Threads / Self-driving vehicles regulation / Future of Transport Regulatory Review: Call for Evidence
Closed Consultation Published 16 Mar 2020 Department for Energy Security and Net Zero ↗ View on source

Future of Transport Regulatory Review: Call for Evidence

We are analysing your feedback. Visit this page on GOV.UK soon to download the outcome to this public consultation.

Opened 16 Mar 2020
Closed 3 Jul 2020
▤ Verbatim text from source document

Future of Transport Regulatory ReviewCall for Evidence

- Department for Energy Security and Net Zero
- Citizen Space

Skip to Main Content

Future of Transport Regulatory ReviewCall for Evidence

Overview

We are analysing your feedback.

Visit
this page on GOV.UK
soon to download the outcome to this public consultation.

Why your views matter

This call for evidence asks for information and views on three areas of the Future of Transport Regulatory Review, as well as on three wider issues:

Micromobility vehicles

Flexible bus services

Mobility as a Service (MaaS)

Ensuring inclusive future transport

Enabling trials of new modes

Local leadership of new transport services

Privacy Notice

The Future of Transport programme is a joint programme across the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) and the Department for Transport (DfT). The Future of Transport Regulatory Review Call for Evidence is being managed by DfT, but this online survey is hosted by BEIS, who is the data controller for this online survey. Delib provides the CitizenSpace platform to BEIS under agreement but not to DfT.

Data from this online survey will be processed in accordance with the
BEIS Personal Information Charter
. For more detailed information about how your data may be processed and shared with other Government departments, including DfT, please see the following Privacy Notices within the charter: "
BEIS Consultations
" and "
Responding to an online consultation (CitizenSpace)
".

If you have any concerns or questions about the use of your data submitted via this online survey specifically, contact the BEIS Data Protection Officer at
dataprotection@beis.gov.uk
.

If you would like to respond by email to the call for evidence, please email
futureoftransport@dft.gov.uk
. Personal information included in responses sent directly to DfT will be processed in accordance with the
DfT Personal Information Charter
.

What happens next

A summary of responses will be published within three months of the call for evidence ending. These responses will complement evidence gathered from the real-world experiences of the Future Transport Zones, and other work on the Future of Transport, to inform our work on this Regulatory Review. Substantive proposals for legislative reform are likely to form part of this.

Closed
3 Jul 2020

Opened
16 Mar 2020

Contact

For general enquiries about the Call for Evidence:

0300 330 3000

futureoftransport@dft.gov.uk

Related

Future of Transport Regulatory ReviewCall for Evidence

688.5 KB (PDF document)

Future of MobilityUrban Strategy

3.3 MB (PDF document)

Audiences

Black and ethnic minority groups

Central government

Charities

Charities and Third Sector organisations

Charity or social enterprise

Civil Society Organisations

Consumer organisations

Consumers

Consumers

Disability groups

General public

Individual

Large businesses (over 250 staff)

LGBT groups

Local government

Low carbon technologies

Medium business (50 to 250 staff)

Micro business (up to 9 staff)

Non-departmental public bodies

Non-Government Organisations

Older people

Regulator

Research Councils

Research Funders

Science Policy organisations and thinktanks

Small business (10 to 49 staff)

SMEs (small and medium businesses)

Students

Technology (R&D)

The Devolved Administrations

Trade bodies

Universities

Younger people

Interests

Business investment

Carbon budgets

Carbon markets

Carbon offsetting

Climate change

Competitiveness

Consumer rights

Economic growth

Emissions

Energy and climate change

Energy and climate change

Growth

Industrial strategy

Innovation

Regulation

Regulation and red tape

Research

Science and society

Starting a business

Share

Share on Twitter

Share on Facebook