Not a "green"
as you think.
You worry a lot about the environment and do everything you can to reduce
your carbon footprint
-- the emissions of greenhouse gases that drive dangerous climate change.
So you always prefer to take the train or the bus rather than a plane, and
avoid using a car whenever you can,
faithful to the belief that this inflicts less harm to the planet.
Well, there could be a nasty surprise in store for you, for taking public
transport may not be as green as you
automatically think, says a new US study.
Its authors point out an array of factors that are often unknown to the public.
These are hidden or displaced emissions that ramp up the simple "tailpipe"
tally, which is based on how much
carbon is spewed out by the fossil fuels used to make a trip.
Environmental engineers Mikhail Chester and Arpad Horvath at the University
of California at Davis say that when
these costs are included, a more complex and challenging picture emerges.
In some circumstances, for instance, it could be more eco-friendly to drive
into a city -- even in an SUV,
the bete noire of green groups -- rather than take a suburban train. It depends
on seat occupancy and the underlying
carbon cost of the mode of transport.
The pair give an example of how the use of oil, gas or coal to generate electricity
to power trains can skew the picture.
Boston has a metro system with high energy efficiency. The trouble is, 82
percent of the energy to drive it comes from
dirty fossil fuels.
By comparison, San Francisco's local railway is less energy-efficient than
Boston's. But it turns out to be rather greener,
as only 49 percent of the electricity is derived from fossils.
The paper points out that the "tailpipe" quotient does not include emissions
that come from building transport infrastructure
-- railways, airport terminals, roads and so on -- nor the emissions that
come from maintaining this infrastructure over its
operational lifetime.
These often-unacknowledged factors add substantially to the global-warming
burden.
In fact, they add 63 percent to the "tailpipe" emissions of a car, 31 percent
to those of a plane, and 55 percent to those
of a train.
And another big variable that may be overlooked in green thinking is seat
occupancy.
A saloon (sedan) car or even an 4x4 that is fully occupied may be responsible
for less greenhouse gas per kilometer
travelled per person than a suburban train that is a quarter full, the researchers
calculate.
"Government policy has historically relied on energy and emission analysis
of automobiles, buses, trains and aircraft
at their tailpipe, ignoring vehicle production and maintenance, infrastructure
provision and fuel production requirements
to support these modes," they say.
So getting a complete view of the ultimate environmental cost of the type
of transport, over its entire lifespan, should
help decision-makers to make smarter investments.
For travelling distances up to, say, 1,000 kilometres (600 miles), "we can
ask questions as to whether it's better to
invest in a long-distance railway, improving the air corridor or boosting
car occupancy," said Chester.
The paper appears in Environmental Research Letters, a publication of Britain's
Institute of Physics.
The calculations are based on US technology and lifestyles.
It used 2005 models of the Toyota Camry saloon, Chevrolet Trailblazer SUV
and Ford F-150 to calibrate automobile
performance; the light transit systems in the San Francisco Bay Area and
Boston as the models for the metro
and commuter lines; and the Embraer 145, Boeing 737 and Boeing 747 as the
benchmarks for short-, medium-
and long-haul aircraft.
