will win them votes. Almost incomprehensible as it may be, they could well be right.
The Sun (that is, Rupert Murdoch) has been running articles and op-eds all week saying Sunak must ditch "net zero and the ULEZ" as soon as possible if he wants to survive in office "because they're unpopular with voters"
I listened to Any Questions on R4 last week, featuring Carla Denyer of the Green Party. The audience support for her was overwhelming, and in complete contrast to the groans that greeted anything the arrogant windbag tory said. The tories are completely out of touch with real people, who seem to have finally woken up to the disaster that 13 years of tory ultra-shambles have brought.