Compact Cities Electrified: Brazil
About
Addressing the climate crisis will require rapid, sustained transformation in every country and every sector of industrial activity. In The Compact City Scenario – Electrified report, researchers from ITDP and the University of California, Davis (with support from the ClimateWorks Foundation) modeled the global changes that will be necessary to decarbonize urban passenger transport. The team found that only through vehicle electrification and modal shift combined can urban transport emissions be reduced enough to limit global warming to less than 1.5°C.
While this original report was both global and regional, ITDP is now producing a series of country-specific Compact Cities Electrified reports that will leverage local contexts and data to outline various regional scenarios for the future of urban transport.
The fourth report in the series takes a closer look at Brazil to identify four highly ambitious, but feasible, scenarios for the next few decades of Brazil’s urban transport sector.
Among the four scenarios — Business-As-Usual, High Electrification, High Shift, and Electrification + Shift — the brief finds that only an Electrification + Shift approach can help Brazil effectively reduce its urban transport emissions and help the country address the effects of the climate crisis.
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Learn More
- Access “The Compact City Scenario Electrified” report →
- Continue Reading on the ITDP Blog →
- Watch “The Compact City Scenario Electrified” video below →
- Watch the “Compact Cities Electrified” panel at Transforming Transportation 2023 →
- Download the “The Compact City Scenario” infographic →
- Download “Compact Cities Electrified: China” →
- Download “Compact Cities Electrified: Egypt” →
- Download “Compact Cities Electrified: India” →
- Download “Compact Cities Electrified: Indonesia” →
- Download “Compact Cities Electrified: Mexico” →
- Download “Compact Cities Electrified: United States” →
Interested in learning more about this research or have a press inquiry? Email us at mobility@itdp.org.