What is Green Transport Week?
Tuesday, 06, Jan 2009 02:34
Green Transport Week 14-22 June 2008
The ETA's Green Transport Week began in 1992 and is designed to highlight real alternatives to the car for every day journeys. This year's Green Transport Week takes place from the 14th to the 22nd of June, 2008 and is a chance for people to make a real difference to the environment.
As part of Green Transport Week the ETA has launched a free Car Buyers’ Guide which charts the environmental performance of more than 1,300 cars.
Green Transport Week aims to:
Raise awareness of transport impact on the environment.
Highlight transport alternatives.
Make people stop and think before they go somewhere.
Send a message to the government on green transport and environmental issues.
The Green Transport Week offers you the opportunity to publicise your existing campaigns under a national banner, or a chance to really get something rolling and support the ETA.
Our environment is a matter of great importance and green issues are high on the agenda for all countries as our reliance on cars contributes to damaging the natural environment. As we become more aware about the impact of transport on the environment, here is our chance to do something to prevent further damage to the planet. The ETA Green Transport Week is a chance for you to make a stand and your views count – both by trying to ‘travel green’ yourself, and by putting pressure on your MP, the local council, or local employers.
It’s never been more important! The use of our cars is ever rising, even for the shortest of journeys, emitting more pollution and guzzling more gas. New roads are churning up the countryside and splitting communities in half. In some parts of the country the bus is an endangered species. There are fears that we’ll soon see more Beeching-style closures of the railways. And as roads get busier, the greenest transport of all – walking and cycling – gets more difficult discouraging people from travelling in an environmentally friendly manner. Maybe you would cycle if there was a decent cycle path. Or walk if there wasn’t a four lane dual carriageway to cross. Write to your local council and paper about this.
But it’s not all bad news. All over the country, groups are campaigning for traffic calming, more cycle paths, better buses, and a unified rail network, and against more and more roads.