-

Conspiracy or Cockup? Reports without date of publication
Conspiracy or Cockup? Why do so many reports get published with no clear indication of their date of publication? Is it incompetence on the part of the report authors or a deliberate attempt to make their work appear timelessly contemporary? It’s not big and it’s not clever. Stop doing it and put the publication date Read more
-

Inclusive transport? You’re ‘avin’ a larf mate
Guess why I got to relieve my bladder at Waterloo straight away rather than queueing like I was at Thorpe Park? Inclusive transport? You’re having a larf mate. #transportplanning#edi#inclusivedesign#invisiblewomen Read more
-

Hybrid conferences are more inclusive
Hybrid conferences are more inclusive – get with the programme as our professional institutions did for the Wales National Transport Conference earlier this month. As the CIHT speaker, I presented on ‘From halcyon days to a brave new world’ in relation to the changing landscape for road investment in the context of a climate and Read more
-

The motivations and meaning behind climate action
If you are truly prepared to open your mind and read the following account with care, attention and reflection, I believe it will pull at your heart strings and wrench at your soul. You will come to understand why ‘love and gratitude’ and ‘love and rage’ sit at the heart of Just Stop Oil and Extinction Rebellion. We Read more
-

Decarbonising towards a more equitable future
Fancy that – transport planning day coinciding with a slew of long-term decisions for a brighter future (well, the UK Government’s cabinet was ‘refreshed’ anyway). I had the privilege of speaking at the Transport Planning Society‘s event in London, addressing the exam question “Fair shares – how equitable is the current transport system and would Read more
-

False precision drives me nuts!
False precision drives me nuts and it may have a lot to answer for in the transport sector and the forecast-led paradigm that just wont seem to go away. It was cathartic to be given the chance by Dom Browne, Editor of Highways Magazine, to write the viewpoint article below for this month’s edition. You Read more
-

The Pentagram of Influence – again
Two posts in one day – not sure the Al Gore Rhythm will like that. Here is the Pentagram of Influence, following its warm reception yesterday at the Wales National Transport Conference in Cardiff. I originally posted about it back in July (https://lnkd.in/e9mDriqy). I hope it can be of use to people as framework for Read more
-

Road investment in Wales – from halcyon days to a brave new world
Will the herculean efforts of Lee Waters MS and colleagues in Wales help with the sisyphean task of effecting substantial positive change in the transport sector? It was a great honour to be the Chartered Institution of Highways & Transportation (CIHT) speaker at today’s Wales National Transport Conference in Cardiff – jointly organised by the Read more
-

Hell awaits
In today’s episode of What The Hell Is Going On we hear from UK ministers and the UN Secretary General. Antonio Guterres, UN Secretary General (20 September): Humanity has “opened gates to hell” by letting climate crisis worsen Mark Harper, UK Secretary of State for Transport (2 October): “There’s nothing wrong with driving”, “We can Read more
-

Free Your Mind – The Matrix meets Levelling Up
The Matrix meets levelling up in Manchester as Danny Boyle’s ‘Free Your Mind’ is the show to mark the opening of Aviva Studios – the £242m new home of Factory International. It’s the biggest capital investment in live arts since the Sydney Opera House. Frankly Rishi Sunak and Elon Musk in London can keep their Read more
-
The epitome of not judging a book by it’s cover; or having a strong hunch that the cover spells trouble? Or sensing a wolf in sheep’s clothing? The word ‘prejudice’ conveys ‘pre-judging’. Here’s an example. My eldest daughter said to me ‘maybe people will listen more if you wear an office shirt and suit jacket…
-
Am I alone in finding myself at least once a day, sometimes several times, asking myself ‘What the hell is going on?’. The closer I look the more I have to squint to try and make sense of what I’m seeing, to the point that it it all blurs. This place has been a good…
-
The humble nutmeg precipitated a colonial atrocity in the 1600s. A massacre that forms part of the dirty rapacious history of appropriating nature as a resource for exploitation that bred capitalism and modernity and trampled over indigenous peoples. I’ve just finished reading Amitav Ghosh’s ‘The Nutmeg’s Curse – Parables for a Planet in Crisis’. It’s…
-
This is a personal post in an awful week. Today my contribution to Local Transport Today’s 2025 ‘deep thinking’ initiative is published. I’m sorry to say fellow transport planners that it is a sobering take on our problems or predicament. It’s called ‘Looking for the light in a dark age’. When I started my transport…


