- Joined
- Jul 27, 2023
- Messages
- 6
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-61077-0
"Cities worldwide are pursuing policies to reduce car use and prioritize public transit (PT) as a means to tackle congestion, air pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions. The increase of PT ridership is constrained by many aspects; among them, travel time and the built environment are considered the most critical factors in the choice of travel mode. We propose a data fusion framework including real-time traffic data, transit data, and travel demand estimated using Twitter data to compare the travel time by car and PT in four cities (São Paulo, Brazil; Stockholm, Sweden; Sydney, Australia; and Amsterdam, the Netherlands) at high spatial and temporal resolutions. "
I've been looking at efficiency studies (car v train) and have always found them lacking in that they are one dimensional. In other words, solely focusing on energy consumption ignores an important variable (time). Time has a cost as does energy. Ignoring time as a cost factor when determining efficiency invalidates whatever "study" is presented.
I would posit that rail is much less efficient (in the USA) when viewed in totality.
"Cities worldwide are pursuing policies to reduce car use and prioritize public transit (PT) as a means to tackle congestion, air pollution, and greenhouse gas emissions. The increase of PT ridership is constrained by many aspects; among them, travel time and the built environment are considered the most critical factors in the choice of travel mode. We propose a data fusion framework including real-time traffic data, transit data, and travel demand estimated using Twitter data to compare the travel time by car and PT in four cities (São Paulo, Brazil; Stockholm, Sweden; Sydney, Australia; and Amsterdam, the Netherlands) at high spatial and temporal resolutions. "
I've been looking at efficiency studies (car v train) and have always found them lacking in that they are one dimensional. In other words, solely focusing on energy consumption ignores an important variable (time). Time has a cost as does energy. Ignoring time as a cost factor when determining efficiency invalidates whatever "study" is presented.
I would posit that rail is much less efficient (in the USA) when viewed in totality.