For rural transit agencies, a rocky road to zero emissions
- Date: 10/10/2024
Difficult terrain. Harsh winters. Pervasive wildfires. Limited vehicles and funds. These are just some of the challenges rural transit agencies…
Wired recently published an 1,800-word article devoted to solving the “critical” dilemma of how to keep electric vehicle fleets charged in dense urban areas.
Whole paragraphs are devoted to the dangers of “charging deserts,” which the authors fret will leave the poor stranded unless the government subsidizes them on their journey to personally owned electric automobility and all the staggering debt, insurance, and maintenance burdens that come with it. (The average electric vehicle costs $56,437, or more than three times the annual income of a household of two living at the federal poverty line.)
“The goal is clear: Build more chargers,” Marshall and Simon write. “But in dense places, the eternal question is, where?”
For sustainable transportation advocates, the answer may seem pretty obvious: at the bus depot. But the article does not mention electric buses until its very last paragraph, when the authors finally concede that “maybe you don’t have to own an EV to enjoy one.” Walking, biking, and other forms of non-automotive mobility are not mentioned at all, save a one-sentence acknowledgment that putting every American into a car would probably be “dangerous for pedestrians” and “undercut the demand for public transit.” (Spoiler alert: they are already are.)
Have more mobility news that we should be reading and sharing? Let us know! Reach out to Sage Kashner (kashner@ctaa.org).
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