Abstract

Sustainable mobility policies may encounter social, economic, and cultural barriers to successful implementation that need to be assessed. In this sense, knowledge of the population’s mobility habits and their relationship with transport modes is particularly essential. Along these lines, a study was carried out of the patterns of transport modes chosen concerning various social and territorial variables on the island of Mallorca based on the most recent mobility surveys. The study shows that the choice of mode is influenced by a wide range of factors, such as gender, age group, motive for the trip, occupation, region of residence, duration of the trip, and proximity to Palma, the capital of the island. The results indicate that private vehicles are the most often chosen mode of transport. Private vehicles are mainly used by working men between 30 and 44 years old for journeys between home and work, which do not exceed 30 min and are preferably in areas close to Palma. Sustainable modes are little used, although they are mainly used by women, young people, and retired people for work purposes and for access to educational and health centers. The demand for transport generated by the resident population and tourist activity and the negative externalities generated by mobility in private vehicles are closely related on a municipal level (Pearson’s coefficient 0.84, p = 0.00). However, the modal distribution does not seem to be directly related to these factors. Instead, it develops a more conditioned distribution by access to rail transport infrastructures and other geographical factors. In recent years, the Balearic Islands’ public administration launched the Balearic Islands Sectorial Mobility Plan 2019–2026, which aims to promote sustainable modes and reduce the use of private vehicles. This plan represents a considerable economic investment, but will also require great institutional coordination and cultural changes in the population’s perception of mobility. The study shows that the implementation of sustainable modes on the island requires a global vision of mobility issues that integrates urban planning and tourism planning to make the land-use model more sustainable.

Highlights

  • The path towards implementing a sustainable transport model in a territory is a long and complicated process that involves a broad series of changes and transformations that must be carried out in a harmonized way over time and space [1,2,3]

  • Other transformations have to do with the change in the model of land use

  • Other changes have more to do with transport and mobility governance, such as developing transportation planning policies, plans, and programs oriented toward promoting and regulating sustainable modes

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Summary

Introduction

The path towards implementing a sustainable transport model in a territory is a long and complicated process that involves a broad series of changes and transformations that must be carried out in a harmonized way over time and space [1,2,3] Some of these transformations are structural and require large-scale economic investments, such as construction of or improvements in sustainable transport infrastructures (roads, highways, railways, trams, subways, bike lanes, etc.) [4], or the construction of energy infrastructures for the use of transport (gas pipelines, construction of facilities for alternative energy, charging systems for electric vehicles, etc.) and communications infrastructures to facilitate the implementation and development of sharing mobility [5] (Santos, 2018). It should be noted that the path to a knowledge society has a direct effect on the development of sharing mobility that can help optimize modes of transport management, diversify the offer, and move towards a more sustainable model [8]

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