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Public Policy
Public Transport

Luxembourg to Be First Country to Offer Free Mass Transit ... Other countries have experimented with free mass transit in recent years.

Burgess COMMENTARY

Peter Burgess

12 Luxembourg to Be First Country to Offer Free Mass Transit Other countries have experimented with free mass transit in recent years.

Why Global Citizens Should Care

Free mass transportation helps to reduce car use, which in turn reduces air pollution. The United Nations’ Global Goals calls on countries to improve air quality both to lift health outcomes and mitigate climate change. You can join us in taking action on these issues here.

Traveling across Luxembourg is about to get a lot easier for people without cars after Prime Minister Xavier Bettel signalled on Dec. 5 that his ruling coalition will soon make free public transportation the law of the land, according to the New York Times.

Although the measure will be great for the environment and helps people tight on money, the primary reason for the action is the country’s vexing levels of traffic, the Times reports.

Luxembourg has the highest car per capita rate in all of Europe and its rate of international commuters doubled over the past decade. The country’s population swells by a third during the week because of workers from abroad, the Guardian notes. As a result, rush hour roads teem with cars, becoming a constant headache for urban dwellers and people who live in border villages, and costing drivers upwards of 33 hours of their lives per year.

The country has been moving in this direction in recent years by allowing people under the age of 20 to ride mass transit free of charge. Fares will no longer be collected on trains, buses, and trams for all people by the summer of 2019, and the measure will be fully phased in by 2020 when the specifics are thought through, the Guardian reports.

For example, the country hasn’t figured out what to do with first- and second-class compartments.

Currently, the country recovers only around 3.3% of the amount it budgets to mass transit through ticket sales, the Times notes. Consequently, the removal of fares will likely be easy to absorb. Other changes may be harder to cope with, according to one study that examined universal travel programs, including a potential rise in vandalism and slower service.

Embedded video Vala Afshar ✔ @ValaAfshar Free public transportation in Luxembourg 🇱🇺 http://wef.ch/2sypJF4

57 8:07 AM - Dec 7, 2018 42 people are talking about this Twitter Ads info and privacy

Read More: Why Cities May Be the Key to Stopping Climate Change

Luxembourg isn’t the only country to experiment with free mass transit. Estonia has offered free mass transit in its capital Tallinn since 2014 and plans to expand the model countrywide in the years ahead.

Cities in Europe like Paris, Barcelona, and Berlin have eased mass transit fares to fight air pollution, which causes 400,000 premature deaths and leads to $24.7 billion in health care costs each year across Europe.

Adopting free public transit also mitigates climate change by prioritizing sustainability in the transportation sector, which is the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions, even exceeding the coal-dependent electricity sector.

Read More: These 6 Cities Are Trying to Give Up Cars Entirely

Germany, for example, is planning to offer free public transit to meet European Union air quality regulations.

“We are considering public transport free of charge in order to reduce the number of private cars,” German ministers wrote in a letter to the European Commission in February. “Effectively fighting air pollution without any further unnecessary delays is of the highest priority for Germany.”

Although Luxembourg is framing free mass transit as a way to fight traffic, air pollution is likely a major factor as well. The country has some of the worst air quality in Europe.

Read More: 8 Ways Cities Are Fighting Climate Change and Environmental Decay

Regardless of the motivation, the move has been celebrated on social media.

Bill McKibben ✔ @billmckibben Luxembourg becomes first nation to make all train, bus travel free. A big idea from a small placehttps://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/luxembourg-free-trains-public-transport-trams-buses-when-a8668496.html … 3,298 9:06 PM - Dec 5, 2018 Twitter Ads info and privacy

Luxembourg to become first country in world to make public transport free

Luxembourg is set to become the first country in the world to abolish all fares on public transport. A new coalition government is taking office in the Grand Duchy with the promise of abolishing...

independent.co.uk 1,516 people are talking about this Twitter Ads info and privacy View image on Twitter View image on Twitter

Mike Hudema ✔ @MikeHudema
BAM! Who’s next? Luxembourg set to become the first country in the world to make all public transport free: https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/luxembourg-free-trains-public-transport-trams-buses-when-a8668496.html …#ActOnClimate #ClimateChange #AirPollution #cdnpoli #cop24
165 3:52 AM - Dec 6, 2018 119 people are talking about this Twitter Ads info and privacy

Helena Rivera @helerivera
A day to dream about in London: “Luxembourg to become first country to make all public transport free” https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/dec/05/luxembourg-to-become-first-country-to-make-all-public-transport-free?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other …

1 2:31 PM - Dec 5, 2018 Twitter Ads info and privacy
Luxembourg to become first country to make all public transport free Government seeks to prioritise environment and end some of world’s worst traffic congestion

theguardian.com See Helena Rivera's other Tweets

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