Renewable Mobility Corridors Economic Viability, Carbon Finance, and the Role of Distributed Infrastructure
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Abstract
The emergence of renewable mobility corridors represents a fundamental shift in how societies conceptualize the intersection of transportation, energy autonomy, and climate resilience. This study presents an original analytical framework that positions these corridors as transformative infrastructures capable of advancing environmental goals while simultaneously supporting social equity and economic diversification. Drawing inspiration from contemporary discussions on sustainable mobility and decentralised renewable systems, the research explores how solar-powered charging architectures, off-grid energy storage, and clean-transport networks can collectively reduce carbon dependency across regional and national transportation landscapes. The abstract outlines how renewable mobility corridors operate as dynamic systems that integrate technological innovation, policy coherence, and community participation. Their development fosters greener transportation choices, strengthens localized economies, and enhances access to clean energy, particularly in underserved regions. By adopting an interdisciplinary approach that weaves together energy studies, mobility planning, environmental policy, and social development theory, this study proposes a comprehensive model that situates renewable mobility corridors at the forefront of sustainable transformation. The findings suggest that such corridors provide scalable, adaptable, and future-ready solutions capable of reshaping mobility systems in alignment with long-term climate and development imperatives.
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References
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