by Kevin Schofield
In honor of St. Patrick’s Day, this weekend’s “long read” is a look to the future of transportation in Seattle and specifically how City officials intend to turn it green.
This past week the City of Seattle released its “blueprint” for how it intends to move to a transportation system that is nearly entirely electric by 2030. City leaders feel a sense of urgency about this, as Seattle has not been meeting its climate-change goals. In fact, according to the City it has “flatlined” on reducing transportation emissions, with only a 2% reduction since 2008.
As is frequently the case, the blueprint leads with climate justice principles. In this case, it emphasizes that the transformation to all-electric should address the higher levels of pollution in low-income and communities of color in the city, the inequities in availability of transportation to some communities, and making sure that new economic opportunities — both green jobs and investments in communities — are made available to all Seattle residents.
Seattle has an advantage in trying to “green” its transportation system: it has a large supply of carbon-free hydroelectric power that it draws upon to power the city, so whenever anything is switched from fossil fuels to electricity it automatically reduces greenhouse emissions. Many other jurisdictions are still reliant on coal, oil, or gas plants to generate their electricity, so in those places switching from a gasoline-powered car to an electric car may not reduce the total greenhouse emissions.
At the same time, a large portion of Seattle’s 85 square miles is residential sprawl, which is difficult to cover efficiently with mass transit. And that raises questions about how much effort to put into electrifying transit versus trying to move residents’ personal vehicles over to electric power. Enabling a large-scale switch to electric vehicles requires that charging infrastructure be in place, both in homes and throughout the rest of the city. But rolling out that infrastructure is tricky: it can create new inequities depending upon where it is rolled out first, and it can also be a source of further gentrification of neighborhoods.
The blueprint lays out six high-level goals to be achieved by 2030:
- 100% of shared mobility is “zero emissions.”
- 90% of all personal trips are “zero emissions.”
- 30% of goods delivery is “zero emissions.”
- The entire City vehicle fleet is fossil-fuel free.
- The electrical infrastructure required to move to electrified transportation is installed and operational ahead of the adoption.
- One or more “Green and Healthy Streets” are created — blocks that restrict cars and instead rely on walking, biking, and electrified vehicles.
The report finishes with a thoughtful discussion of the challenges in implementing this vision by 2030 and how the City intends to meet them. Those challenges range from policy and regulation changes needed to ensuring that Seattle has a workforce ready to take the new green jobs that accompany an electrified transportation system.
Seattle’s Clean Transportation Electrification Blueprint
Kevin Schofield is a freelance writer and the founder of Seattle City Council Insight, a website providing independent news and analysis of the Seattle City Council and City Hall. He also co-hosts the “Seattle News, Views and Brews” podcast with Brian Callanan, and appears from time to time on Converge Media and KUOW’s Week in Review.
Featured image is attributed to Ivan Radic under a Creative Commons license (CC BY 2.0).
Before you move on to the next story … Please consider that the article you just read was made possible by the generous financial support of donors and sponsors. The Emerald is a BIPOC-led nonprofit news outlet with the mission of offering a wider lens of our region’s most diverse, least affluent, and woefully under-reported communities. Please consider making a one-time gift or, better yet, joining our Rainmaker Family by becoming a monthly donor. Your support will help provide fair pay for our journalists and enable them to continue writing the important stories that offer relevant news, information, and analysis. Support the Emerald!
"electric" - Google News
March 20, 2021 at 08:30PM
https://ift.tt/38XGCOk
Weekend Long Reads: Seattle’s Vision for an All-Electric Transportation System - southseattleemerald.com
"electric" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2yk35WT
https://ift.tt/2YsSbsy
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Weekend Long Reads: Seattle’s Vision for an All-Electric Transportation System - southseattleemerald.com"
Post a Comment