PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Metros cut car use in European cities, but trams fall short

People drive significantly less in European cities with a metro system than in cities that only have trams or no rail-based public transport at all. This is shown by a new study from the Complexity Science Hub (CSH), published in Nature Cities.

2025-11-07
(Press-News.org) [Vienna, 07.11.2025]—For his analysis, CSH researcher Rafael Prieto-Curiel examined mobility data from around 400 European cities. These data capture how daily commutes are distributed across three categories: active mobility (walking and cycling), public transport (metro, tram, bus), and (car, taxi, motorcycle, ride-hailing).

“I looked at 47 cities with a metro, 46 cities with a tram but no metro, and 285 cities without both,” explains Prieto-Curiel. The data come from a larger dataset he built for earlier work, available through the interactive visualization Cities Moving.

Share of Car Trips: 37% Versus 50%

In cities with a metro, the average share of car trips is 37%, compared to 50% in cities with trams only and 54% in cities without rail systems. “This means that, on average, people in cities without a metro make almost one and a half times as many car trips per capita as those in cities with a metro,” says Prieto-Curiel.

At the same time, residents of metro cities use public transport far more often (35%) than those in tram cities (21%) or cities without rail (16%).

The figures are weighted according to the population size of each city – “larger cities have a greater influence on the average because more people are on the move there,” Prieto-Curiel explains.

Larger Cities, Larger Effect

According to the study, the difference in mobility behavior grows with city size: In large cities with more than 750,000 inhabitants, the share of car commutes reaches 63% if there is no metro, regardless of whether a tram network exists. Meanwhile, the share of car trips in metro cities remains nearly unchanged at 36%. In other words: In cities with a metro, public transport use stays relatively stable as cities grow. In cities with only a tram, however, it declines as populations increase.

“There are naturally city-level deviations from this average,” Prieto-Curiel notes. “For example, Utrecht (Netherlands), Szeged (Hungary), and Bern (Switzerland) all lack metro systems but still have car shares of only around 20% thanks to high levels of active mobility. Conversely, Rome (Italy), despite having a metro, or Toulouse (France) with over 60%, both show relatively high car shares.”

“On average, however, there is a noticeable effect: Suppose a city has one million inhabitants. According to the calculations, about 370 million car trips per year occur if there is a metro. In a city of the same size with a tram but no metro, that number rises to 700 million, so almost twice as many.”

Small Changes With Big Impact: The Example of Vienna

Even small changes can have major effects, says Prieto-Curiel: “In Vienna, for instance, reducing the daily share of car trips from 27% to 26% would mean almost 4% fewer car journeys – saving roughly six million trips per year.”

Trams: Historical Development and Current Role

Trams experienced their golden age in the 1930s, when about 900 cities worldwide operated networks. As private car ownership grew, however, many systems were dismantled: by the mid-20th century, nearly two-thirds had disappeared, and by the early 1990s only fewer than 300 cities still had trams.

In recent decades, trams have been making a comeback. By 2020, a little over 400 cities had trams, serving an estimated 14.7 billion passengers annually. Europe is the global stronghold of this mode of transport, accounting for nearly 60% of total network length and around 75% of all passengers.

Metros, by contrast, were operating in just over 190 cities worldwide in 2020 – but carried 58.3 billion passengers, roughly four times more than trams.

“Choosing the best means of transport is a central challenge for cities,” Prieto-Curiel says. Metros can move many people quickly across long distances – but are expensive and therefore found in fewer places. Trams are often seen as a more affordable alternative.

“But when it comes to reducing car traffic, the study clearly shows that public transport systems differ greatly in their effectiveness,” he explains. Because trams are typically slower and have lower capacity than metros, they do not reduce car use to the same extent, according to Prieto-Curiel.

Global Relevance: Sustainable Urban Mobility

Cities worldwide are increasingly promoting active mobility and public transport to reduce car dependency and its many negative consequences – such as noise, air pollution, land sealing, traffic congestion, and health burdens.

“The study clearly shows that high-capacity public transport is a key driver of sustainable urban mobility. Even a small reduction in car use can generate significant collective benefits,” says Prieto-Curiel.

While trams are often seen as a cost-effective alternative to metro systems, the study shows that metro networks measurably reduce car traffic, whereas this effect cannot be observed for trams.

About the Study

The study “Metros reduce car use in European cities but trams do not” by R. Prieto-Curiel was published in Nature Cities (doi: 10.1038/s44284-025-00342-7).

About CSH

The Complexity Science Hub (CSH) is Europe’s research center for the study of complex systems. We derive meaning from data from a range of disciplines – economics, medicine, ecology, and the social sciences – as a basis for actionable solutions for a better world. CSH members are Austrian Institute of Technology (AIT), BOKU University, Central European University (CEU), Graz University of Technology, Interdisciplinary Transformation University Austria (IT:U), Medical University of Vienna, TU Wien, University of Continuing Education Krems, Vetmeduni Vienna, Vienna University of Economics and Business, and Austrian Economic Chambers (WKO).

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Antarctic ice melt triggers further melting: Evidence for cascading feedbacks 9,000 years ago

2025-11-07
A recent study published in Nature Geoscience has revealed that the substantial retreat of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS) approximately 9,000 years ago was driven by a self-reinforcing feedback loop between ice melt and ocean circulation. The research team, led by Professor Yusuke Suganuma from the National Institute of Polar Research (NIPR) and the Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI), found that the inflow of warm deep water into coastal East Antarctica caused the collapse of ice shelves, which in turn accelerated inland ice loss. The discovery indicates that Antarctic ice ...

Colorectal cancer evades immunotherapy using a dual barrier

2025-11-07
Barcelona, 7 November 2025 - Colorectal cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer death worldwide. In recent years, immunotherapies—treatments that reactivate the immune system to attack tumour cells—have transformed the treatment of many types of cancer. However, most patients with metastatic colorectal cancer do not respond to these treatments. A study led by Drs. Eduard Batlle and Alejandro Prados (both from IRB Barcelona and members of CIBERONC), together with Dr. Holger Heyn, from CNAG, sheds light on the mechanisms that limit the efficacy of these treatments and suggests strategies to ...

MIT research finds particles that enhance mRNA delivery could reduce vaccine dosage and costs

2025-11-07
CAMBRIDGE, MA - A new delivery particle developed at MIT could make mRNA vaccines more effective and potentially lower the cost per vaccine dose. In studies in mice, the researchers showed that an mRNA influenza vaccine delivered with their new lipid nanoparticle could generate the same immune response as mRNA delivered by nanoparticles made with FDA-approved materials, but at around 1/100 the dose.  “One of the challenges with mRNA vaccines is the cost,” says Daniel Anderson, a professor in MIT’s Department of Chemical Engineering and a member of MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research ...

Enhancing ocean wind observation accuracy: New rain correction approach for FY-3E WindRAD

2025-11-07
Satellite scatterometers play a crucial role in monitoring ocean surface winds, with their accuracy directly impacting weather forecasting and climate research. However, rainfall has consistently challenged precise wind measurements, as Ku-band radar signals are much affected by rain clouds.   A recent collaborative study involving researchers from the China Meteorological Administration, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute has led to the development of an innovative rain conceptual model using dual-frequency measurements from the WindRAD instrument aboard China’s FengYun-3E (FY-3E) ...

New immobilization strategy enables reliable surface plasmon resonance analysis of membrane proteins

2025-11-07
In a recent study published in Analytical Chemistry, a research team led by WANG Junfeng from the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has developed a novel immobilization method for surface plasmon resonance (SPR) assays of membrane proteins, effectively addressing major technical constraints in the field. Membrane proteins make up about one-third of human proteins and nearly 60% of drug targets, playing key roles in signaling and transport. Accurately measuring their interactions with ligands is vital for understanding function and drug development. Surface plasmon resonance (SPR), a gold-standard, label-free technique allows real-time ...

Single organic molecule triggers Kondo effect in molecular-scale “Kondo box”

2025-11-07
Recently, a research group led by Prof. LI Xiangyang from the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, have made a new discovery: a single organic molecule can induce the Kondo effect in a magnetic atom, challenging the long-standing belief that this quantum phenomenon requires a vast sea of metallic electrons. The research results were published in Physical Review Letters. The Kondo effect, is a quantum many-body phenomenon where conduction electrons in a metal collectively screen the magnetic moment of a localized impurity atom. It has been helping to explain strongly correlated ...

Drug toxicity predicted by differences between preclinical models and humans

2025-11-07
In the UK, there was a case where TGN1412, an immunotherapy under development, triggered a cytokine storm within hours of administration to humans, leading to multiple organ failure. Another example, Aptiganel, a stroke drug candidate, was also highly effective in animals but was discontinued in humans due to side effects such as hallucinations and sedation. Even though drugs considered safe in preclinical tests can be fatal in human clinical trials. A machine-learning-based technology has been developed to learn these differences and preemptively identify potentially dangerous drugs before clinical trials.   A ...

Behind the numbers: The growing mental health crisis among international students in America

2025-11-07
Despite international students in U.S. higher education facing significant mental health challenges, national patterns of anxiety, depression, suicidal ideation, and mental health service use among this group remain poorly understood. To address the gap, a recent study published in General Psychiatry explored national trends in clinically significant mental health issues, along with corresponding mental health service use among international students at higher education institutions from 2015 to 2024.   This study looked at data from 44,560 international students, collected each year between 2015 and 2024. The information came ...

Radiative coupled evaporation cooling hydrogel for above‑ambient heat dissipation and flame retardancy

2025-11-07
As outdoor electronic devices face increasing heat loads and fire safety risks, traditional cooling methods like fans and air conditioners fall short in energy efficiency and environmental sustainability. Now, researchers from Central South University and Brown University, led by Professor Meijie Chen, have developed a breakthrough all-in-one photonic hydrogel that combines radiative cooling (RC) and evaporative cooling (EC) for above-ambient heat dissipation and enhanced flame retardancy. Why This Hydrogel Matters Dual-Mode Cooling: Integrates RC and EC into a single material, achieving 12.0°C lower temperatures than RC films under high solar loads. Passive Water Cycle: Uses ...

Constructing double heterojunctions on 1T/2H‑MoS2@Co3S4 electrocatalysts for regulating Li2O2 formation in lithium‑oxygen batteries

2025-11-07
As the demand for high-energy-density storage systems grows, lithium–oxygen batteries (LOBs) have emerged as promising candidates for next-generation power sources. However, challenges such as poor cycle life, high overpotentials, and sluggish redox kinetics hinder their practical application. Now, researchers from Shandong University, led by Prof. Jun Wang and Prof. Lanling Zhao, have developed a novel electrocatalyst—1T/2H-Mo S2@Co3S4—featuring double heterojunctions that significantly enhance ORR/OER performance and cycling ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Metros cut car use in European cities, but trams fall short

Antarctic ice melt triggers further melting: Evidence for cascading feedbacks 9,000 years ago

Colorectal cancer evades immunotherapy using a dual barrier

MIT research finds particles that enhance mRNA delivery could reduce vaccine dosage and costs

Enhancing ocean wind observation accuracy: New rain correction approach for FY-3E WindRAD

New immobilization strategy enables reliable surface plasmon resonance analysis of membrane proteins

Single organic molecule triggers Kondo effect in molecular-scale “Kondo box”

Drug toxicity predicted by differences between preclinical models and humans

Behind the numbers: The growing mental health crisis among international students in America

Radiative coupled evaporation cooling hydrogel for above‑ambient heat dissipation and flame retardancy

Constructing double heterojunctions on 1T/2H‑MoS2@Co3S4 electrocatalysts for regulating Li2O2 formation in lithium‑oxygen batteries

Massively parallel implementation of nonlinear functions using an optical processor

Electrohydrodynamics pump and machine learning enable portable, high-performance excimer laser

UniSA leads national pilot to improve medication safety in aged care

Engineered biochar emerges as a powerful, affordable tool to combat water pollution

City of Hope appoints leading lung cancer expert Dr. Christine M. Lovly to head national thoracic oncology program

Green space to fewer hospitalizations for mental health

Supervised exercise improves strength and physical performance in patients with advanced breast cancer

NIH award to explore improved delivery systems for school-based substance use prevention and treatment programs

Woodpeckers grunt like tennis stars when drilling

International research team awarded €10 million ERC Synergy Grant to revolutionize drug delivery

Research Spotlight: State-of-the-art 7 Tesla MRI reveals how the human brain anticipates and regulates the body’s needs

Rice and Houston Methodist researchers to study brain-implant interface with Dunn Foundation award

OU biochemists lead global hunt for new antibiotics

October research news from the Ecological Society of America

Kinase atlas uncovers hidden layers of cell signaling regulation

Texas Tech scientists develop novel acceleration technique for crop creation

Worcester Polytechnic Institute to lead $5.2 million state-funded effort to build Central Massachusetts BioHub

China commands 47% of remote sensing research, while U.S. produces just 9%, NYU Tandon study reveals

Grocery store records reveal London food deserts

[Press-News.org] Metros cut car use in European cities, but trams fall short
People drive significantly less in European cities with a metro system than in cities that only have trams or no rail-based public transport at all. This is shown by a new study from the Complexity Science Hub (CSH), published in Nature Cities.