Into the New World: The Covid-19 Pandemic’s Impact on Innovation

The Covid-19 pandemic is the most significant global disruption since World War II and the first truly global public health crisis in the modern era. Entire industries have ground to a halt; international travel has receded to its lowest level in 75 years; nearly all of the world’s leading economies are in recession; and at the time of publication, more than one million people have died from the virus and its complications. As the pandemic forces profound change in all aspects of society, technology is playing a starring role in enabling organisations to respond to disruption.

Five essential takeaways from the Economist Impact event on net-zero transport and infrastructure

The transport industry is the largest emitter of greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions for many countries—creating sustainable transport solutions is crucial if nations are to meet their net-zero targets. However, to de-link transport from GHG emissions we also need to assess sectors that are connected with transport, such as infrastructure.

Measuring Transport Connectivity for Trade in Asia

Measuring Transport Connectivity for Trade in Asia was commissioned by the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) as an annex to , the AIIB’s annual flagship publication.

Cooling: Transporting us to net zero

In 2018, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) announced that to limit global warming to 1.5°C, global net human-caused emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) would need to fall by about 45% from 2010 levels by 2030 and reach “net zero” by around 2050. In practice, meeting this target requires all sectors to shift away from oil, gas and coal while also removing CO2 from the atmosphere.

Cutting transport emissions: an urgent, but complex, necessity

The UK's transport sector emissions have been flatlining for years. If this is to change, government policy needs to take a system-wide approach to cutting transport emissions argues Nick Molho, executive director of the Aldersgate Group.

Cities 80m people will call home: Is Africa’s urbanisation sustainable?

Is this a problem? From London and Tokyo to New York and Shanghai, large cities historically drove the world’s largest economies. Evidence still shows that urban population increases can be sustained when economic growth reinforces such population increases.

Road Tech: Addressing the challenges of traffic growth

Road Tech: Addressing the challenges of traffic growth is an Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) report, commissioned by Abertis, which examines the role of technology and smart engineering in addressing issues arising from the growth in traffic. 

The era of the “clean car” is getting closer

Beyond the growth of renewable technologies in the power sector, significant technological and corporate changes are also afoot in the car industry. If accompanied by innovative and holistic policies, these could make an important dent in road transport emissions, argues Nick Molho, executive director of the Aldersgate Group.

Still waiting for your flying car? Personal drones may take off sooner

Personal aviation is more likely to be delivered by autonomous, multi-rotor vehicles than the flying cars predicted by popular culture

The information driving driverless cars

Autonomous vehicles rely on the ability to integrate and interpret data at great speed

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