Advocacy

Our Four Point Plan

Making Canberra a cycle-friendly city

Pedal Power has launched a four-point plan for Active Travel in Canberra. The plan, detailed in our 2023-24 budget submission, is designed to drive investment in cycling and active travel infrastructure, rebuilding Canberra’s status as Australia’s cycling capital. 

More people cycle in Canberra than in any other state or territory in Australia, and this is no accident. The ACT has historically boasted some of Australia’s best cycling infrastructure – infrastructure that is safe, protected, attractive, pleasant to use, and offers genuine convenience to riders. However, despite this, Canberra risks losing its status as Canberra’s cycling capital. 

More than ever, the car remains ‘king’ in Canberra. While the highest in the country, trips by bike still only represent less than 2.7% of the 1.3 million trips that Canberrans make every day. Just 35,000 trips are made daily by bike. For the sake of our health, wellbeing, and environment, we must support more Canberrans to switch from private car to active travel. 

The ACT Government has recently released its Draft Active Travel Plan with a vision of getting more Canberrans to walk and cycle more frequently. Pedal Power commends the lofty goals of this report, as we commended Transport Minister Chris Steel’s March 2022 delivery of an ACT Government Active Travel Statement in the Legislative Assembly. This policy framework promises to deliver projects that will fundamentally transform Canberra’s active travel environment. 

However, while the Draft Active Travel Plan is a good broad document, it has no timelines or commitment to increased funding to make it happen. It remains unclear when key projects and policy reforms will be delivered. If we do not implement the Active Travel Plan, and soon, Canberra will become a more car-centric environment, spread out, and hostile to active travel alternatives. 

Globally, cities such as Wellington, Paris, Amsterdam, London, and New York are investing heavily in cycling infrastructure. The construction of systems of dedicated separated cycle lanes are seeing cycling participation skyrocket. Australian capital cities such as Sydney, Melbourne, and Perth, are starting to do the same, risking them overtaking Canberra in the cycling stakes. 

Our four-point plan will get Canberra back on track. It will drive investment in active travel to support the development of safe and convenient active travel routes, getting more people on their bikes, scooters, and walking to their destinations. 

Our four-point plan is: