Consumer awarness for responsibility to enviroment
Responsible Consumption – carbon footprint – pollution – Sustainable Mobility – human habits – environmental implications and impacts
DescriptionWhere transportation is frequently given as a service, cities are aiming to offer digital, clean, intelligent, autonomous, and multimodal mobility with more walking and cycling spaces.
In this particular location, cities should prepare for significant disruption. Robotic taxis, flying passenger drones, for city-underground tunnels, are just some of the innovations that may emerge in the future of mobility. to abandon driving a car. User-centeredness is the main focus of a change in the dynamics of global urban transportation. Electrification, autonomous driving, smart and connected infrastructure, modal diversity, and mobility that is integrated, resilient, shared, and sustainable - powered by disruptive business models - will all further the trend of major changes in how people move around in cities over the next ten years. 54 percent of city executives confessed in response to an ESI Thoughtlab study that they will reevaluate mobility and transportation in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak.