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 GRASS IN REVIEW

GRASSROOT INSTITUTE OF HAWAII

Nurturing the rights and responsibilities of the individual in a civil society.

 

 WEEKLY GRASS IN REVIEW   -    July 9, 2008


Rail Transit Just Isn't Trying to Improve Fuel Efficiency
By Randal O'Toole

Randal O'TooleMany people assume public transportation is vastly more energy efficient than cars, and that spending more money on transit will attract people out of their cars.

In 1979, University of California-Irvine economist Charles Lave showed in The Atlantic Monthly that both of these assumptions were wrong. Persuading people to buy more fuel-efficient cars is easier and saves more energy, Lave found, than trying to get them to ride transit.

Today, transit advocates argue we need to spend more money on transit, and in particular rail transit, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions as well as save energy. Yet Lave's points are more valid than ever.

Driven by higher gas prices, America's auto fleet today is almost 40 percent more fuel efficient than in 1979. In contrast, the energy efficiency of both bus and rail transit has declined as transit services have reached into distant suburbs, where few people use transit. Despite investing hundreds of millions of dollars into light rail, the share of St. Louis-area commuters using transit has actually declined to 2.8 percent today from 6.9 percent in 1979.

Metro's buses today consume more energy and emit more greenhouse gases, per passenger mile, than a typical sport utility vehicle. Its light-rail lines do better, but consume almost as much energy, and emit almost as much greenhouse gas, per passenger mile, as the average car.

Moreover, even where rail operations do save energy, this savings almost never makes up for the huge energy cost of rail construction. Highway construction also consumes energy, but because highways are more heavily used than rail lines, their energy cost per passenger mile is far lower.

If we ignore construction costs, many rail operations do consume less energy than the average auto — but almost none consume less than a Toyota Prius. As Lave suggested in 1979, to save energy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, it is far more cost effective to encourage people to drive more fuel-efficient cars than to build rail transit lines.

Transit agencies that want to save energy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions should focus on increasing bus loads or reducing the size of their buses. The average Metro bus has 39 seats, yet averages less than 10 passengers. Concentrating service in areas where loads are higher, and using smaller buses in areas or times of day where loads are lower, will do far more to save energy than building rail transit.

Transit agencies also could consider alternative fuels. Hybrid-electric buses save far more energy per dollar invested than the most efficient rail systems.

Electrically powered rail or bus systems reduce greenhouse gas emissions only if they rely on hydro or other renewable sources of energy. Because most of Missouri's electricity comes from coal, electric-powered transit actually generates as much greenhouse gases per passenger mile as transit powered by gas or diesel.

Cities that want to save energy should focus on the form of transport people use the most: automobiles. As Lave notes, "the biggest components matter most," so improving the mode that moves 95 percent of people will do far more than the mode that moves only 1 percent to 2 percent of people.

The most important thing cities can do is relieve congestion. The Texas Transportation Institute estimates that urban congestion wastes nearly 3 billion gallons of fuel each year, in turn emitting 28 million tons of carbon dioxide. This has more than quintupled since 1982.

One simple way to relieve congestion is to coordinate traffic signals. The Federal Highway Administration estimates that three out of four traffic signals need updated coordination systems. Signal coordination costs little, yet can save huge amounts of time, fuel and emissions.

Another way to relieve congestion is to build new roads and pay for those roads with tolls that vary by the amount of traffic on the roads. Variable tolls can keep roads free flowing at all times, saving both energy and greenhouse gases.

There may be places in the world where rail transit works. There may be reasons to build it somewhere in the United States. But saving energy and reducing greenhouse gas emissions are not among those reasons. Cities that want to be green should look to other strategies that are far more cost-effective than investing in high-cost rail systems.

Randal O'Toole is on the GRIH Board of Scholars and is a senior fellow with the Cato Institute. This article originally appeared as a Cato Institute Policy Analysis and was picked up by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

 

IN THE NEWS - HIGHLIGHTED COMMENTARIES
Grassroot Institute is regularly featured in news articles and broadcasts around the state. Here is a sample of some of our recent articles, research stories, and other articles of interest.

Innovation Incentives in Danger from Congress
By Sally Pipes

U.S. patents have fostered American innovation ever since George Washington signed the first one in 1790. By protecting the rights of inventors, the patent system has spurred the development of everything from the light bulb to lifesaving medicines.

You wouldn't think Congress would want to mess with such a winning formula, but that's exactly what lawmakers plan to do with the Patent Reform Act.

The bill proposes changes that could radically reduce innovation in the medical sciences. Research into everything from allergy medicines to new cancer treatments could come to a crashing halt.

(To read more, click here.)

Acton University: Building the Foundations of Freedom
By Lora Burbage

(Editor’s Note: Lora Burbage recently attended a learning event at the Acton Institute. She describes her experiences below. GRIH is proud to have reimbursed her airfare to help her make the most of this great opportunity.)

The Acton Institute, a think tank for the study of religion and liberty, holds a very intellectually stimulating annual event called “Acton University”. I was privileged to attend this four day event in June. Based in Grand Rapids, MI, the Acton Institute has organizations in South America, Africa, and Europe. There were 350 in attendance with 51 countries represented at this event. The ideas discussed at this seminar will surely be spread all over the world.

(To read more, click here.)

FRESH PERSPECTIVE
Grassroot Institute of Hawaii created the Fresh Perspective column exclusively to publish the work of high school and college students. In addition to work appearing on GRIH’s website, their work is also submitted to Hawaii Reporter.  Submissions are welcome from any interested young adult, and we will publish work that is clearly written and grammatically sound. For earlier Fresh Perspectives please click here. Contact wendy@grassrootinstitute.org for more info.


GRASSROOT INSTITUTE LAUNCHES ONLINE TV STATION
Videos, Comments and More at New YouTube Website

July 1, 2008, Honolulu, HI. --- The Grassroot Institute of Hawaii announced today a new communications tool that is aimed at helping educate and inform its members and Hawaii voters. "Grassroot TV" is a new area on the popular YouTube.com site which will feature various videos relating to public issues in Hawaii and beyond, as well as statements from the Institute on various concerns facing our communities.

"It's an exciting new tool for us to use to help keep our members and the community at large informed about what our government is or is not doing," explained Communications Director Tom McAuliffe. "Video is one of the most effective communications mediums available today, and the Grassroot Institute intends to use it to help educate, inform and - who knows - maybe even entertain!" McAuliffe is looking for videos and ideas for the new site, which is available now at www.youtube.com/user/GrassrootHawaii.


GRASSROOT INSTITUTE NOW DOES PODCASTS!

GIR readers and visitors to the GRIH website are now able to enjoy "Grassroot Insights", a periodic podcast hosted by the Institute’s Director of Communications, Tom McAuliffe. The audio interviews with community leaders and special guests at GRIH's monthly meetings are available for download to your iPod or for listening via the Internet. McAuliffe is a former major market on-air radio personality.

Our latest podcast features Dr. Ken Conklin, the author of the new book Hawaiian Apartheid - Racial Separatism and Ethnic Nationalism in the Aloha State.

Click here to listen to the interview with Dr. Conklin, as well as our other recent podcasts with Rep. Marcus Oshiro, Dr. Mark Skousen, GRIH President Emeritus Dick Rowland, and GRIH President Jamie Story.

We hope you'll give Grassroot Insights a listen, and if you have any ideas for the show please let Tom know at tom@grassrootinstitute.org.

 

UPCOMING EVENTS
All of the Institute’s events, research publication dates and speaking engagements are available on our website.

Friedman Legacy event
Gail Heriot
Thursday, July 31, 2008
A Luncheon Celebration in Honor of Milton Friedman's 96th Birthday
11:30 AM – 1:30 PM
in the Card Room, Pacific Club
Save the date! All over the country, events will be held on July 31st to honor Milton Friedman's vision and the impact he has had on our society. University of San Diego School of Law professor Gail Heriot will be the main speaker at this event, speaking on the topic “Milton Friedman: The Man Who Chose Freedom.” Co-sponsors include The Milton and Rose D. Friedman Foundation, The Federalist Society, Research Institute for Hawaii-USA and others. Lunch will be a deli luncheon buffet with sandwiches, salads, cookies and iced tea. Cost is $25 payable by July 17. A few tables of 10 remain and may be purchased for $325. Send checks to the GRIH office at 1314 S King St, Ste 1163, Honolulu, HI 96814. Call (808)591-9193 or email wendy@grassrootinstitute.org to charge. Seats limited. No walk-ins.

Gail Heriot is a member of the United States Commission on Civil Rights and a Professor of Law at the University of San Diego School of Law. She and three others operate the blog “The Right Coast—Thoughts from San Diego on Law, Politics, and Culture.”

 

TRY OUR BLOGS
Use these links to access various topics.

Dash of Calabash>>>Drew Carey Bashes the Trade-Bashers

The Mystery of Hawaiian History>>>90 minute radio interview of Ken Conklin

Read what others have written or add your own thoughts by clicking here.


LIBERTY NETWORK

  1. GRIH President Jamie Story had a commentary published in Hawaii Reporter on 7/3/08: "Mayor Hannemann's Hit Piece Disrespects Voice of Thousands of Hawaii's Citizens". A shorter version was published as a letter to the editor in the Honolulu Star Bulletin on 6/29/08: "Mayor's ad maligned rail's opponents". She was also featured in the "People who make Hawaii work" section of the Pacific Business News on 7/4/08 (although only an abbreviated version is available online). KHNL News 8 has posted an article summarizing its 6/26/08 coverage of Jamie and Mayor Hannemann: "Reaction from a target in Hannemann's ad". (This article contains a rare online photo of the GRIH office.)

  2. Former Hawaii Governor Ben Cayetano wrote a commentary for the 7/1/08 Honolulu Advertiser: "Attacks on opponents of rail are troubling". It has received 35 comments to date.

  3. GRIH Grassroot Insights Podcast #5: Dr. Ken Conklin, author of the new book Hawaiian Apartheid: Racial Separatism and Ethnic Nationalism in the Aloha State, is the featured guest in the fifth of GRIH's periodic podcasts with leaders in the community and beyond. Click here to listen.


HONOLULUTRAFFIC.COM
The mission of HonoluluTraffic.com is to seek cost effective ways to reduce traffic congestion on Oahu. Add your name to the list of supporters.

STOPRAILNOW.COM
The goal of Stop Rail Now is to collect the nearly 45,000 signatures necessary to put on the ballot: "Honolulu mass transit shall not include trains or rail transit." Go to the website to sign up or download a petition, due back July 25th.


How fast does the state spend your money?
State spending is out of control.  Watch the dollars fly out the window.....

Have an Institute speaker at your next meeting!
From taxation to education, from health care to transportation, the Institute’s staff is ready to address your group regarding the important policy issues facing all citizens of Hawaii. Call (808) 591-9193 to check availability and make arrangements, or e-mail us at wendy@grassrootinstitute.org.

 

Grassroot Institute is a proud member of the State Policy Network and Townhall.


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CRABGRASS

America is home to 30 of the world’s 40 top universities, and seventy percent of the world’s Nobel laureates work in the U.S.
(Source: Rand Corporation’s National Defense Research Insatiate)

Higher gas prices have led to increased usage of mass transit. Ridership on public transportation nationwide increased 3 percent during the first three months of 2008.
(Source: USA Today)

FOOD FOR THOUGHT

“Mass transportation is doomed to failure in North America because a person's car is the only place where he can be alone and think.”
--- Critic Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980)

“Our ideals of freedom, set forth and realized in our Constitution, are our greatest export to the world.”
--- Senator Robert Byrd

 

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