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Transportation Data Reveals the 100 Greenest Metro Areas in the US

See where your city’s transportation ranks on a list of the best and worst metro areas in the U.S. — and what levers your planners can move to improve your city’s climate stance.

In 2020, many cities moved quickly to adjust transportation infrastructure to help constituents and businesses. They closed streets to vehicles, opened sidewalks for restaurant seating, and adjusted parking options for delivery services. City governments should incorporate this “rapid planning” stance long-term, as transportation technology, behaviors and economics will continue to evolve rapidly.

Remote work opens up the possibility of reduced commute driving. Reduced travel distance and low-carbon travel modes could lower emissions by nearly six metric tons per year, according to the Emissions Gap Report 2020. And as offices reopen, if companies permanently adopted a one-day-a-week work-from-home policy, it could reduce their commute vehicle miles traveled (VMT) by 20%

Given the potential for decoupling economic growth from VMT, now is the time to create more financial and other incentives for reducing climate impact. Building that into economic recovery is the best way to take advantage of short-term gains made during COVID-19 travel shutdowns.

StreetLight Data is a data analytics company that uses geospatial (GIS) data to transform urban planning and transportation design. Its 2020 U.S. Transportation Climate Impact Index analyzes transportation factors affecting greenhouse gas and ranks the 100 largest metro areas in the U.S. from best to worst.

The list also includes rankings by each factor: vehicle miles traveled, bike and pedestrian travel, transit travel, population density and circuity. Agencies can use this data for transportation planning efforts.

How each factor is ranked:

Red = a low ranking is best
Green = a high ranking is best

The index gives insights into which initiatives contribute to a metro area’s ranking, which actually waste valuable resources, and how the COVID-19 pandemic changed cities’ transportation climate impact in 2020.

This article is an excerpt from Streetlight Data’s 2020 U.S. Transportation Climate Impact IndexDownload the full index, for the entire list of the 100 largest metro areas in the U.S. from best to worst here.

 

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