Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Tips for Driving Low CO2



Drive Less. The average American drives 15,500 miles per year, which is double what we drove 25 years ago. Think twice before you run that errand. Could you bundle it with another trip? Could you accomplish the task another way? Do you have to go at all? Reducing your miles will give you more time, more money, and a healthier future.

Drive Full.
The average American car gets 22 miles per gallon and most of those miles we consume alone in our cars. Sharing those miles with others results in the most fuel efficient of all car travel. Driving with 3 people in a car is like getting 66 miles per gallon -- that's better, faster, cheaper, smarter than buying a fuel-efficient car. GoLoco!

Drive Calm (like a Sunday driver?). Most of us get behind the wheel and suddenly act as though every minute matters. We accelerate quickly, brake often, and go as fast as we think we can get away with. We can get as much as 20% higher mileage just by driving like we've got plenty of time. It might reduce blood pressure and add months to our lives as well.

Buying? Think Twice. Don't be fooled. Look for fuel efficient cars. There are many traditional engine cars that get many more miles per gallon than those labeled. "Hybrid" and "Flex Fuel." And while you're thinking, think about whether you need a new car at all. If you really want to reduce CO2 emissions you'll buy fewer new cars in your lifetime. Keep the car you have for a longer period of time, and reduce the number of cars your household owns whenever the opportunity arises. In addition to saving CO2, it'll save you about $8000 a year in car costs.

2 comments:

Robert said...

Hello! I saw you at TED, and I am fascinated by your thinking.
It is a new way of thinking and I very appreciate it. Here in Romania, not only that we have a lot of old, big trucks, busses, and polluting cars, also our way of thinking is to buy big 4weel cars, polluting ones, and so on… How can we change this? How can people insignificant as me start to change things?
The most interesting things of all, was your talk about the wireless networks… and I believe in Romania, it would be a very good start for testing such things, because we haven’t got a good internet network yet, the prices are pretty high for the services we get (compared to the income), and we embrace pretty good this changes that involve new technology.

Alex said...

Hi mrs chase,

i saw your ted talk about zipcar and it reminded me to an idea to use mobile-gps-phones to make instant carsharing possible, maybe u can use parts of it for your projects

http://wikit.org

kind regards
alex