Presentation by Tim Dallmann, Senior Researcher ICCT during the Webinar "Supporting cities' transition from diesel to soot-free engine technologies (Part 2: Bangalore, Johannesburg and...
Bus fleets provide widely affordable low carbon transportation around the world. But urban buses are powered predominantly by diesel engines, accounting for approximately 25% of the black carbon emitted by the transportation sector. Future investments in low-carbon urban bus fleets should be coupled with clean fuels and soot-free engine technologies. In this way, local officials can preserve the clean air and climate benefits of their investments in urban bus fleets.
The Soot-Free Urban Bus Fleets project of the Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC) aims to accelerate the global transition to soot-free engine technology in the urban bus fleet. The core activity of this project is to directly inform, motivate, secure, and support the implementation of commitments made by cities to shift toward soot-free engines. This includes not only developing the soot-free commitments together with cities, but also taking the further step of making these commitments a reality – whether through advanced diesel, natural gas, hybrid-electric, electric buses or other soot-free technologies.
This two-part webinar is an update on the CCAC Soot-Free Buses Project. Part 1 had a focus on progress in Jakarta, Indonesia and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and was held on April 8, 2020 (Wednesday). Part 2 focused on progress in Bangalore, India, Johannesburg, South Africa as well as Latin America (registration details are below).
These CCAC series of webinars on transport is jointly organized by the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT), United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), BreatheLife and the CCAC Secretariat with support from the other lead partners of the CCAC Heavy-Duty Vehicles Initiative Canada, Switzerland and United States.
Topics and speakers for Part 2
Progress on soot-free buses and electric buses in Latin America by Gianni López, Director of Centro Mario Molina
CALAC+ Project in Latin America – Towards a cleaner urban transport by Adrian Montalvo, Director CALAC+, Swisscontact
Chair: Luis Felipe Quirama, Air Quality and Mobility Unit, UNEP and Gianni López, Director, Centro Mario Molina
Presentation by Tim Dallmann, Senior Researcher ICCT during the Webinar "Supporting cities' transition from diesel to soot-free engine technologies (Part 2: Bangalore, Johannesburg and...
Presentation by Francisco Posada, Senior Researcher, ICCT during the Webinar "Supporting cities' transition from diesel to soot-free engine technologies (Part 2: Bangalore, Johannesburg...
Presentation by Adrian Montalvo, Director CALAC+, Swisscontact during the Webinar "Supporting cities' transition from diesel to soot-free engine technologies (Part 2: Bangalore,...
Presentation by Gianni Lopez, Director of Centro Mario Molina during the Webinar "Supporting cities' transition from diesel to soot-free engine technologies (Part 2: Bangalore, Johannesburg...
Urban buses produce one-quarter of black carbon emissions from road transport, despite constituting only 1% of the global on-road vehicle fleet. Black carbon is a potent short-lived climate...
This study reports on the economic cost of the health impacts of air pollution from road transport – on a global scale but with special reference to China, India and the OECD countries....