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CLIMATE CHANGE, ENHANCED GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS AND PASSENGER TRANSPORT – WHAT CAN WE DO TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE?
| Content Provider | CiteSeerX |
|---|---|
| Author | Hensher, A. |
| Abstract | Climate change, global warming and enhanced greenhouse gas emissions (GGEs) are hot topics for many reasons, including scientific and speculative. The transportation sector, led by the automobile, has been cited constantly as a major contributor through human intervention to climate change. The media and lobby groups have, for many years escalated the case for finding ways to reduce the impact that people movement has on enhanced GGEs. Governments have ramped up the rhetoric to gain political support. Short of banning car use, the challenge remains one of understanding better what mix of actions might contribute in non-marginal ways to reducing the growth of GGEs (primarily CO2) and even reduce the absolute amount of CO2 produced by automobility. This paper evaluates potentially effective instruments that are aimed at a number of policy objectives linked to the triple bottom line – efficiency, sustainability and equity – focussing on social surplus gains in addition to cost effectiveness; but in particular the ability to reduce CO2. We use TRESIS, an integrated transport, land use and environmental strategy impact simulation program, developed by the author, to assess the influence on CO2 of a number of ‘at source ’ and ‘mitigation ’ instruments |
| File Format | |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |