Skip to main content

Caltrans awards $206m for green transport projects

Programmes include mass transit expansion and purchase of zero-emission vehicles
By Adam Hill October 14, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Newsom: 'More clean transit is coming to communities impacted most by pollution' (© Sheila Fitzgerald | Dreamstime.com)

Caltrans - the California Department of Transportation - is to award $206 million for 149 transportation projects designed to reduce pollution in the US state.

The money comes through the Low Carbon Transit Operation Program (LCTOP), which is funded by the Greenhouse Gas Reduction fund and is part of California Climate Investments.

This statewide programme allocates cap-and-trade dollars - in essence, a system to encourage private investment in green projects, with the aim of leading to an overall reduction in emissions.

In the last decade, LCTOP has provided over $1 billion for 1,400 projects, ranging from mass transit expansion and purchase of zero-emission vehicles to support of free or reduced transit fares. Caltrans says 96% of this funding has gone to disadvantaged and low-income communities.

“Thanks to California’s cap-and-trade programme, more clean transit is coming to communities impacted most by pollution. With more than $1 billion invested in clean transit in our communities, we’re bettering the health and day-to-day lives of countless Californians," says state governor Gavin Newsom.

“Caltrans is investing in transit services and infrastructure improvements to enhance and increase travel options in local, disadvantaged communities and help combat climate change,” said Caltrans director Tony Tavares. 

 

Where is LCTOP funding going?

 

Projects that will benefit include:

Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority – Metro E-Line Operations: $51.3 million for operations benefitting Metro’s E Line light rail service. The new and expanded transit line serves 29 stations and operates 7 days a week.

San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency – Free Muni for seniors, people with disabilities and youth: $18 million to operate the Free Muni programme that reduces or eliminates Muni fares for seniors, people with disabilities and youth.

Orange County Transportation Authority – 40 Hydrogen Fuel Cell Electric Bus Project: $10.3 million to purchase vehicles in support of the agency's transition to a zero-emission fleet.

Click here for the full list.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Hyperloop: from sci-fi to transport policy
    April 16, 2020
    The future is here. While it has long looked like something from a sci-fi movie, Graham Anderson investigates a technology whose time might have come.
  • Thailand to spend over US$19 billion for six more MRT rail lines
    August 24, 2012
    The Mass Rapid Transit Authority (MRTA) of Thailand is to make immediate plans to develop six additional mass rapid transit (MRT) rail lines that should be operational by 2020. The lines will measure a length of 200 kilometres and entail US$19.16 billion in combined investments. The move was spurred by a forecast that suggests some three million passengers a day will use the MRT rail system in Bangkok by 2020.
  • US states pledge to reduce road emissions
    January 11, 2021
    Transit investment and air quality reporting are important first steps, say campaigners
  • Move NY Legislation introduced
    March 29, 2016
    A coalition of New York State Assembly Members has unveiled legislation that they say will not only fund Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) capital needs but will create a US$4.5 billion Transit Gap Investment Fund (TGIF) to expand public transit and improve accessibility for millions of New Yorkers, particularly those who live in so-called ‘transit deserts’. Introduced by Assembly Member Robert J. Rodriguez, chair of the subcommittee on infrastructure, and joined by 14 co-sponsors from across t