Sustainable Travel Facts
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Transcript Sustainable Travel Facts
Sustainable Travel –
These are the Facts!
Additional supporting material can be found at
www.schoolmagic.co.uk
Did you know?
•
25% of all car journeys in Britain are
under 2 miles, that’s about a 30
minute walk or a 12 minute bike
ride.
•
•
59% are less than five miles.
Pollution levels inside a car can be
up to three times higher than levels
which cyclists and walkers are
exposed to.
•
One six year old in ten is now obese
and 20% of 15 year olds are obese.
•
Walking to school and walking up
stairs are ways of putting activity
back into our lives.
Exercising
•30 minutes of walking or cycling can reduce the risk of coronary heart disease
by over half, diabetes in adulthood by 50%, obesity by 50%, hypertension by
30%
•Children who walk and cycle to school regularly are less at risk of heart
disease, stroke, diabetes and osteoporosis when they are older.
•4 out of every 10 boys and 6 out of every 10 girls are active for less than one
hour a day.
•The decline in walking to school has coincided with a rise in childhood obesity,
with the proportion of overweight children increasing by 7%between 1996 and
2004.
Trends in Travelling to school in the UK
•During the rush hour 1 in 5 cars are on the school run.
•Parents in the UK drive an average of 600 miles a year for the school run, costing
over £300 a year in fuel costs and wear and tear on the car.
•In 1971 most 7 year olds made their own way to school unaccompanied and
usually on foot. Nowadays, 79% of 7-10 year olds are accompanied.
•Between 1993 and 2004 the proportion of primary school children being driven to
school rose from 29% to 41%.
•In secondary schools, over the last ten years, there has been a 60% increase in the
number of children being driven to school.
•Each day about 8.3 million school children are involved in the school run.
Trends in Travelling to school in the UK
•Nationally about 50% of journeys to school are by foot, 25% are by car, 20%,by
bus and 5% by other means, including bicycles.
•31% of children would like to travel to school by bike.
•The average British child travels 5000 miles a year by car.
•39% of households own at least one bike yet only 5% of journeys are by
bicycle.
Dropping children off on the way to work
•Research for The National Travel Survey 2004 found that 60% of all journeys by
women taking children to school and 57% of those by men returned straight home
afterwards.
•Only 17% of all morning escort trips to school were followed by a trip to work or
business.
•Driving to school causes congestion at the school gate. Even if parents do go on to
work afterwards, they are still contributing to the problem. Why not set off a little
earlier and enjoy a walk to school?
•Many people believe that their children are safer being driven to school. Much of
the danger is perceived rather than real. Walking or cycling to school will improve
your road safety skills, in preparation for independent travel later on, keep you fit
and healthy and establish good habits for adult life.
Walking or cycling to school makes you ready to learn.
•
Recent research from California
suggests that children who walk or
cycle to school arrive more alert
and ready to learn and thus
achieve better academic results.
•
9 out of 10 teachers in a
Department for Transport survey
found that the walk to school
made children brighter, more alert
and ready for the first class of the
day.
Personal safety: Are you really safer in a car?
•There has been a rise in parental concern about personal safety in recent
years, and many parents believe that children are safer travelling to school by
car.
•Research shows that the chances of being killed in a road traffic accident are
40 times greater than the risk of being abducted.
•Encouraging independent journeys to school is part of fostering independence
and self-reliance in children.
•Once you know the route well and are confident enough, you should walk to
school with other children or on your own.
Health
Car fumes are bad for us
•Car passengers in slow-moving traffic face pollution levels inside a car
three times higher than those experienced by pedestrians.
•Emissions of the most noxious air pollutants arising from road traffic
should be about half present levels by 2010, largely because of
improvements in vehicle technology and fuel quality. However, on current
projections, the trend will reverse beyond 2010 as these improvements are
offset by traffic growth.
•Vehicles make a significant contribution to local air pollution. The deaths of
between 12,000 and 24,000 vulnerable people may be brought forward
each year; and between 14,000 and 24,000 hospital admissions and
re-admissions may also result from poor air quality.
Health
Asthma is on the increase
•Asthma is the most common chronic disease of childhood and it is on the
increase in developed countries.
•One in eight children in the UK are being treated for asthma.
•A Nottingham survey found that secondary school children living within 30
metres of an A or B road are twice as likely to wheeze as children living 120
metres away from a main road.
Health
• Physical activity
– 30% of boys and 39% of girls
do not achieve the
recommended level of
physical activity.
– All young people should
participate in physical activity
of at least moderate intensity
for one hour per day.
– A Hertfordshire study showed
that Year 8 pupils walking the
school journey each day used
more calories than during the
2 hours of PE they receive
each week.
Finally…
We are getting more overweight
•About one in 20 boys (5.5%) and about one in 15 girls (7.2%) aged 2-15 in
England were obese in 2002, according to the international classification.
•Overall, over one in five boys (21.8%) and over one in four girls (27.5%)
were either overweight or obese.
Changing the way we travel to and from school is a
great way to improve our overall fitness and health.