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PRIVACY
Tech

Siemens º£½ÇÊÓÆµ CEO: Integrated transport could unlock Manchester's industrial revolution

Juergen Maier CBE, Siemens º£½ÇÊÓÆµ CEO, on why an integrated, modern and accessible public transport network is vital for the success of Greater Manchester's industrial revolution

Juergen Maier, Siemens º£½ÇÊÓÆµ CEO

As we edge closer to the 2020’s, Greater Manchester has the potential to be at the heart of a green, sustainable and digital revolution.

A firm target for our city region to become carbon neutral by 2038 is already in place, requiring all parts of our economy to achieve an ambitious 15 per cent cut in emissions year-on-year on average. Industry will play its part. We at Siemens for example will be carbon neutral by 2030.

Greater Manchester already hosts the Made Smarter Pilot, a £20m industry and government programme to support the digitalisation of small manufacturing companies across the North West, aiming for 25 per cent sector growth through tech adoption. This is in addition to a thriving local digital economy which is host to hundreds of new small starts ups already.

With that said, something has been missing for quite some time.

Businesses large and small, their employees and many others have long been calling for an integrated, modern and accessible public transport network for Greater Manchester. And having one is vital if we really are to have a meaningful industrial strategy locally and nationally. Indeed, we can have ambitious green targets matched by a commitment to invest in the latest tech for industry, but it is largely meaningless if we do not have an integrated transport network to underpin these worthwhile goals.

The recent ‘Our Network’ announcements made by the mayor of Greater Manchester regarding the integration of the city-regions transport network should be welcome as an important step towards greening our economy and increasing our local productivity.

(Image: Manchester)

 

The advantages are clear. It brings together different modes of public transport – bus, tram, rail, tram-train – with cycling and walking in an integrated, simple system with seamless connections, simplified ticketing – something that is already enjoyed in many cities. I know this from personal experience as, living in Didsbury, I often end up taking a car into the city, because there isn’t an app to give me the full end-to-end offer and I can’t easily buy one ticket for the whole journey, which might need a tram, train and bus. In London, where this is possible, I would never dream of taking my car for any journey and it is ease of information, booking and payment that makes this the obvious choice.

We already know that intra-city public transport is essential for the local economy, helping the movement of people and goods across a diverse local economy.