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2 Jul 2025

MPs have called on Amazon and eBay to tighten controls after e-bikes and chargers flagged as serious fire risks were found for sale on their platforms.

25 Jun 2025

The E-Bike Positive campaign has seen major success in the first half of 2025, with its message reaching nearly 8 million people across the UK through high-profile media coverage and growing...

20 Jun 2025

The House of Commons Business and Trade Committee has asked the ACT, and its parent company Bira, to help them reach out to small business retailers across the country, for their quick input on...

20 Jun 2025

Activate Cycle Academy has reopened its Cytech training facility in Darlington, offering a full range of courses from Home Mechanic up to Cytech Technical Three.
 

18 Jun 2025

The Association of Cycle Traders believes the time has come for greater accountability throughout our supply chain, writes ACT Director Jonathan Harrison in an article published for BikeBiz.

16 Jun 2025

The ACT has welcomed the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Cycling and Walking's report "Unregulated and Unsafe: The Threat of Illegal E-Bikes", which calls for urgent Government action to...

11 Jun 2025

A new academic study has found that overzealous pro-cycling campaigners on social media may be inadvertently damaging the case for better cycling infrastructure across the UK.

11 Jun 2025

Bira has welcomed the Welsh Government's consultation on business rate reforms for retail shops, whilst calling for significant improvements to ensure the proposals truly support high street...

10 Jun 2025

Bike thefts across England and Wales have continued their steady decline, according to new data released by cycle insurance specialist Bikmo.

9 Jun 2025

Retailers on Britain's high streets are being encouraged to put themselves forward for the first-ever Love Your High Street Awards, designed to celebrate the small businesses that bring...

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‘Shocking lack of progress’: Charity criticises UK government for latest active travel figures.

Posted on in Business News , Cycles News

The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) has criticised the UK government for a “shocking lack of progress in making streets more attractive for walking, wheeling and cycling” following the recent findings of the Active Lives and National Travel surveys.

Traffic calming

Sport England said the Active Lives survey showed a “positive” long-term increase in activity levels, but IPPR disagrees, pointing to several negative trends, including growing inequality. Among them is what the charity has described as “a growing divide in activity levels based on where someone lives”, with most of the positive upward trends confined to prosperous areas, whereas “the number of people considered active in the most deprived areas has dropped by 2.5 per cent in the last seven years”.

The number of people cycling has also plateaued according to the National Travel survey as, despite an increase over the last decade, figures have remained largely similar since 2019. IPPR has also raised concerns about a decrease in cycling participation since the end of the Covid 19 pandemic, citing the Cycling Traffic Index’s findings that there has been a 29% drop in cycling levels between March 2021 and December 2023.

“The National Travel Survey also shows that although the distance travelled by cycling has seen some signs of growth over the decade, the average distance travelled per person by cycling is the same as in 2019,” it said in a recent press release.

“This theme is picked up in the Cycling Traffic Index which highlights that the gains made during Covid-19 in getting people out on their bikes are continuing to fall with levels of cycling dropping by 29 per cent between March 2021 and December 2023. Cycling traffic levels have increased 15.5 per cent over the last decade but they are still far below where they need to be to achieve the government’s targets.”

To rectify what it believes are concerning trends, IPPR has also called on the UK government to invest more heavily to promote safer neighbourhoods and to stop its "political posturing".

The government has faced criticism recently following its self-styled "clampdown" on low traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs), which have been used since the 1970s to promote active forms of travel, such as walking and cycling. The clampdown has led to the government’s revised ‘Plan for Drivers’ which has raised the bar local authorities need to meet to implement new LTNs, although it hasn’t escaped criticism. In the highest-profile example, the Guardian reported allegations that the government had covered up a report that underlined the economic and health benefits of LTNs.

That study has since been officially released and showed a strong public appetite for LTNs, with 45% of the 1,800 people surveyed in support of them. However, the report also highlighted the lack of public knowledge about LTNs, which was one of the reasons cited by the UK government for the changes to the ‘Plan for Drivers’.

“There is a simple message here. Healthy places support healthier lifestyles and provide a host of other benefits to people – including providing a more affordable way of getting around,” IPPR concluded.

“The government need to act to reverse this rise in inequality, stop the political posturing overactive travel policies and put in place the investment to make it attractive and safe for people to be active in their neighbourhoods.”

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