Environmental Transport Association

The Environmental Transport Association (ETA) is a British carbon-neutral provider of vehicle breakdown, bicycle and travel insurance for the environmentally concerned consumer. Unlike the AA or the RAC which are perceived as pro-car, the ETA aims to raise awareness of the impact that transport has on the environment and help individuals and organisations to make positive changes in their travel habits. They offer breakdown and road rescue for cyclists and mobility scooter users as well as motorists.[1]

In 2015, the ETA was voted Britain's most ethical insurance company by the Good Shopping Guide.[2]

Promotional vehicles

The ETA has built a number of unusual vehicles over recent years to promote sustainable transport as well as its own insurance products, two of which gained Guinness World Records. The Guinness World Record for QTvan is a tiny caravan designed to towed behind a bicycle or mobility scooter and is officially recognised as the world's smallest caravan.[3] The Hornster was designed and built as a way of highlighting the danger posed to cyclists by lorries in urban areas. The bike is fitted with the air horn from a freight train, which is powered by a SCUBA diving cylinder, and has been judged by Guinness World Records to be the world's loudest bicycle horn.[4] The BOND bike was built by the ETA is response to the frustrations faced by urban cyclists; it features a handlebar-mounted flamethrower to dissuade motorists from overtaking too close, a caterpillar track to negotiate potholes and an ejector seat to deal with bike thieves.

History

The ETA was founded in 1990 and became carbon neutral in 2002. It conducts and commissions research into environmental transport issues. It actively lobbies government and key-decision makers to discuss new thinking in environmental transport. They claim to be the world's first climate-neutral motoring organisation. The ETA was a founder member of Transport and the Environment promoting sustainable transport in Europe; which means an approach to transport that is environmentally responsible, economically sound and socially just.

1992 - Green Transport Week is launched in Weybridge.

1993 - The ETA publishes Britain's first Car Buyers' Guide for people wanting to buy greener vehicles.

1995 - Sets up Walk to School Day in Hertfordshire as part of Green Transport Week. 1995 - Sets up a charitable trust.

1997 - The ETA inaugurated the world's first national Car Free Day as part of Green Transport Week which is now held on 22 September every year. In 2014 Car Free Days were held in Beijing, Moscow and Washington.

1998 - Founder member of the Slower Speeds Initiative.

1997 - Began the "20's Plenty" campaign for urban streets and rural lanes. Via the 20's Plenty for Us organisation - partially funded by the ETA an estimated 13 million people will be living on streets at 20 mph within the year.

2002 - The ETA Trust, a charity become limit by guarantee.

2008 - ETA Services Ltd, the services arm, and ETA Trust, the campaigning arm separate. ETA Services funds the ETA Trust through a proportion of its revenue.

2012 - Began the Pop-up zebra crossing campaign [5]

2014 - Established the "Back on a Bike" campaign [6]

2015 - Voted Britain's most ethical insurance company by the Good Shopping Guide [7]

gollark: You could use 5 bits to signal with only a 1/32 chance of a mistake, but then you just waste 1/20 of the round doing suboptimal things.
gollark: However, [REDACTED] apiomemetic protocols.
gollark: Rounds are 100 iterations and you get 1 bit an iteration, I don't think in-band signalling is very practical.
gollark: Dilemmous implementational time!
gollark: Okay, it "works", sending to repo...

References

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