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TRANSIT CEASED PUBLICATION IN JUNE 2010

Car is still king… but more want to start cycling, research suggests

Travel Behaviour

Deniz Huseyin
03 May 2022

 

More than half of UK adults (55%) agree there is too much traffic congestion in their local area while just 23% disagree, says a new survey by Ipsos. 

However, 71% feel they need a car to suit their current lifestyle, rising to 86% among those who have access to one. The survey found that while 21% agree it is less important to own a car nowadays some 59% reject the notion.

Seven in ten (71%) say they support actions to encourage more people to walk or cycle instead of driving a car to reduce the UK’s carbon emissions. Some 65% would support encouraging more people to use public transport rather than driving a car, and 57% would support actions to encourage greater use of ‘car-pooling’.

Some 45% are in favour of schemes which would charge road users a fee to drive around towns and cities to reduce congestion and improve the environment while 33% oppose such schemes in principle.

People living in households without access to a car are more positive about road charging - 51% of this group support such a policy - but those who do have access to a car were more supportive than opposed - 44% compared with 35%. People living in Scotland were more likely to oppose road pricing schemes (41%) than those in England and Wales (33% and 24%).

Four in ten UK adults (44%) say they would like to cycle more than they currently do while a similar percentage (47%) do not see themselves as the sort of person to ride a bike.

Two-thirds (64%) of people agree that it is ‘too dangerous to cycle on the roads’ including a quarter (26%) who agree strongly. Women are much more likely to perceive the dangers of cycling than men, with 71% of women agreeing compared with 57% of men.

Six in ten people, 62%, support the encouragement of the use of electric vehicles instead of petrol or diesel vehicles to reduce the UK’s carbon emissions but are more likely to oppose (45%) than support (31%) only allowing access to certain town and city centres to electric or hybrid cars or vans on some days.

Those aged between 25 and 34 (58%) were much more likely than those aged 55+ (32%) to want to cycle, the survey found. Men (50%) are also more likely to want to cycle than women (39%). Two-thirds (66%) of those who currently have access to a bike say they would like to cycle more. 

Ipsos interviewed a “representative sample” of 2,240 people aged 16+ in the UK between 3-9 February 2022.

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East Midlands Combined County Authority
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Deputy Team Leader - Transport Planning
London Borough of Havering
Town Hall, Romford, Essex, RM1 3BB, GB
Grade 9 £51,093 - £55,155 pa
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