diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'bookmarks/peak travel.txt')
-rwxr-xr-x | bookmarks/peak travel.txt | 138 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 138 deletions
diff --git a/bookmarks/peak travel.txt b/bookmarks/peak travel.txt deleted file mode 100755 index 2df963c..0000000 --- a/bookmarks/peak travel.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,138 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: A Road Less Traveled -date: 2011-08-04T17:03:16Z -source: http://www.psmag.com/environment/a-road-less-traveled-26524/ -tags: economics, travel - ---- - -Amid the planes, trains and automobiles of the holiday season comes a -surprising finding from transportation scientists: Passenger travel, -which grew rapidly in the 20th century, appears to have peaked in much -of the developed world. - -[A study of eight industrialized -countries](http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01441647.2010.518291), including -the United States, shows that seemingly inexorable trends — ever more -people, more cars and more driving — came to a halt in the early years -of the 21st century, well before the [recent escalation in fuel -prices](http://www.psmag.com/science-environment/peak-oil-and-the-return-of-the-jet-set-15395/). -It could be a sign, researchers said, that the demand for travel and the -demand for car ownership in those countries has reached a saturation -point. - -“With talk of ‘peak oil,’ why not the possibility of ‘peak travel’ when -a clear plateau has been reached?” asked co-author [Lee -Schipper](http://peec.stanford.edu/people/profiles/Lee_Schipper.php), -who shares his time between Global Metro Studies at the University of -California, Berkeley, and the Precourt Energy Efficiency Center at -Stanford University. - -Schipper and [Adam Millard-Ball](http://www.stanford.edu/~adammb), a -doctoral candidate at Stanford University, looked at the [gross domestic -product](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gross_domestic_product) per capita -of the United States, Canada, Sweden, France, Germany, the United -Kingdom, Japan and Australia from 1970 through 2008 and plotted it -against the distance traveled per capita per year in each country by -car, pickup truck, bus, train, light rail, streetcar, subway and plane. - -Beginning in 1970, they found, motorized passenger travel grew rapidly -in all eight countries as greater prosperity led to rising car ownership -and domestic air travel. But after 2000, when per capita GDP in the U.S. -hit \$37,000, passenger travel stopped growing here. In the other -countries, passenger travel leveled out at a GDP of \$25,000 to \$30,000 -per capita. - -“A major factor behind increasing energy use and carbon dioxide -emissions since the 1970s has ceased its rise, at least for the time -being,” Schipper said. “If it is a truly permanent change, then future -projections of carbon dioxide emissions and fuel demand should be scaled -back.” - -The peak travel study runs counter to government models predicting -steady growth in travel demand well beyond 2030. Schipper and -Millard-Ball say that their own findings are “suggestive rather than -conclusive.” They speculate that highway gridlock, parking problems, -high prices at the gas pump and an aging population that doesn’t commute -may be contributing to peak travel. People already spend an average 1.1 -hours per day traveling from one place to another, and driving speeds -can’t get much faster. - -“You can’t pronounce one single factor for the slowdown in travel,” -Schipper said. “The most important thing will be to see what happens as -the economy recovers. Everybody expects oil prices to go up. But with -new fuel economy standards, more hybrids and higher oil prices competing -against a recovery in which people buy old-fashioned gas-guzzlers, the -question is, what is going to win?” - -Most of the eight countries in the study have experienced declines in -miles traveled by car per capita in recent years. The U.S. appears to -have peaked at an annual 8,100 miles by car per capita, and Japan is -holding steady at 2,500 miles. - -There are signs of saturation in vehicle ownership, too, at about 700 -cars per 1,000 people in the U.S. — [more cars than licensed -drivers](http://www.cleanenergycouncil.org/files/Edition27_Full_Doc.pdf) -— and about 500 cars per 1,000 people in Japan and most of the European -countries. Car ownership has declined in the U.S. since 2007 because of -the recession. - -“You get to a point where everybody who could possibly drive, drives,” -Schipper said. - -Finally, researchers found, the energy intensity of cars and light -trucks has declined in all eight countries since 1990. (Energy intensity -is the amount of fuel expended per passenger-mile, or one passenger -moving one mile.) - -At the same time, though, vehicle occupancy declined, as more and more -people drove alone. In the U.S, the average vehicle occupancy is 1.7 -people per car, down from 2.2 in 1970, reflecting a likely shift away -from carpooling. So, for example, in 2007, car travel in the U.S., with -two-thirds of the seats empty, was more energy-intensive than U.S. air -travel, because the planes were more than 80 percent full, on average. - -There’s no question that the task of reducing carbon dioxide emissions -in transportation is daunting. According to one estimate, [vehicle -travel in the U.S. would have to fall by half by -2050](http://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/es801032b), or fuel -efficiency would have to improve to 130 miles per gallon, or biofuels -would have to make up most of the fuels on the market to avoid the worst -impacts of climate change. - -And people still like to buy big, heavy cars that can accelerate to 60 -mph in less than four seconds. In a separate study this year, Schipper -found that [technological improvements to vehicle efficiency drove down -fuel -use](http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6VGG-51J17FP-1/2/428493477db36dde85bc58942c86d824) -per unit of horsepower by 50 percent in recent years, even as most of -the potential fuel savings were wiped out by consumer’s preferences for -larger, more powerful vehicles, particularly in the U.S. - -Still, peak travel holds a glimmer of collateral benefits for the -industrialized world. Higher prices at the pump, including [higher fuel -taxes](http://www.civil.ist.utl.pt/wctr12_lisboa/int_01_conference_wmessage.htm), -could help stimulate the manufacture of smaller, less powerful cars, -change people’s driving habits and foment a renaissance in walking and -bicycling, reducing carbon dioxide emissions below their present levels, -Schipper said. - -The growth of motorized travel in China, India and Brazil will reduce -the overall impact of gains in the industrialized world, but they are -still gains, he said. The average American car on the road today uses a -third less fuel per mile than in 1973, and 20 percent less than in 1981, -he said. For European cars, the savings is between 20 percent and 25 -percent. - -Traffic is paralyzed everywhere, and that will be an obstacle to -motorization in the developing world in the end, Schipper said. - -“My basic thesis is, ‘There ain’t room on the road,’” he said. “You -can’t move in Jakarta or Bangkok or any large city in Latin America or -in any city in the wealthy part of China. I think Manila takes the -prize. Yes, fuel economy is really important, and yes, hybrid cars will -help. But even a car that generates no CO2 still generates a traffic -problem. - -“Sadly, what is going to restrain car use the most is that you can’t -move.” |