We Can Do It: A Zero-Carbon Transportation System Is Possible

The task of transportation and climate advocates in these next few years is to identify and work to achieve the contemporaneous and mutually reinforcing shifts in public policy, economics, technology and culture that can make seemingly impossible changes happen quickly.

The Paris Climate Agreement, approved by world leaders last December, represented a bold commitment to prevent the worst impacts of global warming – a commitment that must now be followed by action.

Meeting the agreement’s target of limiting global warming to no more than 2° C (and ideally no more than 1.5° C) above pre-industrial levels will require the United States to reduce its emissions of greenhouse gases by more than 80 percent, and possibly as much as 100 percent, by 2050.

That is 34 years from now. And the clock is ticking.

Can it be done? In March, we joined with Environment America Research & Policy Center to produce We Have the Power, a report that argued that it is possible to repower America with 100 percent renewable energy. And in two weeks, we will release A New Way Forward: Envisioning a Transportation System without Carbon Pollution, which makes the case that America has the tools and strategies it needs to eliminate carbon pollution from urban, light-duty transportation by 2050.

The report explores scenarios by which U.S. metropolitan areas might reduce energy demand for light-duty travel by as much as 90 percent – making it possible to repower our transportation system with clean renewable energy at the same time we eliminate carbon pollution from other areas of the economy.

Ours will not be the first analysis to suggest that decarbonizing transportation is possible. Over the last several years, government agencies, academics, environmental advocates and others have explored a variety of pathways (warning: PDFs) by which we can move toward a zero-carbon transportation system.

And new pathways are opening all the time. The spectacular growth of shared mobility platforms, rapid advances in information technology, recent trends toward urbanization, the mass commercialization of electric vehicles, and the impending advent of autonomous vehicles create new opportunities to rethink how people and goods move through and around our metropolitan areas – and to fix many of the sources of inefficiency and waste that cause America’s transportation system to be so exceptionally polluting … as well as so exceptionally expensive and dangerous.

Over the next two weeks, we will share with you some of the lessons, insights and key findings gleaned from a year of research and conversations with experts, advocates and transportation stakeholders around the country. We will share the things that excite us, the things that scare us, the things that leave us feeling uncertain, as well as some ideas about how to achieve the rapid transformation needed to get us to a zero-carbon transportation system – and to do it before time runs out.

But before we begin, let’s waste no time confronting the elephant in the room: It is possible to believe that decarbonizing transportation is technically possible, and even beneficial, but at the same time be skeptical about the ability of our political system to achieve the goal. In our conversations with people working for sustainable transportation around the country this year, nearly everyone complained in some way about “the politics” in their communities, which are perceived as a hard constraint on the ability to move forward with sensible transportation policies.

And so, while we will spend the next couple of weeks talking about the technical capacity of various technologies, services and policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from transportation, we will spend just as much, if not more, time discussing ways to overcome the cultural, political and institutional barriers that so often limit our vision of what is possible.

The good news is that history is filled with examples of major transformations in society, politics and technology that occurred more rapidly than anyone thought possible. The task of transportation and climate advocates in these next few years, we will argue, is to identify and work to achieve the contemporaneous and mutually reinforcing shifts in public policy, economics, technology and culture that can make the seemingly improbable changes that must happen in our transportation system over the next several decades a reality.

Tomorrow we’ll share some examples of the kinds of transformations we’re talking about, as well as some ideas about how the potential of public policy to spark transformation.

Authors

Tony Dutzik

Associate Director and Senior Policy Analyst, Frontier Group

Tony Dutzik is associate director and senior policy analyst with Frontier Group. His research and ideas on climate, energy and transportation policy have helped shape public policy debates across the U.S., and have earned coverage in media outlets from the New York Times to National Public Radio. A former journalist, Tony lives and works in Boston.