Oslo, Norway Will Be Car Free In 4-Years Time

Automotive

Published on October 21st, 2015 | by Daniel Sherman Fernandez

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Oslo, Norway Will Be Car Free In 4-Years Time

Oslo Opera House Norway

Oslo, the capital of Norway is not the most traffic congested city in Europe and in fact traffic moves quite easily even in peak hours, however the new city council of 59 elected representatives who will manage the city for the next four years have just announced that they will institute a permanent and comprehensive ban of cars in the city centre. This will make Oslo the first European capital where cars are permanently banned, plus it’s a strong indicator that similar bans may be enacted in other major cities across the continent.

The newly elected council, which is made up of the Labour Party, the Greens, and the Socialist Left, said that the Oslo car ban would be enacted “by 2019.” Ahead of the ban, some 60 kilometres (37 miles) of bicycle lanes will be built, plus there’ll be a “massive boost” to public transport spending.  “We want to make it better for pedestrians, cyclists. It will be better for shops and everyone,” said Lan Marie Nguyen Berg of the Green party.

While cars will be banned from the city centre, buses and trams will still be allowed, and “arrangements will be found” so that disabled people aren’t exiled and vehicles can still make deliveries to stores. Oslo has a population of about 650,000, and about 350,000 cars.

oslo-traffic jam

Completely banning cars from a city centre is a bold move to say the least. Some European cities have flirted with car bans over the last few years just last month Paris banned cars for a single day, to combat air pollution and some cities, such as London and parts of Madrid, have congestion charges to reduce the amount of car traffic. Oslo is fairly small as far as capital cities go, though, which probably makes the ban a little more palatable. It’s hard to imagine the upheaval that would occur from banning cars in London.

Still, as metropolitan population densities continue to increase, and air pollution stubbornly persists, other small cities may follow in Oslo’s footsteps. Larger cities, though, will probably stick with more stringent emissions controls: London, for example, should roll out a new “ultra low emissions zone” in 2020 that will hit diesel and other high-emissions vehicles with an extra surcharge. Eventually, it wouldn’t be surprising if megacities completely ban vehicle emissions, requiring all cars to be electric.

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