Electric, hybrid cars cut Bay Area carbon footprint: UC Berkeley study

The Bay Area’s leading role in electric-vehicle adoption is producing a measurable drop in the region’s carbon footprint and contribution to the battle against climate change, new research from UC Berkeley suggests.

Last March, the Bay Area became the first U.S. metropolitan area where half of all new vehicle registrations were for EVs and hybrids, according to S&P Global Mobility.

In a paper published Thursday in the journal Environmental Science & Technology, UC Berkeley professor Ronald Cohen and researchers Naomi Asimow and Alexander Turner report that a network of nearly 60 carbon dioxide sensors around the Bay Area, mostly atop middle- and high-school buildings, provide the first evidence that electrified vehicles are lowering carbon emissions here.

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From 2018 and 2022, the sensors in the Berkeley Environmental Air Quality and CO2 Network recorded a small but consistent drop in CO2 emissions of about 1.8% a year, which the researchers say translates to an annual 2.6% drop in vehicle emission rates attributable to electric and hybrid cars.

“I would really like people to see this as an add-on to our success at reducing greenhouse gas emissions,” Cohen said. “We show from atmospheric measurements that adoption of electric vehicles is working, that it’s having the intended effect on CO2 emissions.”

To meet California’s goal to slash carbon emissions 85% from 1990 levels by 2045, that success would have to be doubled, Asimow pointed out.

Still, Cohen sees the emissions reduction as an encouraging sign that electrifying transportation can drive significant progress against climate change. “We really need to accelerate, but we’re on a track that’s not crazy difficult to get to where we want to get to,” Cohen said.

Electric transportation is seen as a key element in mitigating the effects of human-caused global warming by cutting the output of greenhouse gases from vehicle tailpipes. The White House has set a national goal for zero-emission vehicles representing half of all new vehicle sales by 2030. California in 2022 approved a regulation requiring all new cars sold to be zero-emission by 2035.

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, today’s carbon dioxide emissions are the main cause of global warming into the future. The group of scientists said last year that climate change is expected to continue causing widespread damage to water availability, crop production and fishery yields while boosting infectious disease, population displacement, wildfire conditions and sea levels. Choices made now and in the near future will determine the fate of future generations, the group said in its report.

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