Consultative Workshop - Nairobi, Kenya
- 14 - 15 June 2004
This workshop was hosted by the IFRTD in collaboration
with the Transport and Urban Division of the World Bank's infrastructure
Vice Presidency. Held in Nairobi on the 14 th and 15 th of June
2004, the workshop brought together 22 participants from government
and non-government organisations in 8 different African countries,
complemented by an input from one Asian country, and three contributions
from international organisations based in the African region.
The workshop provided a forum for discussing country policy
priorities with respect to performance monitoring, for sharing
the perspectives of the different regional organisations, and
for highlighting existing institutional arrangements for the
collection and analysis of transport data. It generated some
key messages for institutions working at the regional and global
level on transport indicators, particularly for the World Bank’s
Transport Sector Performance and Monitoring Indicators Initiative
and the Transport Indicators Initiative of the Sub-Saharan Africa
Transport Policy Program.
The workshop showed clearly that countries
have their own priorities and structures for formulating transport
performance indicators that need to be respected. Some countries
welcome the potential to compare and contrast transport sector
performance and there is every likelihood of there being consistent
indicators. However, there was clear agreement that comparisons
between countries should not be the overriding consideration
of a regional or global transport performance initiative. The
value of indicators for developing comprehensive transport sector
approaches, for linking to PRSPs and for mainstreaming social
issues was acknowledged, and the importance of reflecting environmental
issues in transport indicators was highlighted. Other key issues
that need to be considered were the affordability of and accessibility
to transport services, the interdependency of rural-urban contexts,
transport safety issues and corridor development and regional
iintegration issues.
The workshop emphasised that support for building on existing
capacities and enhancing existing institutional arrangements
in the different countries is important. This can strengthen
the reliability of data, and sustainability of data collection
practices. It raised issues of sharing information in the public
domain in a user-friendly way. Participants expressed an interest
in continuing the dialogue on indicators and sharing country
experiences. They made commitments to feedback on the indicators
proposed by the World Bank’s Transport Results Indicators
Initiative and proposed formation of a virtual working group
on Transport Indicators.
The workshop was an effective way of creating linkages between
national, regional and international initiatives on Transport
Indicators. Similar workshops in regions not
represented in Nairobi could expand the scope of the learning
on indicator development and lead to sustained evidence-based
analysis and decision-making in the transport sector.
Click here for the full workshop report:
- Acrobat pdf (391kb)
The Presentations made at the Workshop are available
below:
Transport Results. Indicators for Performance
and Impact by Peter Roberts (World Bank)
Group Work Feedbackby
workshop participants
SSATP Transport Indicator
Initiative by Tsegai Elias
Transport Sector
Performance Indicators (Case Study - Sri Lanka) by D.
S Jayaweera
UN Habitat's Infrastructure Branch,
Programs and Activities in Energy and Transport by Brian
Williams
Linking GUO's Activities
in UN Habitat with Transportation Performance Indicators Development
by Ning Deng
South Africa Case
Study by Laverne Dimitrova, National Department of Transport,
South Africa
Back to Transport
Indicators Main Page