Transportation, Land Use and Greenhouse Gases:
A Bay Area Resource
Guide
DRAFT FOR PUBLIC COMMENT
February 2009
Forty percent of the Bay Area’s greenhouse gas emissions
(GHGs) — nearly 42 million metric tons a year — come
from our cars, trucks, buses, trains, ships and planes. (See
charts on page 5). While the Bay Area has begun a serious discussion
on ways to reduce transportation GHGs (primarily CO2), we need
better information to help us understand which strategies will
yield the most cost-effective results. In addition, we must
develop a clearer understanding of the important roles that
each stakeholder — regional
agencies, local governments, businesses, community groups and
Bay Area residents — must play if we are to significantly
reduce our transportation “carbon
footprint.”
This is a work-in-progress. The goal of this guide is to spark
discussion and generate new ideas in the Bay Area transportation
community. To this end, we welcome and seek your input, additions,
corrections and questions. With your participation, we hope
that this guide will become a living document and community
forum for the exchange of ideas on the best strategies for
reducing GHGs from Bay Area transportation. Please send your
input on this DRAFT to bruce@elmwoodconsulting.com by March
31, 2009.
This DRAFT guide was produced in February, 2009 for the Metropolitan
Transportation Commission. The authors, Bruce Riordan and Chris
Brittle, compiled the guide from numerous sources. Additional
review and comment was provided by staff at the three other
regional agencies — the Bay Area Air Quality Management
District (BAAQMD), the Bay Conservation and Development Commission
(BCDC) and the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG).
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