Article ID: | iaor2013194 |
Volume: | 40 |
Issue: | 1 |
Start Page Number: | 131 |
End Page Number: | 149 |
Publication Date: | Jan 2013 |
Journal: | Transportation |
Authors: | Manaugh Kevin, El-Geneidy Ahmed, Hatzopoulou Marianne, Mathez Anais, Chakour Vincent |
Keywords: | ecology |
The city of Montreal has taken recent initiatives to significantly reduce overall greenhouse (GHG) emissions from the transport sector and has made large investments in alternative transportation. In particular, the city has called upon the participation of all businesses and institutions to further these goals. In light of these recent plans, this study identifies with two objectives: first, to develop a methodology for estimating GHG emissions generated by commuters to McGill University’s downtown campus; and secondly, to better understand who, how, and when each commuter to McGill generates travel‐related GHG. Mode split, travel distance, age, gender and job category were uncovered by a 2011 travel survey that we conducted across the University, from which daily individual GHG emissions are estimated. Details about these trips not only reveal who the largest polluters are and where they are coming from, but also the seasonality of their emissions. These associations are then used to narrate scenarios which present alternatives to the structure of individuals’ commutes by examining the outcomes of selected shifts in travel behavior on total GHG emissions.