‘Depressing’ new figures reveal urgent funding boost needed for government to achieve cycling targets in England

A woman wearing a red t-shirt pedals uphill on a sunny day in England
Latest statistics show 5% decrease in cycling across England since last year
New statistics published today (Thursday 7 September 2023), show that cycling traffic levels have fallen by 5% since last year
  • Latest statistics show 5% decrease in cycling across England since last year  
  • ​Government’s flawed decision to slash budget for cycling and walking in England risks further decline  
  • To avoid falling even further behind its own targets, Cycling UK urges government to boost funding for walking and cycling in upcoming Autumn Statement  

The findings were published following the UK government's decision to cut dedicated funding for cycling and walking in England by more then two thirds in March 2023, despite lagging behind its modest target of doubling the number of cycling journeys by 2025. 

A recent inquiry by the National Audit Office into active travel in England confirmed Cycling UK’s claims that the government’s investment in active travel fell far short of what was needed to meet the 2025 walking and cycling targets – even before ministers made further cuts in March. 

These statistics should be a wake up call for the government, which has already been told in crystal clear terms by the National Audit Office that it can’t meet its own targets without substantially increasing investment in active travel.  

Duncan Dollimore, head of campaigns at Cycling UK said:  

“These statistics should be wake up call for the government, which has already been told in crystal clear terms by the National Audit Office that it can’t meet its own targets without substantially increasing investment in active travel.  

“Multiple government polices recognise the carbon reduction, public health, air pollution and economic benefits which flow from more people cycling and walking, particularly for short journeys. It’s therefore imperative that the government reflects on these figures, and urgently reverses the cuts in the Autumn Statement.” 

Following the cuts, Cycling UK joined its partners in the Walking and Cycling Alliance and more than 146 other organisations, including Campaign for Better Transport and Asthma + Lung UK, to write to the prime minister highlighting the disproportionate level of cuts to funding for cycling and walking infrastructure. The incompatibility between what the government has promised to deliver, and the investment committed to achieve that was repeated in the National Audit Office report in June, and the government’s response to that report is still awaited.  

The prime minister also recently indicated a U-turn on his own government’s stated support for low traffic neighbourhoods, ironically one of the measures local authorities can implement to enable more people to walk and cycle safely, as they are relatively cheap to introduce, at a time when the government is slashing central funding. So far, over 5000 people have used Cycling UK’s online template to write to the Prime Minister urging him not to backtrack on measures designed to create safer streets and to give people real alternatives to driving short journeys.  

ENDS

Notes to editors

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. National Travel Survey and Active Lives Survey – Walking and cycling statistics 
  3. Figures for March – June inclusive, 2023, are all provisional.
  4. Figures cover cycling picked up by automatic traffic counters, meaning off-road trips aren’t accounted for.

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 call Joanne Clark on 07917 243925 or email publicity@cyclinguk.org. Out of hours, call 07584 271 300.