Canceled carbon footprint savings

From the University of California – Berkeley

Suburban sprawl cancels carbon footprint savings of dense urban cores

Interactive maps of US metro areas shows striking differences between cities and suburbs

According to a new study by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, population-dense cities contribute less greenhouse gas emissions per person than other areas of the country, but these cities’ extensive suburbs essentially wipe out the climate benefits.

Dominated by emissions from cars, trucks and other forms of transportation, suburbs account for about 50 percent of all household emissions – largely carbon dioxide – in United States.

The study, which has been accepted for publication in the journal Environmental Science & Technology (ES&T), uses local census, weather and other data – 37 variables in total – to approximate greenhouse gas emissions resulting from the energy, transportation, food, goods and services consumed by U.S. households, so-called household carbon footprints.

A CoolClimate Map of New York City’s carbon footprint by zipcode tabulation area shows a pattern typical of large metropolitan areas: a small footprint in the urban core but a large footprint in surrounding suburbs. Credit: Daniel Kammen and Christopher Jones, UC Berkeley

Interactive carbon footprint maps for more than 31,000 U.S. zip codes in all 50 states are available online at http://coolclimate.berkeley.edu/maps.

“The goal of the project is to help cities better understand the primary drivers of household carbon footprints in each location,” said Daniel Kammen, Class of 1935 Distinguished Professor of Energy in the Energy and Resources Group and the Goldman School of Public Policy, and director of the Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory. “We hope cities will use this information to begin to create highly tailored, community-scale climate action plans.”

A key finding of the UC Berkeley study is that suburbs account for half of all household greenhouse gas emissions, even though they account for less than half the population. The average carbon footprint of households living in the center of large, population-dense urban cities is about 50 percent below average, while households in distant suburbs are up to twice the average: a factor of four difference between lowest and highest locations.

“Metropolitan areas look like carbon footprint hurricanes, with dark green, low-carbon urban cores surrounded by red, high-carbon suburbs,” said Christopher Jones, a doctoral student working with Kammen in the Energy and Resources Group. “Unfortunately, while the most populous metropolitan areas tend to have the lowest carbon footprint centers, they also tend to have the most extensive high carbon footprint suburbs.”

Taking into account the impact of all urban and suburban residents, large metropolitan areas have a slightly higher average carbon footprint than smaller metro areas.

Developing sustainable cities

“A number of cities nationwide have developed exceptionally interesting and thoughtful sustainability plans, many of them very innovative,” Kammen said. “The challenge, however, is to reduce overall emissions. Chris and I wanted to determine analytically and present in a visually striking way the impacts and interactions of our energy, transportation, land use, shopping, and other choices. Cities are not islands: they exist in a complex landscape that we need to understand better both theoretically and empirically.”

The UC Berkeley researchers found that the primary drivers of carbon footprints are household income, vehicle ownership and home size, all of which are considerably higher in suburbs. Other important factors include population density, the carbon-intensity of electricity production, energy prices and weather.

“Cities need information on which actions have the highest potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in their communities,” explained Kammen. “There is no one-size-fits-all solution.”

Efforts to increase population density, for example, appear not to be a very effective strategy locally for reducing emissions. A 10-fold increase in population density in central cities yields only a 25% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.

“That would require a really extraordinary transformation for very little benefit, and high carbon suburbanization would result as a side effect,” Jones said.

Increasing population density in suburbs appears to be an even a worse strategy, he said. Surprisingly, population dense suburbs have significantly higher carbon footprints than less dense suburbs.

“Population dense suburbs also tend to create their own suburbs, which is bad news for the climate,” explains Jones.

So if building more population-dense cities is not a viable solution for city planners, what is? The project website includes a tool that calculates carbon footprints for essentially every populated U.S. zip code, city, county and U.S. state (31,531 zip codes, 10,093 cities and towns, 3,124 counties, 276 metropolitan regions and 50 states) as well as an interactive online map allowing users to zoom in and out of different locations. Households and cities can calculate their own carbon footprints to see how they compare to their neighbors and create customized climate action plan from over 40 mitigation options.

In some locations, motor vehicles are the largest source of emissions, while in other locations it might be electricity, food, or goods and services. California, for example, has relatively low emissions associated with household electricity, but large emissions from transportation. The opposite is true in parts of the Midwest, where electricity is produced largely from coal.

Tailored emission lowering strategies

The real opportunity, say the authors, is tailoring climate solutions to demographically similar populations within locations.

“Suburbs are excellent candidates for a combination of solar photovoltaic systems, electric vehicles and energy-efficient technologies,” said Kammen. “When you package low carbon technologies together you find real financial savings and big social and environmental benefits.”

The authors argue that cities need to step out of traditional roles in planning urban infrastructure and learn how to better understand the needs of residents in order to craft policies and programs that enable the adoption of energy and carbon-efficient technologies and practices.

One example of this is the CoolCalifornia Challenge, a statewide carbon footprint reduction competition to name the “Coolest California City.” The program, run by Jones and Kammen and sponsored by the California Air Resources Board and Energy Upgrade California, will be accepting applications for new cities in February. Each city creates their own, targeted strategies to reduce barriers and increase motivation to engage residents in climate action.

“People need to act within their own spheres of influence, where they feel they can make the most difference,” Jones said. “We hope the information provided in these tools will help individuals, organization and cities understand what makes the most impact locally and to enable more tailored climate strategies.

###

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and the California Air Resources Board.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

77 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Phillip Bratby
January 7, 2014 1:06 am

What a complete waste of taxpayers money. I wonder how much it cost.

Ken Hall
January 7, 2014 1:36 am

So this is the excuse they will use to pursue the Agenda21 aims of herding us all into massive “Judge Dredd” style mega cities is it? This country boy (living in the English Lake District) would rather die than submit to it!

CodeTech
January 7, 2014 1:50 am

I was about to say exactly the same thing as Phillip. Complete, total, utter waste. And completely obvious too. But apparently in the rarified world of climate alarmism, logic never did factor in very much.

January 7, 2014 2:00 am

Each city creates their own, targeted strategies to reduce barriers and increase motivation to engage residents in climate action.

Fair enough. But three thoughts:
1 Why only “climate action”? Why not crime reduction or community spirit or wealth creation or piety or…? How do you determine what the city is for?
2 What do you do with the heretic? Ostracism, exile or some more punitive measure?
3 On-going, who is in charge of the strategies and who watches them?

Robertvd
January 7, 2014 2:07 am

carbon footprint
‘Dr Fleming said the Antarctic Division would complete the annual resupply of Casey station which was interrupted when the Aurora Australis was tasked by the Australian Maritime Safety Authority to go to the assistance of the stricken vessel some 800 nautical miles away.
“This will include discharging the remaining cargo and loading material for return to Australia. It will unload about 500,000 litres of fuel and, if weather conditions permit, hopefully allow the completion of some programs interrupted when the ship was diverted on its rescue mission.’
http://www.antarctica.gov.au/media/news/2014/australian-antarctic-shipping-schedule-revised
500,000 litres of fuel in one station.

Kit Blanke
January 7, 2014 2:14 am

Models and more models
to be used for “sustainability” implementations.
I expect this to be quoted by members of the legislature in Sacramento as proof that we must not use our cars and must live in small apartments. “Bullet Train” anyone

tty
January 7, 2014 2:25 am

“500,000 litres of fuel in one station.”
That is less than 1,400 litres per day for all purposes. Electricity, Vehicles, Boats, Aircraft and heating (and it’s cold in the Antarctic). I don’t know whether they have wind power at Casey (Mawson station has), but this part of Antarctica is one of the very few places on Earth where windpower is fairly reliable since it is usually windy even when it is very cold.

Peter Miller
January 7, 2014 2:47 am

Even by the low standards of climate science, this is really quite special. A complete and utter waste of time, money and resources.
Follow the argument through to its logical conclusion and we shall all have to live cheek by jowl in Stalinist box apartments. For those who have never seen one in Cuba or the former Soviet Union, this is a highly undesirable way to live.

DirkH
January 7, 2014 2:47 am

M Courtney says:
January 7, 2014 at 2:00 am
“Fair enough. But three thoughts:
1 Why only “climate action”? Why not crime reduction or community spirit or wealth creation or piety or…? How do you determine what the city is for?”
Oh come on. Do you want us to believe you don’t know about Agenda 21 and ICLEI?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICLEI

DirkH
January 7, 2014 2:50 am

M Courtney says:
January 7, 2014 at 2:00 am
“2 What do you do with the heretic? Ostracism, exile or some more punitive measure?”
If juvenile: re-education camp.
If adult member of the autochthone population; not member of useful grievance group: economic destruction via fines, jail.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Council_on_Tolerance_and_Reconciliation

Gregory Adams
January 7, 2014 2:59 am

Agenda 21 showtime

Jacob
January 7, 2014 3:02 am

Regardless of the motivations behind this GIS survey and the metrics used, it looks like it has produced results which would surprise many urban planners who advocate densification on spurious sustainability principles. I wish more planners would to do their own data digging and mapping. The tools are there.

George
January 7, 2014 3:05 am

The model says we should build Caves of Steel. Sounds like Berkeley. More government intervention is always the answer.

jbe
January 7, 2014 3:07 am

Regardless of the motivations and metrics used, a study with results that would surprise urban planners who advocate higher density living on spurious sustainability grounds. Would like to see a lot more planners do their own data digging, mapping and analysis. The tools are all there these days.
[Dupe? Mod]

Gregory Adams
January 7, 2014 3:08 am

Ask for their raw data and their methods, and see what happens. Rosa Koire has been fighting these UN progressives for years now.

Dodgy Geezer
January 7, 2014 3:32 am

I could do a map like that.
I presume it’s done by modelling, rather than by getting any real data. Just pick a city – the people living inside won’t spend a lot getting to work while the people outside will. Pick an arbitrary boundary line.
Then just estimate average miles traveled, cash spent, or any other obvious variable, convert to CO2 using a simplistic guess, and mark on the map in two contrasting colours, light blue and fiery red…

January 7, 2014 3:41 am

DirkH. Douglas Adams had a solution for the useless members of society.

paqyfelyc
January 7, 2014 3:42 am

what about the huge amount of energy litterally build in the core cities ? It’s a huge capital, and this capital does what capital allows do : increse efficiency

jim
January 7, 2014 3:55 am

From the article:
“The UC Berkeley researchers found that the primary drivers of carbon footprints are household income, vehicle ownership and home size, all of which are considerably higher in suburbs.”
Then the solution is obvious: Reduce people’s income, house size mobility. This is better known as poverty.

michael hart
January 7, 2014 3:55 am

“37 Variables”. Chuckle.
I’ll file that along with “97%”.

JackT
January 7, 2014 4:01 am

Really??? What a crock. When I saw UC Berkeley I should have stopped reading. It’s all about the “privileged class” that doesn’t conform to the city model that the elites believe the mass populous should conform to. Nothing more, nothing less. NO SCIENCE HERE, just social stereotyping.

Grey Lensman
January 7, 2014 4:08 am

Silly me, I thought the problem was Carbon Di-oxide.
If they cannot get that right, what else is left to believe in this “report”. Does the author qualify for the longest job title ever. Man he must be Important.

January 7, 2014 4:09 am

They will not be happy until ever man woman and child is locked away in a concentration camp.

Mike Mangan
January 7, 2014 4:11 am
DirkH
January 7, 2014 4:15 am

phillipbratby says:
January 7, 2014 at 3:41 am
“DirkH. Douglas Adams had a solution for the useless members of society.”
I know. It’s difficult to tell whether the EU uses that story as its playbook or 1984.

1 2 3 4