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Tag Archives: cars

How to not buy anything ever again

17 Mar

BY Jess Zimmerman

Neither a borrower nor a lender be? Stuff it, old man. Shareable has collected a primer on “collaborative consumption,” i.e. the fine art of consensual mooching. At the risk of sounding like a dangerous commie: It turns out there’s basically no reason to be the sole owner of anything ever again.

Among the things Shareable shows you how to go splitsies on:

  1. Housing. If you can handle a housemate, sharing living quarters reduces your rent and can make your utilities usage more efficient. Our favorite: The cohousing directory, which helps you find communities with cooperative home ownership.
  2. Food and gardening. Sign up for a shared vegetable garden, find a CSA, or start a collaborative cooking group. Our favorite: MamaBake, which helps you organize multi-family-style large-batch cooking.
  3. Work. Start a coworking space to consolidate utility usage — and get that water-cooler culture you’ve been missing at your telecommuting job. Our favorite: The coworking wiki.
  4. Travel. Why stay at a hotel when you can house-swap or couch-surf? Our favorite: CouchSurfing, which hooks travelers up with a place to crash.
  5. Transportation. From slug lines to ZipCars, there are a lot of ways to share transportation even if you’re going somewhere public transit can’t take you. Our favorite: Taxi2, which turns the expensive and wasteful airport taxi ride into a shared experience.
  6. Media. Borrow and swap books, DVDs, music, and games. Our favorite: BookMooch, which lets you offer up books you’re over and request books you want to read next. (Sure, sure, it’s called a library, but some of us have a book-buying problem, okay?)
  7. Clothing. Rent clothes for special events, or throw a swap meet. Our favorite: SwapStyle, which keeps fashion victims from becoming fashion hoarders.
  8. School supplies. Sharing keeps college students from having to write home for money. Our favorite: Chegg, which rents out textbooks. (Because let’s be real — are you seriously going to need that $100 chem book this semester, let alone next?)

Read more: “The Gen Y Guide to Collaborative Consumption,” Shareable

There’s safety in numbers for cyclists

13 Oct

BY Elly Blue ~Thanks Elly!

During last year’s transit strike in Philadelphia, bike ridership boomed. That likely made streets safer for cyclists. Photo: Kyle Gradinger

In U.S. cities, there are a lot more people out bicycling than just a few years ago. You might reasonably think that the bicycle crash rate would skyrocket as more people, from wobbly new riders to the outright safety-averse, take to the streets on two wheels. It’s a fine, common-sense assumption—that happens to be wrong.

Research has been steadily showing, actually, that the more people are out there riding bicycles, the safer bicycling becomes. As ridership goes up, crash rates stay flat. It’s happening in Portland (see page 11 of this report [PDF]). It’s happening in New York City.

Much of the ridership increase is due to cities’ investments in bicycle-specific infrastructure. But the efficacy of that infrastructure for safety is often questioned. And there’s one theory—based on a growing body of data—that suggests that a few painted lines on the road, bike racks, and traffic lights form only part of the safety equation. And maybe a smaller part than we tend to assume. The phenomenon, dubbed “safety in numbers,” was first identified in 2003, in an academic paper by public health researcher Peter Jacobsen [PDF]. After being asked by officials in Pasadena, Calif., if their city “was a dangerous place to bicycle,” Jacobsen began looking at crash data from various communities where bicycle ridership had fluctuated over time.

What he found surprised him: The number of crashes involving bikes correlated with the number of riders in a community. As ridership fluctuated, so did the crash rate. More riders, fewer crashes; fewer riders, more crashes. This happened too abruptly, Jacobsen decided, to be caused by slow-moving factors like infrastructure development and cultural change. Bicycling becomes safer when the number of riders increases, he concluded, at least in part because the number of riders increases.

The inverse happens, as well. One data set Jacobsen looked at covered 49 years of biking history in the United Kingdom. Those numbers showed that cycling became safer during the oil crisis of the 1970s, caused by the OPEC oil embargo. Once the crisis ended, both ridership and safety dropped. This all must sound terribly wonky. Actually, it’s been revolutionary.

The idea of Safety in Numbers has slowly built up steam in traffic safety circles since Jacobsen introduced it. Supporting data continues to quietly (and sometimes dramatically) roll in from around the world, influencing mainly traffic engineers and planners who are trying to figure out how to improve bicycle safety. Bicycle safety is often seen in a sort of vacuum. Helmets tend to dominate the conversation, with visibility—lights and bright clothing—taking a close second. More sophisticated conversations get deep into infrastructure: Which is better, sharrows, bike lanes, or separated cycle tracks? We discuss educating cyclists in defensive riding techniques and the rules of the road.

These are all good and important efforts. The problem is what’s missing. Here’s the core of Jacobsen’s analysis, from the 2003 “Safety in Numbers” report:

    Whose behavior changes, the motorist’s or that of the people walking and bicycling? It seems unlikely that people walking or bicycling obey traffic laws more or defer to motorists more in societies or time periods with greater walking and bicycling. Indeed it seems less likely. … Adaptation in motorist behavior seems more plausible.

So why might this be the case?
When there is a serious bicycle crash, it almost always involves someone driving a car. There are any number of ways drivers become involved in these crashes, primarily involving speed, turning, and the myriad distractions that are common behind the wheel. But when there are a lot of bicyclists on the road, according to this theory, drivers take notice. They become more attentive, slow down, pass more cautiously, double-check their blind spots, expect the unexpected. They sense that the road has become a more complicated place, and adjust their behavior accordingly. As a result, the road becomes safer, presumably for everyone.

Safety in numbers is an important idea that has shifted the way planners and engineers think about bicycle safety. But it won’t be the final word. We will doubtless see this idea bandied back and forth for some time, especially as academic interest in bicycling and walking increases. As data improves we’ll likely see a more complex relationship emerge among ridership, safety, infrastructure, laws, and culture.

Whatever the variables, as Jacobsen told me in a requisitely wonky email, “The bigger SIN story is that those cities /countries that have encouraged bicycling have been rewarded with more trips by bike, and not just a non-linear increase in injuries, but a decrease in injuries.”

That’s huge. Safety in numbers will prove over time, I suspect, to be the first major theory based on objective data that can break down the double standard we all pedal under. Jacobsen’s research calls into question the foundation of a system in which the convenience of driving is exalted above the basic safety and mobility of people walking and bicycling.

India Says Is Now Third Highest Carbon Emitter

8 Oct

Author: Gopal Sharma


A truck emits smoke during evening rush hour in Mumbai November 19, 2009. Photo: Reuters/Arko Datta

India’s environment minister said on Monday the country could not have high economic growth and a rapid rise in carbon emissions now that the nation was the number three emitter after China and the United States. Jairam Ramesh’s comments come as negotiators from nearly 200 governments meet in the northern Chinese port city of Tianjin. The U.N. talks aim to reach agreement on what should follow the current phase of the Kyoto Protocol, the key treaty on climate change, which expires in 2012. Indian per-capita emissions are still low but demand for energy is rising as the middle-class buys more cars, TVs and better housing. Much of that energy comes from coal oil and gas, the main sources for planet-warming carbon dioxide.

But Ramesh said India’s rush for wealth could not come at the expense of the environment. Officials said his comments are the first time a government minister has said India has overtaken Russia as the third-largest source of greenhouse gas emissions.

“We will unilaterally, voluntarily, move on a low-carbon growth path. We can’t have 8-9 percent GDP growth and high-carbon growth,” Ramesh told reporters on the sidelines of a conference in the Nepalese capital. “It has to be low-carbon 8 percent, 9 percent growth and that is the objective that we have set for ourselves,” he said.

Poorer nations are now the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions and many big developing countries have taken steps to curb the growth of their emissions but say they won’t agree on absolute cuts, fearing this will hurt their economies. India weathered the global financial crisis better than most, and is setting its sights on economic growth of almost 10 percent over the coming years. Its economy currently grows at around 8.5 per cent.

“We are the third largest emitter of the greenhouse gases in the world … China is number one at 23 percent, the United States is second at about 22 percent and India is number three at about five percent.”

GREENER PATH
In India, any talk of a low-carbon economy was once seen as politically very risky, given the economic costs involved. But Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in January asked a panel to begin charting a path to a greener economy. The report is expected by the year-end. Although India has announced a new climate plan which identifies renewable energy, such as solar power, as a key element, coal remains the backbone of energy supply in a country where almost half the 1.1 billion population has no access to electricity.

“The gap between the second and the third (highest emitters) is very very high, but nevertheless we need to be conscious of our contribution,” Ramesh said.

The fraught U.N. talks have been hobbled by lack of trust between rich and poor nations over climate funds, demand for more transparency over emissions cut pledges and anger over the size of cuts offered by rich nations. The risk of the talks stalling is so great that the United Nations has stopped urging nations to commit to tougher pledges to curb carbon emissions, fearing further debate could derail already fraught talks on a more ambitious climate pact.

(Editing by David Fogarty)

Tajik Officials To Give Up Cars For Bicycles

21 Mar


Officials at Tajikistan’s Communications and Transportation Ministry are expected to start using bicycles instead of their business cars as of April 1. Talking to RFE/RL’s Tajik Service, Deputy Communications and Transportation Minister Beg Zuhurov said that the measure is very serious and its major goal is to save money.

According to Zuhurov, some officials at the ministry, including him, have been using bicycles from time to time already. Tajik parliamentary deputy Muhammad Zabirov told RFE/RL’s Tajik Service he is ready to give up using his business car if need be, adding though that he would prefer to travel to work by foot.

But according to Zabirov, Dushanbe’s streets are not bike-friendly enough.

With Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan is Central Asia’s poorest country, and is feeling the strains of the economic crisis. The IMF has promised to give Tajikistan aid worth $120 million and Dushanbe has just secured another $40 million from the Asian Development Bank.

Tajik Service