Under the theme 'Move better' it gathered over 200 exhibitors and 240 speakers
Tomorrow.Mobility closes its 2025 edition speeding up to a more sustainable urban mobility
The fifth edition of Tomorrow.Mobility World Congress (TMWC) closes its doors today after three days focused on accelerating the transition to new, more sustainable urban mobility paradigms. Co-organised by Fira de Barcelona and EIT Urban Mobility, an initiative of the European Institute of Innovation and Technology, a body of the European Union, the event brought together more than 200 speakers and 240 exhibitors.
Under the slogan ‘Move Better’, this featured more than 50 conference sessions focusing on topics such as the deployment of new multimodal mobility systems, autonomous transportation or improving the quality of public transport systems.
“Cities are leading the mobility transformation,” said Marc Rozendal, CEO of EIT Urban Mobility and President of TMWC. “This year’s congress highlights that sustainable mobility drives both environmental progress and economic growth. With a focus on public transport, shared and active mobility, advanced technologies like autonomous vehicles, and behavioural change, we reaffirm Europe’s commitment to climate neutrality and resilient, connected cities.”
Speakers at TMWC 2025 included David Zipper, Senior Fellow at the MIT Mobility Initiative; Jari Kauppila, Head of the Office of the Secretary-General at the International Transport Forum (ITF); Pierfrancesco Maran, Member of the European Parliament; Arianna Censi, Deputy Mayor for Mobility of Milan (Italy); and Claire Depré, Head of the Road Safety Unit at the Directorate-General for Mobility and Transport of the European Commission.
The director of Tomorrow.Mobility World Congress, Delphine Romeu, pointed out that “this edition confirms TMWC as the necessary and fundamental event for the transformation of mobility on a global scale, bringing together leading international experts and companies that develop real solutions for the transport of the 21st century”.
The exhibition space, with more than 240 companies and institutions, featured Barcelona Serveis Municipals, Deloitte, Generalitat de Catalunya – Departament de Territori, Moventis, Google, Network Optix, PTV Group, Sener and TomTom, among others.
Knowledge Forum
In addition, EIT Urban Mobility released a study revealing that by 2030 bike-sharing schemes across Europe will create one new job for every 75 shared bicycles deployed, and that European bike sharing schemes have saved 760,000 commuting hours, equivalent to €30 million in productivity gains.
In addition, in the show’s Innovation Playground, various technological innovations and cutting-edge solutions were presented, such as a device for controlling poorly parked cars, autonomous scooters that can reach 25 km/h or an electric autonomous taxi, among other novelties.
As in previous editions, Tomorrow Mobility World Congress has been held in conjunction with Smart City Expo World Congress, the leading international summit on smart cities and urban solutions. Together with Tomorrow.Building and Tomorrow.Blue Economy, these events have brought together 1,190 exhibitors and more than 27,000 attendees.
