this post was submitted on 11 Aug 2023
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Solarpunk Travel
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Community for those focused on sustainable travel. Our society's current levels of energy intensive and frequent travel are not compatible with life on a finite planet. We advocate for long-term slow travel to see the world, and low energy local travel to deeply experience your community. Green washing free zone.
related to sustainable travel:
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- !rail@feddit.uk ← UK Rail and Trains
- !ukpublictransport@feddit.uk ← UK public transport
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- !traveltips@feddit.uk ← Europe focus
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I admit not having read the full study that lead to that graph, but I think I do understand the graph itself:
Buses are local public transport (intracity), commonly run by the government/municipality/etc. They run no matter what. Maybe at some point they will abandon the line, but it is a public service, so they won’t be doing that easily.
Coaches are long distance (intercity) travel, usually run by a private company, and if it’s not profitable they’ll just cull it. You have that in the US, it’s the Greyhound, which is now run by Flixbus.
If you look at the graph, buses do not generally lose out to cars, only to cars with 4 people on it.
Now a bus that runs 24/7 has a lower average utilization, because e.g. at night you might be the only passenger. If you compare that to a fully loaded car, sure, the car is better.
And the long distance bus (coach) doesn’t have to stop every 500m, so you’ll have way less fuel spent on braking and accelerating compared to a bus.
It’s actually impressive that despite the many times a public transport bus runs at low utilization it still is better than a car with just one person on it.
A coach, on the other hand, will have a better average utilization, since they will just immediately shut it down if there’s only one person using it.