Title: Key Components of a Green Transportation Measure
1Key Components of a Green Transportation Measure
Reid EwingDept. of City and Metropolitan
PlanningUniversity of Utah
2(No Transcript)
3www.support.smartgrowthamerica.org/growing_cooler
4Climate Change Is the Ultimate Green Issue
5Chapter 3
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7Climate Change Impacts at 2 to 3C
- More than 1/3 of species at risk of extinction
(corals, polar bears) - Amazon rainforest Great Lakes ecosystem at risk
of collapse - Hundreds of millions displaced from coastal
areas, at risk of hunger - Partial deglaciation of Greenland Ice Sheet
expected to begin sea level to increase 4-6
meters over centuries to millennia
8Global Warming Fingerprints
Hurricanes Ophelia, Nate, and Maria were among 15
hurricanes that raged across the Atlantic, Gulf
of Mexico, and Caribbean in 2005.
9Global Warming Fingerprints
10Global Warming Fingerprints
J. Madsen and E. Figdor, When It Rains, It Pours
Global Warming and the Rising Frequency of
Extreme Precipitation in the United States,
Environment America Research Policy Center,
December 2007. http//www.environmentamerica.org/u
ploads/oy/ws/oywshWAwZy-EXPsabQKd4A/When-It-Rains-
It-Pours----US---WEB.pdf
11Energy Bill CAFE -10 Fuel GHG by 2025
12VMT Growth to Wipe Out Energy Bill Savings
13Chapter 4
14Main Questions Addressed
- What reduction in vehicle miles traveled (VMT) is
possible in the United States with compact
development rather than continuing urban sprawl? - What reduction in CO2 emissions will accompany
such a reduction in VMT? - What policy changes will be required to shift the
dominant land development pattern from sprawl to
compact development?
15 Portland vs. Raleigh
1635 Less VMT with Compact Development
17Southern Village (40 lower)
18Answer to 1st Question
- 20-40 VMT Reduction for Each Increment of
Compact Development
19Doing the Math through 2050
- 60-90 Compact
- x
- 67 New Development
- x
- 30 VMT Reduction
-
- 12-18 Reduction in Metropolitan VMT
20Add Smart Growth -15 VMT ? 2030 CO2 is 14 below
1990
21Chapter 8
22What Would It Take?
- What would it take to reach the 2030 CO2
reduction target of 33 percent below 1990 levels?
- Will compact development with supportive
transportation policies be enough? - If not, how much VMT reduction must be achieved
through pricing, and what price changes would be
required?
23Urban VMT Reduction
24Compact Development Transit Road
Pricing-Highway Expansion38 VMT reduction
by 2030
25No Ballot Measure Can Be Considered Green If It
Includes a Lot of New Money for Highways
261995 Report on Induced Travel (with Minority View)
27Short-Term Supply and Demand
28Short-Term Increases in Traffic
- New Trips
- More Distant Destinations
- Mode Shifts
- Route Shifts
- Most important effect according to Dowling et
al., 1994
29Long-Term Supply and Demand
30Long-Term Increases in Traffic
- Higher Car Ownership
- Reduced Transit Service
- Activity Location Shifts
- Most important effect according to Cervero,
2002
31Growth of Traffic Over Time
32Cerveros Bottom Lines
- the preponderance of research suggests that
induced-demand effects are significant, with an
appreciable share of added capacity being
absorbed by increases in traffic. - All that can be said with certainty is that
induced-demand effects exist and they
accumulate over time.
33Average Elasticities
34No Transit Measure Can Be Considered Green Unless
It Is Coupled with Transit-Oriented Development
35What is TOD?
- TOD is widely defined as compact, mixed-use
development near transit facilities with
high-quality walking environments, not
necessarily at the expense of automobile access.
36More Than 100 TODs in USA
37High Mode Shares for TOD Residents
38Introducing the 3Ds
39Density
4033 Units per Acre (gross)
4115 Units per Acre
42Diversity
43Seamless Pattern
44Design
45Simple Correlations with Design Variables
46Pedestrian-Friendly Design
47Pedestrian-Friendly Design
48Effect of Density Bay Area Rail
49Effect of Diversity
50Effect of Design