
FOR A SUSTAINABLE
TRANSITION
PROFITABLE
TO ALL
The mobility revolution is very closely connected to that for energy, if we are to achieve the multiple objectives set at the COPs.
The energy issue has to be seen as an evolution and an inevitable big step forward. That said, it has to be supported by a period of reasoned transition, adapted to and supported by technological progress.
In the field of mobility, today's investments in infrastructure for associated vehicles will continue to serve their purpose for decades to come.
Challenges and opportunities
Our actions must therefore assume a medium- to long-term perspective, taking on board the synergies between the various fields of activity, whether for mobility or for industry in general.
By opting for technological solutions that are as transposable and as adaptable as possible, and by pooling fields of application. Also, by ensuring that energy hubs harmoniously cover territories on every scale, whether private or public. For longdistance transportation, the energy solutions chosen, restricted by price rises and geostrategic and political orientations, must be as global and as universal as possible.
On the scale of a single European country, the needs expressed at city level for last-mile delivery must find a coherent response with the long-distance transportation of goods, links in a global logistics chain that must be cost-effective, all the while seeking energy efficiency and sobriety in the control of greenhouse gases and environmental impacts in general.
IN PRACTICE
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