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The next Industrial Revolution what role for Government

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'sell the dream, live the nightmare?' Mobility system today. Getting a free ride? ... generates value stream through whole-life service package including servicing, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The next Industrial Revolution what role for Government


1
The next Industrial Revolution what role for
Government?
  • Stewart Davies, Business Commissioner
  • 27th November 2007

2
Where Do We Need To Be?
Global emissions will need to be reduced to
less than 5 GTCO2e, over 80 below current annual
emissions (Stern, 2006)
3
Priority product-service systems
4
Next Industrial Revolution
  • Megatrends needed
  • Power generation
  • Industry manufacturing
  • Consumer Choices
  • Buildings
  • Mobility

5
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9
Mobility 2020
  • A rapid shift to low-carbon mobility with
    in-reach technologies

10
Todays personal mobility system is grinding to a
haltsell the dream, live the nightmare?
Mobility system today
11
Getting a free ride?Transport is the only major
sector of the UK economy which plans not to
contribute to CO2 reductions in the first decade
after Stern
Mobility system today
12
Consumers want solutions for their lives that are
affordable, desirable, and sustainable
Oil price races to 100 dollars a barrel
Looking ahead
13
Consensus pathway to low carbon mobility
significant challenges due to locked-in
behaviours and technologies
Looking ahead
14
Car marketing isnt greening the fleet 55 of
advertising spend is on cars emitting over 165 gm
CO2/km
Supermini 753,872
Lower Medium 694,428
Looking ahead
15
Consumer behaviour
  • Travel by car is the default option
  • Journeys more frequent, higher mileage driven
    with low occupancy rates
  • Purchase costs are felt to be the most
    significant outlay, while running costs have
    little impact
  • Early signs of change linked to urban traffic
    schemes and pay as you go services

Mobility system today
16
Product-service mix
  • Individually-owned cars/light vehicle market
    dominates the mobility system
  • Internal combustion engine powered vehicles
    highly engineered for performance and comfort
  • Sector growth is largely in heavier, high
    specification vehicle segments that sustain
    profit margins
  • Finance packages drive business model
    sustaining new vehicle sales
  • Comprehensive fossil fuel distribution network
    locks system into prevailing technologies and
    revenue streams
  • Alternative mobility options are relatively
    expensive, inconvenient, unreliable, often unsafe

Mobility system today
17
Efficiency
  • No reduction in fleet CO2 emissions
  • Fuel supply and materials recovery external to
    the product-service system
  • Grey fleet market is a barrier to improving
    overall efficiency
  • In-reach efficiency-enhancing technologies left
    on the shelf by OEMs
  • Growing urban and motorway congestion offset
    gains in vehicle performance

Mobility system today
18
Mission To create a new market for efficient
cars by 2020 which will help the motor industry
to create value from low-carbon personal mobility
and achieve the transition to low carbon cars in
decades 2-3 A.S.
19
Mobility 2020 roadmap
Emissions from passenger vehicle
20
Mobility 2020 vehicle standard criteriaaim to
reinforce beneficial behaviours of players
drivers/marketers/designers
  • 80g/km running emissions
  • Maximum speed 75mph
  • Maximum power limit, not acceleration
  • Equivalent passenger safety standards
  • Improved pedestrian safety standards
  • Dashboard information on instantaneous fuel
    consumption, CO2 emissions and trip costs
  • Reduced embodied energy of the vehicle
  • Discrete MOT elements required
  • Efficient route planning technology for driver
  • Ability to pick up local speed limit signal
  • Declare metrics on non-functional mass (bolted-on
    extras), rolling resistance (tyre labelling)

Step 1 Define a standard
21
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22
System standard differentiates green from
greenwash
  • Benefits
  • The new product-service system, the related
    standard and accreditation scheme end confusion
    around what is a green car
  • Lays the foundation for a radically different
    marketing conversation consumers are empowered
    to choose a low-carbon personal mobility option
    that works for them
  • Facilitates collaborative problem solving and
    innovation
  • Sets a level playing field for the new generation
    of cars

Step 1 Define a standard
23
New market product-service system transforms
consumer experience of personal mobility and
incentivises switch to Mobility 2020 vehicle
standard
Step 2 Create the platform
24
Full page
Mobility 2020 Web page
  • Plan works on the basis of a lease scheme,
    approaching PAYG motoring
  • Choose the service plan which suits you
    according to your predominant travel
    behaviours/preferred mode of transport
  • Choose your car

25
Launching the platformintegrated mobility
services create new Mobility 2020 market
  • Offers access, use and integration of services
    across mobility modes
  • Empowers consumers to choose more efficient
    patterns of vehicle ownership
  • PAYG convenience offers immediate appeal to
    consumers
  • Aligns players in value-chain with sustainable
    outcomes
  • Stimulates investment in intelligent
    infrastructure
  • Could represent a consumer-based challenge to old
    patterns of behaviour.

Step 2 Create the platform
26
Growth of new Mobility 2020 marketexpands from
core of ready now segments to serve majority
market
27
Business opportunityexpanding the space to
deliver customer value over the life of a product
  • creates a mainstream market for lightweight cars
    enabling the supply chain to compete in a new
    space
  • generates value stream through whole-life service
    package including servicing, maintenance,
    component upgrading, fuel, parking etc
  • employs pay-as-you-go finance systems to minimise
    cost and align with shift away from credit
    culture
  • builds communities around fleet-based services
    (car clubs, lift share etc)

Looking ahead
28
Governments roleGovernment can effect change
through policies and practice, rooted in
awareness of consumer behaviour and collaboration
with business
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