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Transport is a key contributor to economic growth, prosperity and to societal well-being. Physical links across Asia and the Pacific have increasingly improved through years of steady investments in the Asian Highway, a project endorsed by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UN ESCAP) commission at its 48th session in 1992 to promote inter-governmental agreements to develop a regional highway network, and the Trans-Asian Railways, as well as through the facilitation of land transport projects. These intertwined projects have resulted in a network of 140,000 kilometres of roads being developed in 32 countries, which, in turn, has enabled better connectivity within Asia as well as between Asia and Europe, and contributed to the development of other related infrastructure.
Further deepening Asian transport connectivity, however, requires that we consider some additional imperatives. For instance, we must ensure that regional connectivity is seamless and promotes multimodal connectivity to allow for the most cost-effective and time-efficient delivery of goods from one point to another. To this end, some important regional initiatives such as the Master Plan on ASEAN Connectivity, China's "One Belt, One Road" initiative, and the Eurasian Economic Union, provide strategic visions that will help forge broader regional and international transportation connectivity in our region. Moving forward, these initiatives must develop missing corridors and link Asia better with internal and outside markets in order to better promote seamless connectivity. Beyond this, we as a region must also develop a better understanding of how to harmonise these plans with the principles of sustainable development.
To promote regional transport sector development that is in sync with and reinforces the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, we must focus our efforts on three areas.
First, we must urgently curb the transport sector's contribution to the Asia-Pacific region's GHG emissions. Asia's motorised transport emissions are responsible for 23 percent of global aggregate emissions and are set to rise to 31 percent by 2030. If no action is taken transport will become the single largest emitter of GHGs, responsible for 46 percent of the share of global emissions by 2035. Success in meeting the global climate change targets laid out in the Paris Agreement will require both reducing transport emissions and strengthening the resilience of transport infrastructure to the effects of climate change.
Second, tackling traffic congestion in our cities will help us unlock bottlenecks to economic growth by speeding up transportation and reducing costs associated with the movement of goods. To illustrate the heavy effects of such bottlenecks, traffic congestion in Bangkok, where the UN ESCAP is headquartered, costs roughly 6 percent of Thailand's annual GDP.
Third, sustainability of transport calls for a careful response to the public health dimension of transport. Road accidents continue to be one of the leading causes of fatalities in our economies, killing over 700,000 people annually in the Asia-Pacific and injuring many more. The economic costs of road accidents are estimated to be 3 percent of global GDP. Asia-Pacific's low and middle-income countries are shouldering road accident costs as high as 5 percent of GDP, which in many cases is greater than the total value of their overseas development assistance.
Recognising these needs and challenges, the UN ESCAP, with the support from the government of the Russian Federation, is organising a Ministerial Conference on Transport in Moscow from 5th to 9th December 2016 to provide an opportunity to our member states to develop a new five-year regional action programme for sustainable transport. At its core, the regional action programme will promote integrated intermodal transport systems to balance, link and co-ordinate the varied modes of transport such as roads, railways, maritime and aviation, in order to achieve optimum economic, social and environmental performance.
This programme will facilitate greater intra-regional investment and trade in the region and will also guide the transport sector to significantly cut greenhouse gas emissions by optimising resources, improving transport modal choices and increasing efficiencies. Through enhancing road safety, advocacy, policy, legislation, infrastructure facilities and cross-border operations this programme will enable remote and poor rural communities better access to markets, investment, health, education and social needs. The programme will also enable countries of the region to be better equipped to develop and implement evidence-based policies and plans to address urban transport challenges in order to underpin future economic growth.
Implementing this new regional action programme will be a challenging, but ultimately critical task if we are to realise the ambitions of the 2030 Agenda. ESCAP, as the regional arm of the United Nations in the Asia-Pacific, will support countries of the region to take the visionary steps and work together in order to ensure the contribution of the transport sector to sustainable development.
(The writer is the Executive Secretary of the United Nations (UN) Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). She will be speaking about Asia's new energy realities and the implications for regional energy security at the Singapore International Energy Week (SIEW) 2016)

Copyright Business Recorder, 2016

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