不良研究所

As Americans Shelter in Place, Traffic, Emissions and Fuel-Tax Revenues Decline Dramatically

COVID-19 Mitigation Efforts Could Put U.S. on Track to Meet Paris Climate Accord Goals

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One car drives across Brooklyn Bridge in New York during Spring 2020's shelter-in-place directives.
One car drives across New York’s Brooklyn Bridge during this spring’s shelter-in-place directives. (Getty)

Americans drove drastically less, saved millions of metric tons of greenhouse gases, and, in some states, lost millions in fuel-tax revenue since COVID-19 mitigation efforts took effect in early March. That is according to the latest special report from the Road Ecology Center at the 不良研究所.

鈥淎lthough there are economic downsides to our new normal of reduced driving, there are silver, and even 鈥榞old and green鈥 linings that we can be thankful for, including less greenhouse gases, less money spent on gas, and fewer injuries and deaths from crashes,鈥 said Road Ecology Center director and project lead author Fraser Shilling.

The report, 鈥溾 is available on the  website.

Nearly empty rush-hour traffic in Orange County on March 23, 2020
Rush-hour traffic in Orange County, California, on March 23, 2020. (Getty)

Billions of miles of roads less traveled

Using data from Streetlight.com, the researchers estimated changes in daily vehicle miles traveled across the U.S. before and after government shelter-in-place guidance. The difference amounted to a drop from 103 billion miles in early March to 29 billion miles during the second week of April. All states reduced their vehicle miles traveled by at least 60 percent.

The report recognized a correlation between the number of COVID-19 cases in a state and its traffic reductions. The higher the number of COVID-19 cases and deaths reported in a state, the fewer miles driven there. New York carried the highest rate of cases during the reporting period. Drivers there and in the surrounding states of New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Vermont drove at least 80 percent fewer miles after shelter-in-place directives began. Nearby Washington D.C. saw the greatest drop of 90 percent fewer daily vehicle miles traveled.

graph of covid-19 cases and traffic reductions in U.S.
The higher the number of COVID-19 cases and deaths reported in a state, the fewer miles driven there. (不良研究所 Road Ecology Center)

Fuel saved, tax revenue lost

Fuel use dropped from 4.6 billion gallons in early March to 1.3 billion gallons during the second week of April, saving U.S. drivers $8.6 billion per week. It also resulted in fuel-tax revenue reductions, which vary by state.

In California, where vehicle miles dropped more than 75 percent, the state鈥檚 fuel-tax revenue under Senate Bill 1 (2017) also plummeted from $61 million in early March to $15 million for the second week of April. For an eight-week, stay-at-home order, the loss to the state is an estimated $370 million in funds that support highway construction, maintenance and transit improvements aimed at reducing emissions.

Emissions slashed, Paris Climate Accord within view

The drop in fuel use was accompanied by a significant drop in U.S. greenhouse gas emissions.

During the reporting period, the authors calculated a 71 percent decline in carbon dioxide equivalents from local road travel. This represents a 13 percent decrease in transportation-related annual emissions for 2020 and a 4 percent decrease of total greenhouse gas emissions for 2020 in the nation. That exceeds Paris Climate Accord targets by 3 percent.

GHG transport emissions reductions map during COVID19 shelter-in-place orders.
Greenhouse gas emissions reductions from road transportation were down across the United States from early March to early April 2020. (不良研究所 Road Ecology Center)

In California, greenhouse gas emissions from transportation are a greater proportion of total emissions than in the United States as a whole. So the state鈥檚 75 percent reduction in local road travel was an even greater contribution to climate change targets. If traffic remained reduced by 75 percent for a year, the state would be on track to meet half of its 2050 emissions target by 2021.

The study acknowledges that the emissions benefits of stay-at-home orders could go away once normal activity resumes. It concludes with a hopeful note: 鈥淚t is possible that the U.S. public could embrace the multiple unintended benefits of the pandemic response and retain some level of reduction in harm from travel and economic activity.鈥

Media Resources

Fraser Shilling, 不良研究所 Road Ecology Center, 530-219-3282, fmshilling@ucdavis.edu

Kat Kerlin, 不良研究所 News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu

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