Steering Smart Mobility Services: Lessons from Seattle, Greater Manchester and Stockholm
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Smart Mobility Governance in Context
1.2. Terminology
2. Background
2.1. Smart Mobility Governance Challenges
2.2. Smart Mobility and Accountability
- To whom is accountability owed?
- By whom is it owed?
- For what is accountability owed?
- What is the process and how is it created?
- What are the standards that need to be met?
- What happens if the accountable party fails to meet these standards?
3. Method
4. Results
4.1. Seattle
4.2. Greater Manchester
4.3. Stockholm
5. Discussion
5.1. What Shapes Smart Mobility Governance?
5.1.1. Context Matters
5.1.2. Approaches to Steering
5.2. Creating Accountability Regimes for Smart Mobility
6. Conclusions: Smart Mobility in the System of Automobility
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Seattle | Greater Manchester | Stockholm | |
---|---|---|---|
City Characteristics | |||
Population | 737,015 (2020) [37] | 2,867,800 (2021) [38] | 978,770 (2021) [39] |
Governance structure | Mayor/ Council (city level) and county council | Combined Authority (regional level) and 10 local councils | Mayor/Council (city level) and regional council |
Transport authority | SDOT/KCM | TfGM, local councils | City of Stockholm, Regional Public Transport Authority |
Public transport modes | Light rail, commuter rail, monorail, bus, streetcar, ferries | Tram, bus, commuter rail | Metro, tram, bus, commuter rail, ferries |
Available smart mobility services | Carshare, e-scooter share, bikeshare, TNCs | Bikeshare, rideshare, carshare, e-scooter share, MaaS and AV trials | Carshare, rideshare, e-scooter share, MaaS and AV trials |
Data collected | |||
Number of interviews | 6 | 6 | 10 |
Organisations represented | SDOT, KC, KCM, City of Seattle, transport consultant | TfGM, smart mobility operator, research organization | City of Stockholm, Stockholm Region, KOMET, Drive Sweden, transport consultants, Stockholm Parkering |
Cities | Providers | |
---|---|---|
Who is accountable and to whom is accountability owed? | Cities are accountable to citizens and providers are accountable to their stakeholders. Also, cities and providers have reciprocal relationships and are accountable to each other and jointly accountable to citizens. | |
For what is accountability owed? | Providing sustainable mobility. | Providing good quality services. |
Cities are accountable to providers for developing a context supportive for providers’ operations (infrastructure, subsidies etc.) and providers are accountable to cities for contributing to the achievement of sustainable mobility objectives and following local regulation. | ||
What is the accountability process? | Local democratic process. | Corporate processes. |
Partnership agreements and local smart mobility regulation. | ||
What are the standards to be met? | Democratic accountability standards. | Corporate targets. |
Shared and mutual objectives and standards that support local sustainable transport objectives, mitigate externalities, and ensure that providers’ operations remain commercially viable. | ||
What happens if standards are not met? | Cities should be able to reject and ban services that do not meet local objectives. |
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Moscholidou, I.; Marsden, G.; Pangbourne, K. Steering Smart Mobility Services: Lessons from Seattle, Greater Manchester and Stockholm. Sustainability 2023, 15, 4566. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054566
Moscholidou I, Marsden G, Pangbourne K. Steering Smart Mobility Services: Lessons from Seattle, Greater Manchester and Stockholm. Sustainability. 2023; 15(5):4566. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054566
Chicago/Turabian StyleMoscholidou, Ioanna, Greg Marsden, and Kate Pangbourne. 2023. "Steering Smart Mobility Services: Lessons from Seattle, Greater Manchester and Stockholm" Sustainability 15, no. 5: 4566. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054566
APA StyleMoscholidou, I., Marsden, G., & Pangbourne, K. (2023). Steering Smart Mobility Services: Lessons from Seattle, Greater Manchester and Stockholm. Sustainability, 15(5), 4566. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15054566