Communities across England denied boost to health and environment due to chronic underfunding of walking and cycling, says charity

Two people cycling on a cycle lane (c) Joolze Dymond
Reacting to IPPR’s new report ‘Stride and ride: England's path from laggard to leader in walking, wheeling, and cycling’ published today
  • Reacting to IPPR’s new report ‘Stride and ride: England's path from laggard to leader in walking, wheeling, and cycling’ published today, Cycling UK says England denied a slew of health, wellbeing and climate benefits due to half a century of underfunding of walking, wheeling and cycling
  • Investment in walking, wheeling and cycling infrastructure offers twice the value for money for the public purse than road building
  • Just 2% of total transport budget is being spent on active travel infrastructure 

People across England are missing out on a slew of health, wellbeing and environmental benefits due to half a century of chronic underfunding of its streets, says charity Cycling UK. The comments come following the release of a new report by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), published today, supported by the charity.

The report provides clear evidence of the multiple benefits that come from investment in walking, wheeling and cycling. This includes the creation of green jobs, boosting economic growth and making our streets safer, in addition to proven health, wellbeing and environmental benefits.

Increasing levels of cycling to those seen in Denmark would save the NHS £17 billion over 20 years by improving people’s health and wellbeing.

Doubling cycling and increasing walking would also prevent 8,300 premature deaths and save £567 million a year through improved air quality.

Investment in walking, wheeling and cycling infrastructure offers far better value for the public purse than money spent on road building projects and is considerably lower cost, as the report makes clear.

For every £1 spent on so-called active travel, there is an average return on investment of £5.62, compared with just £2.50 for roads. However, spending on walking, wheeling and cycling infrastructure can have a maximum return of up to £19 per £1 spent, while some road building projects offer no return on investment at all.

Sarah Mitchell, Cycling UK’s chief executive, said:

“Spending on active travel is one of the most secure investments that a government can make, something that the new report by IPPR makes crystal clear. People want the choice to walk, wheel or cycle to get around their local neighbourhoods, but they can’t do it without a well-designed, joined-up network of suitable paths.

“When it comes to investing in active travel, Scotland and Wales are investing to reap the benefits that come from increased spending, while England remains the poor relation. It seems the UK government didn’t get the memo and we therefore hope this new research will shift attitudes across Westminster so that walking, wheeling and cycling shoots up the list of investment priorities.

“It’s never been more important to prioritise investing in schemes like the National Cycle Network and we fully support IPPR’s call for the NCN to have a ten-year investment plan.”

Lawrence Davies from Heaton, Newcastle upon Tyne, said:

“Bikes are a lifeline to independent transport for my family as we’ve never been in a position to afford a car. Newcastle City Council recently put in new cycle paths and is trialling a low traffic neighbourhood – this infrastructure helps us every day to travel safely to school, work, swimming lessons and the city centre. The experience of cycling away from significant traffic is wonderful – we keep fit, bump into friends and learn more about the world around us.

“But the infrastructure making this possible has taken years to implement and is continually under threat, and the wider network near to where we live is really patchy. There are parts of the city that are positively dangerous to get to by bike, and some of our close friends wouldn’t dare to cycle because their neighbourhood has no cycling infrastructure whatsoever.”

England has some of the lowest cycling and walking rates in Europe, due to the fact that investment in active travel has historically been low across the nation. Fewer than one in five people walk, wheel or cycle on an average day compared to more than one in four across Europe.

Among IPPR’s recommendations is that the government puts in place a ten-year investment guarantee for walking, wheeling and cycling with a commitment to spend at least £35 per head every year on physical infrastructure.

Current spending levels correspond to £24 per head annually in London between 2016 and 2021, while the rest of England spent only £10 per head.

At the same time, spending on roads amounts to an equivalent of £148 per person per year; over ten times the amount spent on active travel. The report also recommends that spending on active travel should be at least 10% of the total transport budget, instead of the 2% it is currently.

Notes to editors

  1. Cycling UK, the UK’s cycling charity, imagines a world where the streets are free of congestion and the air is clean to breathe, where parents encourage their children to cycle to school and everyone shares the exhilaration of being in the saddle. For more than 140 years, we’ve been making our streets safer, opening up new traffic free routes and inspiring more people to cycle more often. www.cyclinguk.org 
  2. The IPPR’s report Ride and stride: England's path from laggard to leader in walking, wheeling and cycling by Maya Singer Hobbs and Stephen Frost is published Tuesday 6 February. It will be available to read in full here: https://www.ippr.org/articles/stride-and-ride 
  3. Photos of Lawrence Davies available to download: https://www.skyfish.com/p/cyclinguk/2368418 
     

Press contact information

For more information, please contact the national Cycling UK press office www.cyclinguk.org/contact/press-and-media. If you would like to speak to a member of the press office during working hours (0900 - 1700) please email publicity@cyclinguk.org. Out of hours, call 07584 271 300