 
     As bold moves aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions have been introduced in California, David Crawford looks at the ramifications for transportation.    
     
California Governor Jerry Brown’s recent dramatic raising of the bar on emissions reduction policy for the state has won him praise from Japan, Australia, Europe and the secretariat of the critical UN conference on climate change being held in Paris in November/December 2015. His April 2015 executive order aimed at bringing emissions to 40% below 1990 levels by 2030, tops already ambitious targets created through state cap and trade programmes, which put prices on industrial carbon emissions and create funding for environmental and transport improvements. 
     
In parallel 
     
This is set against a background in which transportation is a major contributor to California’s problems. It is, despite decreases in recent years, still responsible for 36% of the state’s total greenhouse gas emissions, making it the largest single source of pollution, with emissions from on-road sources accounting for 92% of the sector total. 
 
These figures explain why, in his 2015 inaugural   address, Governor Brown gave, as one of his “ambitious goals” for   achievement over the next 15 years, the reduction of current levels of   petroleum use in cars and trucks by up to 50%. Another called for an   increase from one-third to a half in the share of electricity, for   charging alternatively-powered vehicles, derived from renewable and   non-polluting sources. 
  
Electric vehicles
Heavy   emphasis will lie on encouraging the less well-off to take up electric   vehicles (EVs). But EVs are only part of a wider programme and the   California legislature is now deciding on the mechanics for   implementation and the specific contributions of Caltrans. 
     
This agency’s 2015-2020 Strategic Management Plan sets out broad period-end targets: 
     
 
- Tripling levels of cycling and doubling the use of transit and walking from a 2010-12 California Household Travel survey baseline;
- A 15% reduction in vehicle distances travelled per capita relative to 2010;
- A 15% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from 2010 levels to those of 1990; and
- Delivering real-time multimodal travel information on 50% of the state’s key top integrated corridors, to reduce congestion and encourage mode shift.
- Highly‐connected multimodal networks, with ‘complete streets’ designed for safe access and use by all;
- Communities where walking, bicycling and transit use are common options;
- A supply of housing that allows people of all incomes and abilities to live within reasonable distance of their most often visited destinations; and
- An    inter‐regional network for longer‐distance travel and freight   movement.  Progressing these will be subject to performance measures   including  emissions reduction targets.  
 
The location efficiency concept will work in parallel with a hierarchy of defined ‘smart mobility place types’, including urban centres, suburbs, ‘dormitory’ communities, walkable neighbourhoods and historic or rural towns. These are intended to serve as reality checks for the deployment of mobility initiatives.
Strategies
Caltrans  sustainability spokesperson Steven Cliff told ITS International: “The  place types are a key tool that can be used to implement smart mobility.  Transportation and land-use strategies can be applied to them and the  outcome would be different depending on what the type is. 
     
“For  example, transit-oriented development is a strategy that may be used  within multiple place types. But it is necessary to identify the  characteristics of the particular location it is destined for, to decide  how it would best function and to what extent it would achieve its  desired targets, including emission reductions.” 
 
Caltrans  has already run an implementation pilot study incorporating  the SMF  approach into a corridor system management plan for the San  Francisco  Bay region and a long range transportation planning process  in the Los  Angeles region. The result, says Cliff, is “a replicable  process for  incorporating smart mobility into comparable efforts  throughout Caltrans  and partner agencies’ work.” 
     
The agency is now giving priority to three closely-related tasks aimed at speeding up SMF adoption. 
     
First,   it is integrating the key principles into departmental guidelines and   introducing place types categorisation into multimodal long-range (20-25 year) transportation concept reports on segments of key state corridors.
     
Second,  it is building an SMF learning network  (including a series of expert  forums) for practitioners in  transportation as well as urban planning  and development. These will  thrash out the practical nuts and bolts of  location efficiency, and of  the application of place types criteria to  mobility proposals.
     
Third,   it has started work on a ‘Transportation Analysis Guide/  Transportation  Impact Study Guide (TAG/TIS)’, a standardised analytical  framework for  multimodal transportation planning with location  efficiency and place  types as central elements. 
  
Electric vehicles
Governor   Brown’s drive to reduce petrol consumption is built on firm  behavioural  foundations. Over the period December 2010 to August 2014,  Californians  bought 102,240 electric plug-in cars. That represents  around 40% of  America’s EV purchases and more than in most other  countries, according  to Christine Kehoe, executive director of the  California Plug-in  Electric Vehicle Collaborative. 
 
A   September 2014 Senate Bill, signed off by  Governor Brown, commits the   state to put 1.5million zero-emission  vehicles on the road by 2023,   aided by financial incentives to make  them affordable and accessible for   lower-income households. One effect  will be to make it easier for   tenants of apartment blocks to have  charging stations installed in their   buildings. 
     
Follow-up    action has been fast. In July 2015, the California Air Resource  Board,   which aims to ensure safe, clean air to all Californians,  awarded one of   the US’ most polluted cities, Los Angeles, a US$1.7  million grant for a   pilot project to double its current level of car  sharing. The city is   placing 100 new EVs and supporting recharging  equipment (including an   innovative system that takes advantage of  existing street lighting poles   at parking spaces) in its most  disadvantaged low-income communities,   where they will be available for  sharing by over 7,000 potential users.    
Comments LA mayor Eric   Garcetti:  “Our EV car sharing pilot is a perfect example of how our   state’s cap  and trade dollars should be put to work: providing   transportation  options for Angelenos in need, and helping us achieve our   clean air  goals.” The city’s first Sustainability Plan, published in   April 2015,  points out that Angelenos currently waste 64 hours in   traffic each  year, making theirs “the most traffic-congested major city   in the US.”  
     
Currently   only 16% of  LA’s population walk, cycle or take public transit on their   daily  commute; while fewer than half live within 0.4km of good-quality    transit. In a clear endorsement of the location efficiency concept, the    Plan states that, by 2035, the proportion of new housing units built    within 0.4km of transit will be at least 65%. 
 
At    the same time, the San Diego Association of   Governments has been    offered US$300,000 to expand an existing   free-floating all-EV car share    system into two heavily-disadvantaged   communities.
   
A constructive county
Among California’s local government agencies, which are the major means of implementing and enforcing state legislation as well as generators of their own initiatives, one of the liveliest is Contra Costa County. Lying across from San Francisco on the eponymous Bay, it has a rising reputation for transport innovation. Discussing the Brown initiative, Contra Costa Transportation Authority (CCTA) executive director Randy Iwasaki – who was previously director of Caltrans - told ITS International: “As with every major initiative, the devil tends to be in the detail - sometimes governments like to over-regulate.“In this case, I hope that state lawmakers will craft thoughtful legislation that allows for innovation, creativity and imagination in developing strategies to achieve pollution reduction goals. This approach will be especially relevant, since many local agencies are already working on initiatives that support the Governor’s goals.”
Recently,    for example, the CCTA opened its GoMentum Station programme  at a   2000ha  former US navy weapons station, now claimed as the  world’s   largest  secure vehicle test complex. It offers 32km of  roadways, with   tunnels  and flyovers, and buildings that can be  configured to simulate   urban  environments for trialling connected vehicle/automated vehicle    technologies in controlled conditions.  Investigations by the US Center    for Urban Transportation Research  indicate that individual automated    vehicles can cut fuel consumption  (and thus emissions) by 20%. 
     
Two     automakers – 
     
The     county is also pushing a concept it calls ‘City 5.0’, which aims  to     knit tighter connections between the places where people live,  work  and    play. Says Iwasaki: “If you can reduce the amount of auto  travel   needed   for the majority of the population to get to where  they need  to  go on a   daily basis, you can make a significant impact  on the   environment.”
     
For      example, CCTA has started an EV ridesharing project along its  sector  of    Interstate 80 (I-80). It is currently looking at creating a      subscription-based, electric autonomous vehicle fleet to connect      residents to transit and at locating clean manufacturing plants closer      to residential areas to provide local jobs. Also on the agenda is      upgrading and extending the transit network to deliver potentially      on-demand services. 
“Overall”,     says Iwasaki, “California continues to be  a leader in transportation     technology in the US, and I believe that  this new mandate will spur   new   innovation and fresh partnerships  between the private and public     sectors. Government and industry have  already been working together  to    make cars and transit vehicles  smarter, in a move towards a vision  of    zero traffic deaths, and that  is a goal we will aggressively  continue  to   pursue. 
     
“Change    tends  to  happen first at the local level in California, since  cities   and  their  agencies are directly serving the public every day.  I   believe  that  you’ll start to see these agencies pioneering some    creative ideas  on  achieving significant pollution reductions while    still getting  people  where they want to go.”
     
ITS      International invited ITS California to comment on the implications     for  the industry of these heightened levels of activity, but had     received  no response by the time that this issue went to press.
     
 Driving towards emissions reduction        
         
Governor  Brown claims his initiative is "the most aggressive benchmark enacted  by any government in North America to reduce dangerous carbon  emissions." His target brings the state in line with commitments already  made by the 28 member countries of the European Union.  
 
Two  key forces are driving him. The first is the state's worsening weather  conditions which have recently included the loss of snowpack (melting in  summer boost fresh water levels), droughts, wildfires and heat waves,  all of which he attributes to pollution-generated climate change. 
         
The  second is Pope Francis, whose 2015 encyclical (circular letter)  subtitled Care for our Common Home – issued to influence the UN  conference - accompanies Brown on his global round of environmental  summits. It contains the Vatican's first-ever pronouncement on traffic  issues, which stresses the “suffering” caused by congestion and the need  for “substantial improvements” in public transport alternatives which  currently “force people to put up with undignified conditions.” The  Vatican has also hosted a July 2015 summit of city mayors, where  Governor Brown was an invited expert, and New York City mayor Bill de  Blasio announced that he was setting the same targets as California. 
 
 
     
         
         
        



