By: Bill King
One of the arguments transit advocates regularly use to justify the billions spent by taxpayers every year on mass transit is that it reduces greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. However, the data is clear that its actual effect on GHG emissions is negligible.
The easiest way to demonstrate this is through a thought experiment that assumes all trips currently made in passenger vehicles could be converted to transit. Of course, it is impossible to convert every passenger trip to transit, but the exercise will give us the outside limit of how much transit could reduce GHG emissions.
The EPA has issued a report that estimated the to- tal U.S. GHG emissions as 2022 at 6,343 metric tons and breaks down the sources of those emissions. Transportation makes up 29% of the total. Of the total emissions attributed to transportation, Emissions Cont. the EPA estimates that 57% are due to “light-duty ve- hicles.” It attributes 20% to passenger vehicles and 37% to “light-duty trucks, which include sport utility vehicles, pickup trucks, and minivans.”
The EPA lumping all light-duty trucks into the same category creates some difficulty in estimating potential savings from transit. Many families use SUVs, pickups and minivans...
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