Big Travel With Little Carbon
by Karen on May 26th, 2009
It is official – summer is here! Memorial Day may have felt early this year since we still have a week of May left, but the vacation season is now underway. Whether you are traveling for food, folks, or fun, there is likely a lower carbon way of getting there.
You might guess that the answer is simple. But the Union of Concerned Scientists created a guide to the lowest carbon ways to travel. They looked at three different factors: how far you were going, what the vehicle was, and, the kicker for me, and how many people were traveling with you? It turns out that their research had some surprises.
One big surprise was how important it was to incorporate the size of your travel group when you plan your travels. Overall the lowest carbon emission choice is to travel by motor coach – but the second best choice just might be to fly economy. If your party has two people and you are traveling 1,000 miles then flying economy beats out driving – the flight creates 835 pounds of CO2 while driving would create 1,125 pounds of CO2. It even beats out taking the train which comes in at 860 pounds of CO2.
But the Union is serious when they stated ‘economy.’ A vacation splurge can offset an entire year of environmental conservation actions. One wild example was the carbon impact of a family of four taking a vacation. In the Union’s example, the family used frequent flyer miles to fly first class, for free, with their kids from Chicago to Disney World. First class – sounds great! But not for the environment. It turns out a first class seat takes up twice the space of an economy seat causing twice as many emissions. This single flight created 1.5x more carbon emissions than all of the family’s daily commuting for the year. And they commuted about 35 miles a day in non-hybrid cars! What an eye opener.
The Union even created a table to help you plot the most eco-friendly way to enjoy your summer vacation.
So if you are traveling beyond a walk-able distance this summer give the report a look – it has lots of tips on how to get where you are going.
And low happy carbon travels!
Tags: community development, energy efficiency, environmental sustainability, green banking, green transportation, ShoreBank, triple bottom line

Interesting. But what sign on novelties of the news?
[...] garden. This year, I obtained flight status from recreationally flying over 25,000 miles. We even blogged on plotting the most eco-friendly way to enjoy your vacation. Using that blog’s CO2/trip [...]