Thoughts, insights and rants about futures, climate change, system change, transport, wicked problems, EDI, and heavy metal

By Professor Glenn Lyons

.

  • Ideas for the Integrated National Transport Strategy

    Ideas for the Integrated National Transport Strategy

    💡Dear Department for Transport (DfT), United Kingdom, here are some ideas that you called for for your new Integrated National Transport Strategy for England. Would love to discuss! I’ve indulged myself today looking in detail at the DfT’s call for ideas and preparing in turn my thoughts. The extended article below is in three sections Read more

  • The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy as an antidote to maga-madness

    The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy as an antidote to maga-madness

    As self-parody consumes inept billionnaires playing games with society, and as I read about the horrors of colonialism, my brain has found solace in the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. I’m reading Amitav Ghosh’s book ‘The Nutmeg’s Curse’ (Parables for a Planet in Crisis) at the moment. In talking of the War of the Worlds Read more

  • The darkest of days

    The darkest of days

    I know I won’t be the only person feeling physically sick this morning. How many of us will have a day today where we feel we are going through the motions, rearranging the deckchairs? As I’ve got older I’ve come to realise how complicated the world is. My privileged upbringing protected me from the dark Read more

  • Concern for self versus concern for others

    Concern for self versus concern for others

    Controversial! Have you thought about the balance between your concern for yourself and your concern for others when it comes to behaviours affecting climate change? At the first Chartered Institution of Highways & Transportation (CIHT) CLIMATES workshop, a participant who I greatly respect introduced me to the simple notion of concern for self versus concern Read more

  • Question Sixty Nine

    Question Sixty Nine

    Does ’69’ have meaning for you? I’m not talking about the sexual connotations. I’m talking about what is now lovingly referred to by those of us in the world of ‘decide and provide’ planning as Question Sixty Nine. The National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) was published in 2012 and has seen revisions and updates in Read more

  • In-group and out-group thinking to interpret white male privilege

    In-group and out-group thinking to interpret white male privilege

    A good friend of mine pointed me to social identity theory. In a nutshell if you belong to the in-group you begin to favour it and become hostile toward the out-group and feel superior to the out-group. Self-esteem and status increase due to belonging to the ‘superior’ in-group. This helps explain prejudice against out-groups (thanks Read more

  • We are in the danger zone

    We are in the danger zone

    Have you got 74 minutes to look at what’s behind the curtain? To see what the science has to show us? To look beyond the crap we are fed for the most part in our daily lives? If you have, and like me hadn’t seen it before, watch this documentary if you can – ‘Breaking Read more

  • The aviation game

    The aviation game

    Juxtaposition. This lunchtime I was hit by two news items – Just Stop Oil targeting Heathrow Airport this morning, and the first big carrier to drop its climate goal. Why not play this game yourself? Find nine news items on a topic that has lots of question marks around it. One can imagine two world Read more

  • Emissions from aviation – bunker or bunkum?

    Emissions from aviation – bunker or bunkum?

    Bunkers or bunkum? Once upon a time there was a flight of fancy that aviation only accounted for 1% of UK transport emissions. Then international aviation was included and this increased to 20%. New ‘bottom-up’ research suggests the figure is more like 60%. What the hell is going on? Academic colleagues Zia Wadud, Adeel Muhammad Read more

  • TAP-SWOT in a BOX – paper published

    TAP-SWOT in a BOX – paper published

    Remember TAP-SWOT in a Box? We are pleased to let you know that a paper on this serious game methodology for socialising Triple Access Planning has now been published. Triple Access Planning (TAP) sits in the ‘decide and provide’ paradigm. It is vision-led, access-focused and accommodates uncertainty. It is contrasted with (some) traditional transport planning Read more

  • Roger Hallam and colleagues sentenced to prison

    Roger Hallam and colleagues sentenced to prison

    I woke this morning at 5am and the first thing I did was read this 12-minute account from Roger Hallam about his trial and conviction. It is harrowing and shocking. In a british court. In 2024. Please spare a few minutes to read it. “I outlined four characteristics of the effects of emitting greenhouse gases Read more

  • Transport planning history in the making

    Transport planning history in the making

    It was my great honour to be part of transport planning history yesterday. The first ever cohort of transport planning degree apprentices graduated from Aston University after their five-year journey on a course that Lucy Rackliff had the vision to establish back in 2019. Huge congratulations to the graduates: Andrew Carter MCIHT EngTech, Thomas Emery, Read more


  • Digital Genocide

    I have been an academic throughout my career. I am shaken to the core by what I have just read. A researcher in the US federal system has just had an opinion piece published in the BMJ (one of the world’s oldest general medical journals – formerly called the British Medical Journal). It has been…


  • It’s like being forced to watch the second series of a poorly produced Netflix drama. I had a look on Google Maps and it currently says ‘Gulf of Mexico (Gulf of America)’. I found the meme below on Bluesky. And the four-year period is barely underway. Today is a day of love. Whatever your gender…


  • This is a ‘pick ‘n’ mix’ of some of the things I’ve been reminded of and explored with bright minds over the last two days in London. They might not all take your fancy, but one or two might be really tasty. 1. Don’t let yourself get stressed over things you can’t control (which can…


  • You may be fixating in the news at the moment on other things – and monstrous things are indeed at play – but here’s a reminder that climate change isn’t going away. And it’s not caused by DEI. During the CIHT CLIMATES initiative we’ve repeatedly prepared a slide called ‘In the news over the last…


  • I’ve just watched Avatar. It hit me hard between the eyes compared to the last time I’d watched it. Having just read a book on colonialism I now appreciate its purpose as an allegory (a story with hidden meaning). Greedy humans – corporate and military together – have found a beautiful planet years in stasis…